##// END OF EJS Templates
custom keyboard interrupt handling in ask_yes_no...
custom keyboard interrupt handling in ask_yes_no Sometimes, Ctrl-C just makes sense as an answer, and re-asking the question is just frustrating. This changes makes it possible to break out of the asking loop via Ctrl-C. This is particularly handy for asking questions from the command line, where one expects Ctrl-c to be a sort of "Cancel" operation, and is often functionally equivalent to "no"

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tclass.py
35 lines | 959 B | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""Simple script to be run *twice*, to check reference counting bugs.
See test_run for details."""
from __future__ import print_function
import sys
# We want to ensure that while objects remain available for immediate access,
# objects from *previous* runs of the same script get collected, to avoid
# accumulating massive amounts of old references.
class C(object):
def __init__(self,name):
self.name = name
self.p = print
self.flush_stdout = sys.stdout.flush
def __del__(self):
self.p('tclass.py: deleting object:',self.name)
self.flush_stdout()
try:
name = sys.argv[1]
except IndexError:
pass
else:
if name.startswith('C'):
c = C(name)
#print >> sys.stderr, "ARGV:", sys.argv # dbg
# This next print statement is NOT debugging, we're making the check on a
# completely separate process so we verify by capturing stdout:
print('ARGV 1-:', sys.argv[1:])
sys.stdout.flush()