Display a countdown for the python sleep function

拥有回忆 提交于 2019-11-30 06:51:27
aestrivex

you could always do

#do some stuff
print 'tasks done, now sleeping for 10 seconds'
for i in xrange(10,0,-1):
    time.sleep(1)
    print i

This snippet has the slightly annoying feature that each number gets printed out on a newline. To avoid this, you can

import sys
import time
for i in xrange(10,0,-1):
    sys.stdout.write(str(i)+' ')
    sys.stdout.flush()
    time.sleep(1)
Saullo G. P. Castro

You can do a countdown function like:

import sys
import time

def countdown(t, step=1, msg='sleeping'):  # in seconds
    pad_str = ' ' * len('%d' % step)
    for i in range(t, 0, -step):
        print '%s for the next %d seconds %s\r' % (msg, i, pad_str),
        sys.stdout.flush()
        time.sleep(step)
    print 'Done %s for %d seconds!  %s' % (msg, t, pad_str)

The carriage return \r and the comma , will keep the print in the same line (avoiding one line for each countdown value)

As the number of seconds decreases, the pad_str will ensure the last line is overwritten with spaces instead of leaving the last character(s) behind as the output shortens.

The final print overwrites the last status message with a done message and increments the output line, so there is evidence of the delay.

This is the best way to display a timer in the console for Python 3.x:

import time
import sys

for remaining in range(10, 0, -1):
    sys.stdout.write("\r")
    sys.stdout.write("{:2d} seconds remaining.".format(remaining))
    sys.stdout.flush()
    time.sleep(1)

sys.stdout.write("\rComplete!            \n")

This writes over the previous line on each cycle.

This is something that I've learned at one of my first python lessons, we played with ["/","-","|","\","|"] but the principle is the same:

import time

for i in reversed(range(0, 10)):
    time.sleep(1)
    print "%s\r" %i,

Sure, just write a loop that prints 10 minus the iteration counter, then have it sleep 1 second each iteration and run for 10 iterations. Or, to be even more flexible:

def printer(v):
    print v
def countdown_timer(duration, step=1, output_function=printer,
                    prompt='Waiting {duration} seconds.'):
    output_function(prompt.format(duration=duration))
    for i in xrange(duration/step):
        output_function(duration - step * i)

time.sleep() may return earlier if the sleep is interrupted by a signal or later (depends on the scheduling of other processes/threads by OS/the interpreter).

To improve accuracy over multiple iterations, to avoid drift for large number of iterations, the countdown may be locked with the clock:

#!/usr/bin/env python
import sys
import time

for i in reversed(range(1, 1001)):
    time.sleep(1 - time.time() % 1) # sleep until a whole second boundary
    sys.stderr.write('\r%4d' % i)
Silas Poulson

Here's one I did:

import time
a = input("How long is the countdown?")
while a != 0:
    print a
    time.sleep(1)
    a = a-1

At the end if you and an else you can put an alarm or whatever.

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