How to reset cursor to the beginning of the same line in Python

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暖寄归人
暖寄归人 2020-12-05 06:48

Most of questions related to this topics here in SO is as follows:

How to print some information on the same line without introducing a new line

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  • 2020-12-05 07:11

    On linux( and probably on windows) you can use curses module like this

    import time
    import curses
    
    win = curses.initscr()
    for i in range(100):
        win.clear()
        win.addstr("You have finished %d%%"%i)
        win.refresh()
        time.sleep(.1)
    curses.endwin()
    

    Benfit with curses as apposed to other simpler technique is that, you can draw on terminal like a graphics program, because curses provides moving to any x,y position e.g. below is a simple script which updates four views

    import time
    import curses
    
    curses.initscr()
    
    rows = 10
    cols= 30
    winlist = []
    for r in range(2):
        for c in range(2):
            win = curses.newwin(rows, cols, r*rows, c*cols)
            win.clear()
            win.border()
            winlist.append(win)
    
    for i in range(100):
        for win in winlist:
            win.addstr(5,5,"You have finished - %d%%"%i)
            win.refresh()
        time.sleep(.05)
    curses.endwin()
    
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  • 2020-12-05 07:14

    using sys.stdout.write() instead of print works in both python 2 and 3 without any compromises.

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  • 2020-12-05 07:16

    I had to combine a few answers above to make it work on Python 3.7 / Windows 10. The example runs on Spyder's console:

    import sys, time
    
    for i in range(0, 101, 5):
      print("\r>> You have finished {}%".format(i), end='')
      sys.stdout.flush()
      time.sleep(.2)
    

    The time.sleep(.2) is just used to simulates some time-consuming code.

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  • 2020-12-05 07:18

    Python 3

    You can use keyword arguments to print:

    print('string', end='\r', flush=True)

    • end='\r' replaces the default end-of-line behavior with '\r'
    • flush=True flushes the buffer, making the printed text appear immediately.

    Python 2

    In 2.6+ you can use from __future__ import print_function at the start of the script to enable Python 3 behavior. Or use the old way:

    Python's print puts a newline after each command, unless you suppress it with a trailing comma. So, the print command is:

    print 'You have finished {0}%\r'.format(percentage),
    

    Note the comma at the end.

    Unfortunately, Python only sends the output to the terminal after a complete line. The above is not a complete line, so you need to flush it manually:

    import sys
    sys.stdout.flush()
    
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  • 2020-12-05 07:23

    The OP didn't specify Py2 or Py3. In Python 3 the 'import' of 'sys' and the 'sys.stdout' call can be replaced with 'flush=True':

    import time
    for i in range(0,101,25):
      print("\r>>TESTING - {:0>3d}%".format(i), end='', flush=True)
      time.sleep(.5)
    print()
    

    Thanks to Petr Viktorin for showing the "flush" parameter for Python 3 print(). I submit this because his Python 3 example doesn't include a 'format' specifier. It took me awhile to figure out that the additional parameters go after the 'format' specifier parentheses as shown in my example. I just picked an example format of 3 character integer 0 filled on the left. The best doc I found for Py3 format is: 6.1.3.1. Format Specification Mini-Language

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  • 2020-12-05 07:24
    import sys, time
    
    for i in xrange(0, 101, 10):
      print '\r>> You have finished %d%%' % i,
      sys.stdout.flush()
      time.sleep(2)
    print
    

    The \r is the carriage return. You need the comma at the end of the print statement to avoid automatic newline. Finally sys.stdout.flush() is needed to flush the buffer out to stdout.

    For Python 3, you can use:

    print("\r>> You have finished {}%".format(i), end='')
    
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