Is there any way to clear the STDIN buffer in Perl? A part of my program has lengthy output (enough time for someone to enter a few characters) and after that output I ask f
I had the same problem and solved it by just discarding anything in STDIN after the processing like this:
for(my $n = 0; $n < 70000; $n++){
print $n . "\n";
}
my $foo=<STDIN>;
print "would you like to continue [y/n]: ";
chomp(my $input = <STDIN>);
print $input . "\n";
It looks like you can accomplish this with the Term::ReadKey module:
#!perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use 5.010;
use Term::ReadKey;
say "I'm starting to sleep...";
ReadMode 2;
sleep(10);
ReadMode 3;
my $key;
while( defined( $key = ReadKey(-1) ) ) {}
ReadMode 0;
say "Enter something:";
chomp( my $input = <STDIN> );
say "You entered '$input'";
Here's what happens:
ReadMode 2
means "put the input mode into regular mode but turn off echo". This means that any keyboard banging that the user does while you're in your computationally-expensive code won't get echoed to the screen. It still gets entered into STDIN
's buffer though, so...ReadMode 3
turns STDIN
into cbreak mode, meaning STDIN
kind of gets flushed after every keypress. That's why...while(defined($key = ReadKey(-1))) {}
happens. This is flushing out the characters that the user entered during the computationally-expensive code. Then...ReadMode 0
resets STDIN
, and you can read from STDIN
as if the user hadn't banged on the keyboard.When I run this code and bang on the keyboard during the sleep(10)
, then enter some other text after the prompt, it only prints out the text I typed after the prompt appeared.
Strictly speaking the ReadMode 2
isn't needed, but I put it there so the screen doesn't get cluttered up with text when the user bangs on the keyboard.
{ local $/; <STDIN> }
This temporarily - limited to scope of the block - sets $/, the input record seperator, to be undef, which tells perl to just read everything instead of reading a line at a time. Then reads everything available on STDIN and doesn't do anything with it, thus flushing the buffer.
After that, you can read STDIN as normal.