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This might be a silly question, but as I can't find an answer, I have to ask it.

In interactive python I want to process a message which i get with:

>>> message = sys.stdin.readlines()

Everything works fine, but... how to stop it from getting an input and make it save into message variable? Stopping with ctrl+c stops whole process so there is no input to be saved anywhere. I guess there's an easy answer I just can't find...

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2 Answers

up vote 13 down vote accepted

For unix based system :

Hello, you can tape : Ctrld

Ctrld closes the standard input (stdin) by sending EOF.

Example :

>>> import sys
>>> message = sys.stdin.readlines()
Hello
World
My
Name
Is
James
Bond
# <ctrl-d> EOF sent
>>> print message
['Hello\n', 'World\n', 'My\n', 'Name\n', 'Is\n', 'James\n', 'Bond\n']

For Windows :

To send EOF on Windows, you can replace Ctrld by Ctrlz

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Thank a lot - exactly what I was looking for. As both of you answered in the same time, I'll upvote both of yours answers. – Gandi Apr 5 '11 at 8:38
You're welcome. – Sandro Munda Apr 5 '11 at 8:42

Use CTRL-D.

message = sys.stdin.readlines()
abc
def
<CTRL-D>

# message == ['abc\n', 'def\n']
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