Reputation: 1609
how do you overwrite the previous print in python 2.7? I am making a simple program to calculate pi. here is the code:
o = 0
hpi = 1.0
i = 1
print "pi calculator"
acc= int(raw_input("enter accuracy:"))
if(acc>999999):
print "WARNING: this might take a VERY long time. to terminate, press CTRL+Z"
print "precision: " + str(acc)
while i < acc:
if(o==0):
hpi *= (1.0+i)/i
o = 1
elif(o==1):
hpi *= i/(1.0+i)
o = 0
else:
print "loop error."
i += 1
if i % 100000 == 0:
print str(hpi*2))
print str(hpi*2))
It basicly outputs the current pi after 100000 calculations. how can I make it overwrite the previous calculation?
Upvotes: 12
Views: 30260
Reputation: 41
cnt = 0
while True:
cnt += 1
print ("\r", cnt, end = " ")
The preceding space (originated by the first ",") is for a more readable output,
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 13596
Check out this answer. Basically \r
works fine, but you have to make sure you print without the newline characters.
cnt = 0
print str(cnt)
while True:
cnt += 1
print "\r" + str(cnt)
This won't work because you print a new line every time, and \r
just goes back to the previous newline.
Adding a comma to the print
statement will prevent it from printing a newline, so \b
will go back to the beginning of the line you just wrote, and you can write over it.
cnt = 0
print str(cnt),
while True:
cnt += 1
print "\r" + str(cnt),
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 10260
Prefix your output with carriage return symbol '\r'
and do not end it with line feed symbol '\n'
. This will place cursor at the beginning of the current line, so output will overwrite previous its content. Pad it with some trailing blank space to guarantee overwrite. E.g.
sys.stdout.write('\r' + str(hpi) + ' ' * 20)
sys.stdout.flush() # important
Output the final value as usual with print
.
I believe this should work both in most *nix terminal emulators and Windows console. YMMV, but this is the simplest way.
Upvotes: 23