APT command line interface-like yes/no input?
I'd do it this way:
# raw_input returns the empty string for "enter"
yes = {'yes','y', 'ye', ''}
no = {'no','n'}
choice = raw_input().lower()
if choice in yes:
return True
elif choice in no:
return False
else:
sys.stdout.write("Please respond with 'yes' or 'no'")
There is a function strtobool
in Python's standard library: http://docs.python.org/2/distutils/apiref.html?highlight=distutils.util#distutils.util.strtobool
You can use it to check user's input and transform it to True
or False
value.
As you mentioned, the easiest way is to use raw_input()
(or simply input()
for Python 3). There is no built-in way to do this. From Recipe 577058:
import sys
def query_yes_no(question, default="yes"):
"""Ask a yes/no question via raw_input() and return their answer.
"question" is a string that is presented to the user.
"default" is the presumed answer if the user just hits <Enter>.
It must be "yes" (the default), "no" or None (meaning
an answer is required of the user).
The "answer" return value is True for "yes" or False for "no".
"""
valid = {"yes": True, "y": True, "ye": True, "no": False, "n": False}
if default is None:
prompt = " [y/n] "
elif default == "yes":
prompt = " [Y/n] "
elif default == "no":
prompt = " [y/N] "
else:
raise ValueError("invalid default answer: '%s'" % default)
while True:
sys.stdout.write(question + prompt)
choice = input().lower()
if default is not None and choice == "":
return valid[default]
elif choice in valid:
return valid[choice]
else:
sys.stdout.write("Please respond with 'yes' or 'no' " "(or 'y' or 'n').\n")
(For Python 2, use raw_input
instead of input
.)
Usage example:
>>> query_yes_no("Is cabbage yummier than cauliflower?")
Is cabbage yummier than cauliflower? [Y/n] oops
Please respond with 'yes' or 'no' (or 'y' or 'n').
Is cabbage yummier than cauliflower? [Y/n] [ENTER]
>>> True
>>> query_yes_no("Is cabbage yummier than cauliflower?", None)
Is cabbage yummier than cauliflower? [y/n] [ENTER]
Please respond with 'yes' or 'no' (or 'y' or 'n').
Is cabbage yummier than cauliflower? [y/n] y
>>> True
You can use click's confirm
method.
import click
if click.confirm('Do you want to continue?', default=True):
print('Do something')
This will print:
$ Do you want to continue? [Y/n]:
Should work for Python 2/3
on Linux, Mac or Windows.
Docs: http://click.pocoo.org/5/prompts/#confirmation-prompts