Kaydet (Commit) c3eb868c authored tarafından Georg Brandl's avatar Georg Brandl

Fix some PEP8 in curses HOWTO.

üst dc801844
......@@ -144,8 +144,8 @@ window, but you might wish to divide the screen into smaller windows, in order
to redraw or clear them separately. The :func:`newwin` function creates a new
window of a given size, returning the new window object. ::
begin_x = 20 ; begin_y = 7
height = 5 ; width = 40
begin_x = 20; begin_y = 7
height = 5; width = 40
win = curses.newwin(height, width, begin_y, begin_x)
A word about the coordinate system used in curses: coordinates are always passed
......@@ -184,11 +184,13 @@ displayed. ::
# explained in the next section
for y in range(0, 100):
for x in range(0, 100):
try: pad.addch(y,x, ord('a') + (x*x+y*y) % 26 )
except curses.error: pass
try:
pad.addch(y,x, ord('a') + (x*x+y*y) % 26)
except curses.error:
pass
# Displays a section of the pad in the middle of the screen
pad.refresh( 0,0, 5,5, 20,75)
pad.refresh(0,0, 5,5, 20,75)
The :func:`refresh` call displays a section of the pad in the rectangle
extending from coordinate (5,5) to coordinate (20,75) on the screen; the upper
......@@ -321,7 +323,7 @@ again, such combinations are not guaranteed to work on all terminals.
An example, which displays a line of text using color pair 1::
stdscr.addstr( "Pretty text", curses.color_pair(1) )
stdscr.addstr("Pretty text", curses.color_pair(1))
stdscr.refresh()
As I said before, a color pair consists of a foreground and background color.
......@@ -343,7 +345,7 @@ When you change a color pair, any text already displayed using that color pair
will change to the new colors. You can also display new text in this color
with::
stdscr.addstr(0,0, "RED ALERT!", curses.color_pair(1) )
stdscr.addstr(0,0, "RED ALERT!", curses.color_pair(1))
Very fancy terminals can change the definitions of the actual colors to a given
RGB value. This lets you change color 1, which is usually red, to purple or
......@@ -381,9 +383,12 @@ your program will look something like this::
while 1:
c = stdscr.getch()
if c == ord('p'): PrintDocument()
elif c == ord('q'): break # Exit the while()
elif c == curses.KEY_HOME: x = y = 0
if c == ord('p'):
PrintDocument()
elif c == ord('q'):
break # Exit the while()
elif c == curses.KEY_HOME:
x = y = 0
The :mod:`curses.ascii` module supplies ASCII class membership functions that
take either integer or 1-character-string arguments; these may be useful in
......@@ -433,4 +438,3 @@ If you write an interesting little program, feel free to contribute it as
another demo. We can always use more of them!
The ncurses FAQ: http://invisible-island.net/ncurses/ncurses.faq.html
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