5
I’m trying to make a timer that, after 10 seconds, prints a string.
I tried to use the time.sleep()
and it didn’t work.
Example:
def tempo():
#passados 10 segundos
print "olá"
5
I’m trying to make a timer that, after 10 seconds, prints a string.
I tried to use the time.sleep()
and it didn’t work.
Example:
def tempo():
#passados 10 segundos
print "olá"
7
Use the method time.sleep()
.
import time
def tempo():
time.sleep(10)
print "Ola"
To make a stopwatch and print the number on the same line:
import time, sys
for i in range(0, 10):
sys.stdout.write("\r{}".format(i))
sys.stdout.flush()
time.sleep(1)
print ("\nFim")
Thank you ;) I probably forgot to import time.
And it is possible to make a stopwatch, that is, to count the time in a single line?
but that the count should replace the number that is there before:
But keep adding numbers to the count
-2
I think a smaller form would be:
from time import sleep
for contagem in range(0,10):
sleep(1)
print('Olá!')
I don’t understand why sleep
10x would be more "reduced" than calling just one.
-4
From time import Sleep
Msg = str(imput("type a sentence:")) Times = int(imput("how often do you want to execute that sentence:")
While Vezes:
Print(Msg)
Sleep(10)
print("end of execution")
Caution. The function imput
does not exist in Python, the correct is input
; her return is always a string, so call str
is to insert redundancy into the code; as you do not modify the value of Vezes
, if any value other than 0 is entered it will cause an infinite loop; From
should be from
; While
should be while
, Print
should be print
; Sleep
should be sleep
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I did a much better way: from time import Leep def espera(tempo): Leep(tempo)
– Zucamarabu
And how does this help to solve the problem that is in the question? Where does the
print("olá")
would be used with this? What is the reason that would lead someone to use their functionespere
instead of usingsleep
directly?– Victor Stafusa