"""curses.wrapper Contains one function, wrapper(), which runs another function which should be the rest of your curses-based application. If the application raises an exception, wrapper() will restore the terminal to a sane state so you can read the resulting traceback. """ import sys, curses def wrapper(func, *rest): """Wrapper function that initializes curses and calls another function, restoring normal keyboard/screen behavior on error. The callable object 'func' is then passed the main window 'stdscr' as its first argument, followed by any other arguments passed to wrapper(). """ res = None try: # Initialize curses stdscr=curses.initscr() # Turn off echoing of keys, and enter cbreak mode, # where no buffering is performed on keyboard input curses.noecho() curses.cbreak() # In keypad mode, escape sequences for special keys # (like the cursor keys) will be interpreted and # a special value like curses.KEY_LEFT will be returned stdscr.keypad(1) # Start color, too. Harmless if the terminal doesn't have # color; user can test with has_color() later on. The try/catch # works around a minor bit of over-conscientiousness in the curses # module -- the error return from C start_color() is ignorable. try: curses.start_color() except: pass res = func(stdscr, *rest) except: # In the event of an error, restore the terminal # to a sane state. stdscr.keypad(0) curses.echo() curses.nocbreak() curses.endwin() # Pass the exception upwards (exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback) = sys.exc_info() raise exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback else: # Set everything back to normal stdscr.keypad(0) curses.echo() curses.nocbreak() curses.endwin() # Terminate curses return res