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Raspberry Pi Forum How to break out of a while True: loop with a button
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Related

How to break out of a while True: loop with a button

flypadre
flypadre over 9 years ago

I've been working on some python scripts accessing the gpio pins on my rpi to light an led and I ran into a little problem I'm not sure how to solve.

My code looks something like this minus some setup statements

 

def ledblink():

     while True:

          GPIO.output(13, True)

          time.sleep(.5)

          GPIO.output(13, False)

          time.sleep(.5)

 

def ledoff():

     GPIO.output(13, False)

 

button = Button(root, text = 'LED ON', command = ledblink)

button.pack()

offbutton = Button(root, text = 'LED OFF', command = ledoff)

offbutton.pack()

 

As you can probably tell using tkinter for my gui. Also, as you can probably tell once I click the on button, that is all this program is going to let me do, the led blinks and continues because True is always True. How can I keep an indefinite loop running so that I can have a blinking led and still be able to break out of the loop when I want to turn things off? This was easy when I wanted to simply turn the led on and off, but not so easy with the loop I have to make it blink.

Just an FYI I was able to break out of the loop in my script version by using a try/except in which I used KeyboardInterrupt to call GPIO.cleanup() but I'm not sure how to do this in a gui.

 

 

 

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  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 9 years ago

    Those are some valid points which would need attention in other languages, Python does much of the dirty work for us so there isn't any need to be concerned.

     

    The blink function needs to be called whenever the button is pressed which is why its in a function that the button press calls. Placing it at the bottom will start the blinking but once the stop button is pressed, the start button will never doing anything.

     

    Once the while loop breaks, the thread closes itself automatically through the Python subsystem and gets garbage collected.

     

    If the start button is pressed again once the thread is actually running then additional threads will build up, this could be easily solved if it becomes a problem which is unlikely in a single user scenario. If it was something that I was going to release with a product then that would certainly be something that needs addressing, for now I think the Original Posters question has been answered and I'm happy to help with any future queries.

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  • rew
    0 rew over 9 years ago in reply to Former Member

    lucie tozer wrote:

     

    Once the while loop breaks, the thread closes itself automatically through the Python subsystem and gets garbage collected.

    Ooops. I was thinking of a mix of what you wrote and what I suggested. You're right! I mis-read what you coded. Sorry! Still, I'd prefer to have a "do the blinking" thread that is started once.

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  • rew
    0 rew over 9 years ago in reply to Former Member

    lucie tozer wrote:

     

    Once the while loop breaks, the thread closes itself automatically through the Python subsystem and gets garbage collected.

    Ooops. I was thinking of a mix of what you wrote and what I suggested. You're right! I mis-read what you coded. Sorry! Still, I'd prefer to have a "do the blinking" thread that is started once.

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