I got this code from a different SO question, but node complained to use process.stdin.setRawMode instead of tty, so I changed it.
Before:
var tty = require("tty");
process.openStdin().on("keypress", function(chunk, key) {
if(key && key.name === "c" && key.ctrl) {
console.log("bye bye");
process.exit();
}
});
tty.setRawMode(true);
After:
process.stdin.setRawMode(true);
process.stdin.on("keypress", function(chunk, key) {
if(key && key.name === "c" && key.ctrl) {
console.log("bye bye");
process.exit();
}
});
In any case, it's just creating a totally nonresponsive node process that does nothing, with the first complaining about tty
, then throwing an error, and the second just doing nothing and disabling Node's native CTRL+C handler, so it doesn't even quit node when I press it. How can I successfully handle Ctrl+C in Windows?
For those who need the functionality, I found death (npm nodule, hah!).
Author also claims it works on windows:
I can confirm CTRL+C works on win32 (yes, I am surprised).
If you're trying to catch the interrupt signal
SIGINT
, you don't need to read from the keyboard. Theprocess
object ofnodejs
exposes an interrupt event:Edit: doesn't work on Windows without a workaround. See here