I have been trying to use python to bind my customize event to keyboard event with specific event code number like below
ctypes.windll.user32.keybd_event('0x24',0,2,0)
but as you already know
windll
the library only worked on Windows OS. how can I do something like this in Linux machines? I read about
CDLL('libc.so.6')
but I can't figure it out if this library is helpful or not?
is there another way to set keypress listener in OS level with python using the virtual key code?
1 Answers
Answers 1
Linux input subsystem is composed of three parts: the driver layer, the input subsystem core layer and the event processing layer. and the keyboard or other input event is all describe by input_event
.
use below code and type in your Terminal python filename.py | grep "keyboard"
#!/usr/bin/env python #coding: utf-8 import os deviceFilePath = '/sys/class/input/' def showDevice(): os.chdir(deviceFilePath) for i in os.listdir(os.getcwd()): namePath = deviceFilePath + i + '/device/name' if os.path.isfile(namePath): print "Name: %s Device: %s" % (i, file(namePath).read()) if __name__ == '__main__': showDevice()
you should get Name: event1 Device: AT Translated Set 2 keyboard
. then use
#!/usr/bin/env python #coding: utf-8 from evdev import InputDevice from select import select def detectInputKey(): dev = InputDevice('/dev/input/event1') while True: select([dev], [], []) for event in dev.read(): print "code:%s value:%s" % (event.code, event.value) if __name__ == '__main__': detectInputKey()
evdev
is a package provides bindings to the generic input event interface in Linux. The evdev interface serves the purpose of passing events generated in the kernel directly to userspace through character devices that are typically located in /dev/input/.andselect
is select
.
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