Expand description
indicatif is a library for Rust that helps you build command line interfaces that report progress to users. It comes with various tools and utilities for formatting anything that indicates progress.
Platform support:
- Linux
- OS X
- Windows (colors require Windows 10)
Best paired with other libraries in the family:
§Crate Contents
- Progress bars
ProgressBar
for bars and spinnersMultiProgress
for multiple bars
- Data Formatting
HumanBytes
for formatting bytesDecimalBytes
for formatting bytes using SI prefixesBinaryBytes
for formatting bytes using ISO/IEC prefixesHumanDuration
for formatting durationsHumanCount
for formatting large countsHumanFloatCount
for formatting large float counts
§Progress Bars and Spinners
indicatif comes with a ProgressBar
type that supports both bounded
progress bar uses as well as unbounded “spinner” type progress reports.
Progress bars are Sync
and Send
objects which means that they are
internally locked and can be passed from thread to thread.
Additionally a MultiProgress
utility is provided that can manage
rendering multiple progress bars at once (eg: from multiple threads).
To whet your appetite, this is what this can look like:
Progress bars are manually advanced and by default draw to stderr. When you are done, the progress bar can be finished either visibly (eg: the progress bar stays on the screen) or cleared (the progress bar will be removed).
use indicatif::ProgressBar;
let bar = ProgressBar::new(1000);
for _ in 0..1000 {
bar.inc(1);
// ...
}
bar.finish();
General progress bar behaviors:
- if a non terminal is detected the progress bar will be completely hidden. This makes piping programs to logfiles make sense out of the box.
- a progress bar only starts drawing when
set_message
,inc
,set_position
ortick
are called. In some situations you might have to calltick
once to draw it. - progress bars should be explicitly finished to reset the rendering for others. Either by also clearing them or by replacing them with a new message / retaining the current message.
- the default template renders neither message nor prefix.
§Iterators
Similar to tqdm, progress bars can be associated with an iterator. For example:
use indicatif::ProgressIterator;
for _ in (0..1000).progress() {
// ...
}
See the ProgressIterator
trait for more
methods to configure the number of elements in the iterator or change
the progress bar style. Indicatif also has optional support for parallel
iterators with Rayon. In your
Cargo.toml
, use the “rayon” feature:
[dependencies]
indicatif = {version = "*", features = ["rayon"]}
And then use it like this:
use indicatif::ParallelProgressIterator;
use rayon::iter::{ParallelIterator, IntoParallelRefIterator};
let v: Vec<_> = (0..100000).collect();
let v2: Vec<_> = v.par_iter().progress_count(v.len() as u64).map(|i| i + 1).collect();
assert_eq!(v2[0], 1);
Or if you’d like to customize the progress bar:
use indicatif::{ProgressBar, ParallelProgressIterator, ProgressStyle};
use rayon::iter::{ParallelIterator, IntoParallelRefIterator};
// Alternatively, use `ProgressBar::new().with_style()`
let style = ProgressStyle::default_bar();
let v: Vec<_> = (0..100000).collect();
let v2: Vec<_> = v.par_iter().progress_with_style(style).map(|i| i + 1).collect();
assert_eq!(v2[0], 1);
§Templates
Progress bars can be styled with simple format strings similar to the
ones in Rust itself. The format for a placeholder is {key:options}
where the options
part is optional. If provided the format is this:
[<^>] for an optional alignment specification
WIDTH an optional width as positive integer
! an optional exclamation mark to enable truncation
.STYLE an optional dot separated style string
/STYLE an optional dot separated alternative style string
For the style component see Style::from_dotted_str
for more information. Indicatif uses the console
base crate for all
colorization and formatting options.
Some examples for templates:
[{elapsed_precise}] {bar:40.cyan/blue} {pos:>7}/{len:7} {msg}
This sets a progress bar that is 40 characters wide and has cyan as primary style color and blue as alternative style color. Alternative styles are currently only used for progress bars.
Example configuration:
bar.set_style(ProgressStyle::with_template("[{elapsed_precise}] {bar:40.cyan/blue} {pos:>7}/{len:7} {msg}")
.unwrap()
.progress_chars("##-"));
The following keys exist:
bar
: renders a progress bar. By default 20 characters wide. The style string is used to color the elapsed part, the alternative style is used for the bar that is yet to render.wide_bar
: likebar
but always fills the remaining space. It should not be used withwide_msg
.spinner
: renders the spinner (current tick string).prefix
: renders the prefix set on the progress bar.msg
: renders the currently set message on the progress bar.wide_msg
: likemsg
but always fills the remaining space and truncates. It should not be used withwide_bar
.pos
: renders the current position of the bar as integerhuman_pos
: renders the current position of the bar as an integer, with commas as the thousands separator.len
: renders the amount of work to be done as an integerhuman_len
: renders the total length of the bar as an integer, with commas as the thousands separator.bytes
: renders the current position of the bar as bytes.percent
: renders the current position of the bar as a percentage of the total length.total_bytes
: renders the total length of the bar as bytes.elapsed_precise
: renders the elapsed time asHH:MM:SS
.elapsed
: renders the elapsed time as42s
,1m
etc.per_sec
: renders the speed in steps per second.bytes_per_sec
: renders the speed in bytes per second.binary_bytes_per_sec
: renders the speed in bytes per second using power-of-two units, i.e.MiB
,KiB
, etc.eta_precise
: the remaining time (likeelapsed_precise
).eta
: the remaining time (likeelapsed
).duration_precise
: the extrapolated total duration (likeelapsed_precise
).duration
: the extrapolated total duration time (likeelapsed
).
The design of the progress bar can be altered with the integrated
template functionality. The template can be set by changing a
ProgressStyle
and attaching it to the progress bar.
§Human Readable Formatting
There are some formatting wrappers for showing elapsed time and file sizes for human users:
use indicatif::{HumanBytes, HumanCount, HumanDuration, HumanFloatCount};
assert_eq!("3.00 MiB", HumanBytes(3*1024*1024).to_string());
assert_eq!("8 seconds", HumanDuration(Duration::from_secs(8)).to_string());
assert_eq!("33,857,009", HumanCount(33857009).to_string());
assert_eq!("33,857,009.1235", HumanFloatCount(33857009.123456).to_string());
§Feature Flags
rayon
: adds rayon supportimproved_unicode
: adds improved unicode support (graphemes, better width calculation)
Re-exports§
pub use crate::style::ProgressStyle;
Modules§
Structs§
- Formats bytes for human readability using ISO/IEC prefixes
- Formats bytes for human readability using SI prefixes
- Wraps an std duration for human basic formatting.
- Formats bytes for human readability
- Formats counts for human readability using commas
- Wraps an std duration for human readable formatting.
- Formats counts for human readability using commas for floats
- Manages multiple progress bars from different threads
- A progress bar or spinner
- Wraps an iterator to display its progress.
- Target for draw operations
- The state of a progress bar at a moment in time.
- A weak reference to a
ProgressBar
.
Enums§
- Vertical alignment of a multi progress.
- Behavior of a progress bar when it is finished
Traits§
- Wraps an iterator to display its progress.
- A trait for minimal terminal-like behavior.