From e106bf94eff07d9a59771d9ccc4406421e18ab64 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sat, 4 May 2024 19:35:20 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 3.0.36. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- docs/pages/progress_bars.rst | 248 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 248 insertions(+) create mode 100644 docs/pages/progress_bars.rst (limited to 'docs/pages/progress_bars.rst') diff --git a/docs/pages/progress_bars.rst b/docs/pages/progress_bars.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9485ed1 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/pages/progress_bars.rst @@ -0,0 +1,248 @@ +.. _progress_bars: + +Progress bars +============= + +Prompt_toolkit ships with a high level API for displaying progress bars, +inspired by `tqdm `_ + +.. warning:: + + The API for the prompt_toolkit progress bars is still very new and can + possibly change in the future. It is usable and tested, but keep this in + mind when upgrading. + +Remember that the `examples directory `_ +of the prompt_toolkit repository ships with many progress bar examples as well. + + +Simple progress bar +------------------- + +Creating a new progress bar can be done by calling the +:class:`~prompt_toolkit.shortcuts.ProgressBar` context manager. + +The progress can be displayed for any iterable. This works by wrapping the +iterable (like ``range``) with the +:class:`~prompt_toolkit.shortcuts.ProgressBar` context manager itself. This +way, the progress bar knows when the next item is consumed by the forloop and +when progress happens. + +.. code:: python + + from prompt_toolkit.shortcuts import ProgressBar + import time + + + with ProgressBar() as pb: + for i in pb(range(800)): + time.sleep(.01) + +.. image:: ../images/progress-bars/simple-progress-bar.png + +Keep in mind that not all iterables can report their total length. This happens +with a typical generator. In that case, you can still pass the total as follows +in order to make displaying the progress possible: + +.. code:: python + + def some_iterable(): + yield ... + + with ProgressBar() as pb: + for i in pb(some_iterable, total=1000): + time.sleep(.01) + + +Multiple parallel tasks +----------------------- + +A prompt_toolkit :class:`~prompt_toolkit.shortcuts.ProgressBar` can display the +progress of multiple tasks running in parallel. Each task can run in a separate +thread and the :class:`~prompt_toolkit.shortcuts.ProgressBar` user interface +runs in its own thread. + +Notice that we set the "daemon" flag for both threads that run the tasks. This +is because control-c will stop the progress and quit our application. We don't +want the application to wait for the background threads to finish. Whether you +want this depends on the application. + +.. code:: python + + from prompt_toolkit.shortcuts import ProgressBar + import time + import threading + + + with ProgressBar() as pb: + # Two parallel tasks. + def task_1(): + for i in pb(range(100)): + time.sleep(.05) + + def task_2(): + for i in pb(range(150)): + time.sleep(.08) + + # Start threads. + t1 = threading.Thread(target=task_1) + t2 = threading.Thread(target=task_2) + t1.daemon = True + t2.daemon = True + t1.start() + t2.start() + + # Wait for the threads to finish. We use a timeout for the join() call, + # because on Windows, join cannot be interrupted by Control-C or any other + # signal. + for t in [t1, t2]: + while t.is_alive(): + t.join(timeout=.5) + +.. image:: ../images/progress-bars/two-tasks.png + + +Adding a title and label +------------------------ + +Each progress bar can have one title, and for each task an individual label. +Both the title and the labels can be :ref:`formatted text `. + +.. code:: python + + from prompt_toolkit.shortcuts import ProgressBar + from prompt_toolkit.formatted_text import HTML + import time + + title = HTML('Downloading ') + label = HTML('some file: ') + + with ProgressBar(title=title) as pb: + for i in pb(range(800), label=label): + time.sleep(.01) + +.. image:: ../images/progress-bars/colored-title-and-label.png + + +Formatting the progress bar +--------------------------- + +The visualisation of a :class:`~prompt_toolkit.shortcuts.ProgressBar` can be +customized by using a different sequence of formatters. The default formatting +looks something like this: + +.. code:: python + + from prompt_toolkit.shortcuts.progress_bar.formatters import * + + default_formatting = [ + Label(), + Text(' '), + Percentage(), + Text(' '), + Bar(), + Text(' '), + Progress(), + Text(' '), + Text('eta [', style='class:time-left'), + TimeLeft(), + Text(']', style='class:time-left'), + Text(' '), + ] + +That sequence of +:class:`~prompt_toolkit.shortcuts.progress_bar.formatters.Formatter` can be +passed to the `formatter` argument of +:class:`~prompt_toolkit.shortcuts.ProgressBar`. So, we could change this and +modify the progress bar to look like an apt-get style progress bar: + +.. code:: python + + from prompt_toolkit.shortcuts import ProgressBar + from prompt_toolkit.styles import Style + from prompt_toolkit.shortcuts.progress_bar import formatters + import time + + style = Style.from_dict({ + 'label': 'bg:#ffff00 #000000', + 'percentage': 'bg:#ffff00 #000000', + 'current': '#448844', + 'bar': '', + }) + + + custom_formatters = [ + formatters.Label(), + formatters.Text(': [', style='class:percentage'), + formatters.Percentage(), + formatters.Text(']', style='class:percentage'), + formatters.Text(' '), + formatters.Bar(sym_a='#', sym_b='#', sym_c='.'), + formatters.Text(' '), + ] + + with ProgressBar(style=style, formatters=custom_formatters) as pb: + for i in pb(range(1600), label='Installing'): + time.sleep(.01) + +.. image:: ../images/progress-bars/apt-get.png + + +Adding key bindings and toolbar +------------------------------- + +Like other prompt_toolkit applications, we can add custom key bindings, by +passing a :class:`~prompt_toolkit.key_binding.KeyBindings` object: + +.. code:: python + + from prompt_toolkit import HTML + from prompt_toolkit.key_binding import KeyBindings + from prompt_toolkit.patch_stdout import patch_stdout + from prompt_toolkit.shortcuts import ProgressBar + + import os + import time + import signal + + bottom_toolbar = HTML(' [f] Print "f" [x] Abort.') + + # Create custom key bindings first. + kb = KeyBindings() + cancel = [False] + + @kb.add('f') + def _(event): + print('You pressed `f`.') + + @kb.add('x') + def _(event): + " Send Abort (control-c) signal. " + cancel[0] = True + os.kill(os.getpid(), signal.SIGINT) + + # Use `patch_stdout`, to make sure that prints go above the + # application. + with patch_stdout(): + with ProgressBar(key_bindings=kb, bottom_toolbar=bottom_toolbar) as pb: + for i in pb(range(800)): + time.sleep(.01) + + # Stop when the cancel flag has been set. + if cancel[0]: + break + +Notice that we use :func:`~prompt_toolkit.patch_stdout.patch_stdout` to make +printing text possible while the progress bar is displayed. This ensures that +printing happens above the progress bar. + +Further, when "x" is pressed, we set a cancel flag, which stops the progress. +It would also be possible to send `SIGINT` to the mean thread, but that's not +always considered a clean way of cancelling something. + +In the example above, we also display a toolbar at the bottom which shows the +key bindings. + +.. image:: ../images/progress-bars/custom-key-bindings.png + +:ref:`Read more about key bindings ...` -- cgit v1.2.3