Skip to main content

A Python Progressbar library to provide visual (yet text based) progress to long running operations.

Project description

Build status:

python-progressbar test status

Coverage:

https://coveralls.io/repos/WoLpH/python-progressbar/badge.svg?branch=master

Install

The package can be installed through pip (this is the recommended method):

pip install progressbar2

Or if pip is not available, easy_install should work as well:

easy_install progressbar2

Or download the latest release from Pypi (https://pypi-hypernode.com/pypi/progressbar2) or Github.

Note that the releases on Pypi are signed with my GPG key (https://pgp.mit.edu/pks/lookup?op=vindex&search=0xE81444E9CE1F695D) and can be checked using GPG:

gpg –verify progressbar2-<version>.tar.gz.asc progressbar2-<version>.tar.gz

Introduction

A text progress bar is typically used to display the progress of a long running operation, providing a visual cue that processing is underway.

The progressbar is based on the old Python progressbar package that was published on the now defunct Google Code. Since that project was completely abandoned by its developer and the developer did not respond to email, I decided to fork the package. This package is still backwards compatible with the original progressbar package so you can safely use it as a drop-in replacement for existing project.

The ProgressBar class manages the current progress, and the format of the line is given by a number of widgets. A widget is an object that may display differently depending on the state of the progress bar. There are many types of widgets:

The progressbar module is very easy to use, yet very powerful. It will also automatically enable features like auto-resizing when the system supports it.

Security contact information

To report a security vulnerability, please use the Tidelift security contact. Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure.

Known issues

  • The Jetbrains (PyCharm, etc) editors work out of the box, but for more advanced features such as the MultiBar support you will need to enable the “Enable terminal in output console” checkbox in the Run dialog.

  • The IDLE editor doesn’t support these types of progress bars at all: https://bugs.python.org/issue23220

  • Jupyter notebooks buffer sys.stdout which can cause mixed output. This issue can be resolved easily using: import sys; sys.stdout.flush(). Linked issue: https://github.com/WoLpH/python-progressbar/issues/173

Usage

There are many ways to use Python Progressbar, you can see a few basic examples here but there are many more in the examples file.

Wrapping an iterable

import time
import progressbar

for i in progressbar.progressbar(range(100)):
    time.sleep(0.02)

Progressbars with logging

Progressbars with logging require stderr redirection _before_ the StreamHandler is initialized. To make sure the stderr stream has been redirected on time make sure to call progressbar.streams.wrap_stderr() before you initialize the logger.

One option to force early initialization is by using the WRAP_STDERR environment variable, on Linux/Unix systems this can be done through:

# WRAP_STDERR=true python your_script.py

If you need to flush manually while wrapping, you can do so using:

import progressbar

progressbar.streams.flush()

In most cases the following will work as well, as long as you initialize the StreamHandler after the wrapping has taken place.

import time
import logging
import progressbar

progressbar.streams.wrap_stderr()
logging.basicConfig()

for i in progressbar.progressbar(range(10)):
    logging.error('Got %d', i)
    time.sleep(0.2)

Multiple (threaded) progressbars

import random
import threading
import time

import progressbar

BARS = 5
N = 50


def do_something(bar):
    for i in bar(range(N)):
        # Sleep up to 0.1 seconds
        time.sleep(random.random() * 0.1)

        # print messages at random intervals to show how extra output works
        if random.random() > 0.9:
            bar.print('random message for bar', bar, i)


with progressbar.MultiBar() as multibar:
    for i in range(BARS):
        # Get a progressbar
        bar = multibar[f'Thread label here {i}']
        # Create a thread and pass the progressbar
        threading.Thread(target=do_something, args=(bar,)).start()

Context wrapper

import time
import progressbar

with progressbar.ProgressBar(max_value=10) as bar:
    for i in range(10):
        time.sleep(0.1)
        bar.update(i)

Combining progressbars with print output

import time
import progressbar

for i in progressbar.progressbar(range(100), redirect_stdout=True):
    print('Some text', i)
    time.sleep(0.1)

Progressbar with unknown length

import time
import progressbar

bar = progressbar.ProgressBar(max_value=progressbar.UnknownLength)
for i in range(20):
    time.sleep(0.1)
    bar.update(i)

Bar with custom widgets

import time
import progressbar

widgets=[
    ' [', progressbar.Timer(), '] ',
    progressbar.Bar(),
    ' (', progressbar.ETA(), ') ',
]
for i in progressbar.progressbar(range(20), widgets=widgets):
    time.sleep(0.1)

Bar with wide Chinese (or other multibyte) characters

# vim: fileencoding=utf-8
import time
import progressbar


def custom_len(value):
    # These characters take up more space
    characters = {
        '进': 2,
        '度': 2,
    }

    total = 0
    for c in value:
        total += characters.get(c, 1)

    return total


bar = progressbar.ProgressBar(
    widgets=[
        '进度: ',
        progressbar.Bar(),
        ' ',
        progressbar.Counter(format='%(value)02d/%(max_value)d'),
    ],
    len_func=custom_len,
)
for i in bar(range(10)):
    time.sleep(0.1)

Showing multiple independent progress bars in parallel

import random
import sys
import time

import progressbar

BARS = 5
N = 100

# Construct the list of progress bars with the `line_offset` so they draw
# below each other
bars = []
for i in range(BARS):
    bars.append(
        progressbar.ProgressBar(
            max_value=N,
            # We add 1 to the line offset to account for the `print_fd`
            line_offset=i + 1,
            max_error=False,
        )
    )

# Create a file descriptor for regular printing as well
print_fd = progressbar.LineOffsetStreamWrapper(lines=0, stream=sys.stdout)

# The progress bar updates, normally you would do something useful here
for i in range(N * BARS):
    time.sleep(0.005)

    # Increment one of the progress bars at random
    bars[random.randrange(0, BARS)].increment()

    # Print a status message to the `print_fd` below the progress bars
    print(f'Hi, we are at update {i+1} of {N * BARS}', file=print_fd)

# Cleanup the bars
for bar in bars:
    bar.finish()

# Add a newline to make sure the next print starts on a new line
print()

Naturally we can do this from separate threads as well:

import random
import threading
import time

import progressbar

BARS = 5
N = 100

# Create the bars with the given line offset
bars = []
for line_offset in range(BARS):
    bars.append(progressbar.ProgressBar(line_offset=line_offset, max_value=N))


class Worker(threading.Thread):
    def __init__(self, bar):
        super().__init__()
        self.bar = bar

    def run(self):
        for i in range(N):
            time.sleep(random.random() / 25)
            self.bar.update(i)


for bar in bars:
    Worker(bar).start()

print()

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

This version

4.4.2

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

progressbar2-4.4.2.tar.gz (101.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

progressbar2-4.4.2-py3-none-any.whl (56.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file progressbar2-4.4.2.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: progressbar2-4.4.2.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 101.3 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/5.0.0 CPython/3.12.2

File hashes

Hashes for progressbar2-4.4.2.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 3fda2e0c60693600a6585a784c9d3bc4e1dac57e99e133f8c0f5c8cf3df374a2
MD5 6f9c21082d015cf541fae1b2bc58c826
BLAKE2b-256 417b42c1cec1218b8b9289d6c84bc9d874df1f06db642ad3350d01a4116de834

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file progressbar2-4.4.2-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for progressbar2-4.4.2-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ec157391635b008b8a422326fb05c27045ffbb2dc8dab5e4d90d4d412c4ffd39
MD5 076cc2fac489b1bd236297fff59869e8
BLAKE2b-256 e67c7da9fefe4429f21e16fb9ab95c05f47cd11ffa4fd79932b639a1380a52a3

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page