Travis status:
Coverage:
NOTE: This version has been completely rewritten and might not be 100% compatible with the old version. If you encounter any problems while using it please let me know: https://github.com/WoLpH/python-progressbar/issues
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 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:
- Timer
- ETA
- AdaptiveETA
- FileTransferSpeed
- AdaptiveTransferSpeed
- AnimatedMarker
- Counter
- Percentage
- FormatLabel
- SimpleProgress
- Bar
- ReverseBar
- BouncingBar
- RotatingMarker
- DynamicMessage
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.
- Documentation
- Package homepage
- My blog
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.
import time
import progressbar
bar = progressbar.ProgressBar()
for i in bar(range(100)):
time.sleep(0.02)
import time
import progressbar
with progressbar.ProgressBar(max_value=10) as bar:
for i in range(10):
time.sleep(0.1)
bar.update(i)
import time
import progressbar
bar = progressbar.ProgressBar(redirect_stdout=True)
for i in range(100):
print 'Some text', i
time.sleep(0.1)
bar.update(i)
import time
import progressbar
bar = progressbar.ProgressBar(max_value=progressbar.UnknownLength)
for i in range(20):
time.sleep(0.1)
bar.update(i)
import time
import progressbar
bar = progressbar.ProgressBar(widgets=[
' [', progressbar.Timer(), '] ',
progressbar.Bar(),
' (', progressbar.ETA(), ') ',
])
for i in bar(range(20)):
time.sleep(0.1)