kdam is a port of tqdm library which is written in python. kdam has almost same features as tqdm with extra features included. Some features couldn't be ported due to language barriers. kdam is also 8-10 times faster than tqdm.
Instantly make your loops show a smart progress meter. Just wrap any iterator with tqdm!(iterator) macro and you're done!
```rust use kdam::tqdm;
fn main() { for _ in tqdm!(0..100) {} } ```
100%|█████████████████████████████| 100/100 [00:00<00:00, 25854.49it/s]
Add this to your Cargo.toml file.
toml
[dependencies]
kdam = "0.1.0"
```rust use kdam::tqdm;
fn main() { let chars = ["a", "b", "c", "d"]; let mut charset = String::new();
for i in tqdm!(chars.iter()) {
charset += i;
}
assert_eq!(charset, "abcd");
} ```
```rust use kdam::tqdm;
fn main() { let mut pb = tqdm!(total = 100); for _ in 0..100 { pb.update(1); } } ```
Another example without a total value. This only shows basic stats.
```rust use kdam::tqdm;
fn main() { let mut pb = tqdm!();
for _ in 0..10000000 {
pb.update(1);
}
pb.refresh();
} ```
10000000 [00:03, 2998660.35it/s]
Custom information can be displayed and updated dynamically on kdam
bars with the desc
and postfix
.
```rust use kdam::tqdm;
fn main() { let mut pb = tqdm!(total = 10); pb.refresh();
for i in 0..10 {
std::thread::sleep(std::time::Duration::from_secs_f32(0.5));
pb.set_description(format!("GEN {}", i));
pb.set_postfix(format!("str={}, lst={:?}", "h", [1, 2]));
pb.update(1);
}
} ```
GEN 4: 50%|█████████▎ | 5/10 [00:02<00:02, 1.95it/s, str=h, lst=[1, 2]]
kdam
supports nested progress bars. For manual control over positioning (e.g. for multi-processing use), you may specify position=n
where n=0
for the outermost bar, n=1
for the next, and so on.
```rust use kdam::tqdm;
fn main() { for _ in tqdm!(0..4, desc = "1st loop".tostring(), position = 0) { for _ in tqdm!(0..5, desc = "2nd loop".tostring(), position = 1) { for _ in tqdm!(0..50, desc = "3rd loop".tostring(), position = 2) { std::thread::sleep(std::time::Duration::fromsecs_f32(0.0001)); } } } print!("{}", "\n".repeat(3)); println!("completed!"); } ```
1st loop: 50%|███████▎ | 2/4 [00:08<00:08, 0.25it/s]
2nd loop: 60%|████████▌ | 3/5 [00:02<00:01, 1.25it/s]
3rd loop: 0%|▎ | 0/50 [00:00<00:00, ?it/s]
Since kdam
uses a simple printing mechanism to display progress bars, you should not write any message in the terminal using println!()
while a progressbar is open.
To write messages in the terminal without any collision with kdam
bar display, a .write()
method is provided.
```rust use kdam::tqdm;
fn main() { let mut pb = tqdm!(total = 10);
for i in 0..10 {
std::thread::sleep(std::time::Duration::from_secs_f32(0.1));
pb.update(1);
pb.write(format!("Done task {}", i));
}
} ```
By default, this will print to standard output.
Done task 0
Done task 1
Done task 2
Done task 3
Done task 4
Done task 5
Done task 6
Done task 7
Done task 8
Done task 9
100%|███████████████████████████| 10/10 [00:02<00:00, 4.31it/s]
© 2022 clitic
This repository is licensed under the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.