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progress


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Progress bar in your R terminal

An R package to show ASCII progress bars. Heavily influenced by the https://github.com/tj/node-progress JavaScript project.

Installation

devtools::install_github("r-lib/progress")

Usage

Use the progress_bar R6 class:

library(progress)
pb <- progress_bar$new(total = 100)
for (i in 1:100) {
  pb$tick()
  Sys.sleep(1 / 100)
}
[==========================================================-------------]  81%

The progress bar is displayed after the first tick command. This might not be desirable for long computations, because nothing is shown before the first tick. It is good practice to call tick(0) at the beginning of the computation or download, which shows the progress bar immediately.

pb <- progress_bar$new(total = 100)
f <- function() {
  pb$tick(0)
  Sys.sleep(3)
  for (i in 1:100) {
    pb$tick()
    Sys.sleep(1 / 100)
  }
}
f()

Custom format, with estimated time of completion:

pb <- progress_bar$new(
  format = "  downloading [:bar] :percent eta: :eta",
  total = 100, clear = FALSE, width= 60)
for (i in 1:100) {
  pb$tick()
  Sys.sleep(1 / 100)
}
  downloading [========----------------------]  28% eta:  1s

With elapsed time:

pb <- progress_bar$new(
  format = "  downloading [:bar] :percent in :elapsed",
  total = 100, clear = FALSE, width= 60)
for (i in 1:100) {
  pb$tick()
  Sys.sleep(1 / 100)
}
  downloading [==========================------]  80% in  1s
pb <- progress_bar$new(
  format = "  downloading [:bar] :elapsedfull",
  total = 1000, clear = FALSE, width= 60)
for (i in 1:1000) {
  pb$tick()
  Sys.sleep(1 / 100)
}
  downloading [=====================--------------] 00:00:08

With custom tokens:

pb <- progress_bar$new(
  format = "  downloading :what [:bar] :percent eta: :eta",
  clear = FALSE, total = 200, width = 60)
f <- function() {
  for (i in 1:100) {
    pb$tick(tokens = list(what = "foo   "))
    Sys.sleep(2 / 100)
  }
  for (i in 1:100) {
    pb$tick(tokens = list(what = "foobar"))
    Sys.sleep(2 / 100)
  }
}
f()
  downloading foo    [======------------------]  27% eta:  4s

It can show download rates for files with unknown sizes:

pb <- progress_bar$new(
  format = "  downloading foobar at :rate, got :bytes in :elapsed",
  clear = FALSE, total = 1e7, width = 60)
f <- function() {
  for (i in 1:100) {
    pb$tick(sample(1:100 * 1000, 1))
    Sys.sleep(2/100)
  }
  pb$tick(1e7)
  invisible()
}
f()
  downloading foobar at 5.42 MB/s, got 15.45 MB in  3s

Progress bars can also digress, by supplying negative values to tick():

pb <- progress_bar$new()
f <- function() {
  pb$tick(50)  ; Sys.sleep(1)
  pb$tick(-20) ; Sys.sleep(1)
  pb$tick(50)  ; Sys.sleep(1)
  pb$tick(-30) ; Sys.sleep(1)
  pb$tick(100)
}
f()

See the manual for details and other options.

Creating a plyr compatible progress bar

It is easy to create progress bars for plyr:

progress_progress <- function(...) {
  pb <- NULL
  list(
    init = function(x, ...) {
      pb <<- progress_bar$new(total = x, ...)
    },
	step = function() {
      pb$tick()
    },
	term = function() NULL
  )
}

You can try it with

plyr::l_ply(
  1:100,
  .fun = function(...) Sys.sleep(0.01),
  .progress = 'progress'
)

C++ API

The package also provides a C++ API, that can be used with or without Rcpp. See the example package that is included within progress. Here is a short excerpt that shows how it works:

#include <RProgress.h>

...

RProgress::RProgress pb("Downloading [:bar] ETA: :eta");

  pb.tick(0);
  for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
    usleep(2.0 / 100 * 1000000);
    pb.tick();
  }

...

The C++ API has almost the same functionality as the R API, except that it does not currently support custom tokens, custom streams, and callback functions.

Note that the C++ and the R APIs are independent and for a single progress bar you need to use either one exclusively.

License

MIT

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Progress bar in your R terminal

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  • R 68.4%
  • C++ 31.6%