Rebecca Turner
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README.md
gauge
A nearly stateless terminal based horizontal guage / progress bar.
var Gauge = require("gauge")
var gauge = new Gauge()
gauge.show("test", 0.20)
gauge.pulse("this")
gauge.hide()
var gauge = new Gauge([options], [ansiStream])
- options – (optional) An option object. (See below for details.)
- ansiStream – (optional) A stream that's been blessed by the ansi module to include various commands for controlling the cursor in a terminal.
Constructs a new gauge. Gauges are drawn on a single line, and are not drawn if the current terminal isn't a tty.
If you resize your terminal in a way that can be detected then the gauge will be drawn at the new size. As a general rule, growing your terminal will be clean, but shrinking your terminal will result in cruft as we don't have enough information to know where what we wrote previously is now located.
The options object can have the following properties, all of which are optional:
- maxUpdateFrequency: defaults to 50 msec, the gauge will not be drawn more
than once in this period of time. This applies to
show
andpulse
calls, but if youhide
and thenshow
the gauge it will draw it regardless of time since last draw. - theme: defaults to Gauge.unicode
if the terminal supports unicode according to [has-unicode], otherwise it defaults to
Gauge.ascii`. Details on the theme object are documented elsewhere. - template: see documentation elsewhere for defaults and details.
If ansiStream isn't passed in, then one will be constructed from stderr
with ansi(process.stderr)
.
gauge.show([name, [completed]])
- name – (optional) The name of the current thing contributing to progress. Defaults to the last value used, or "".
- completed – (optional) The portion completed as a value between 0 and 1. Defaults to the last value used, or 0.
If process.stdout.isTTY
is false then this does nothing. If completed is 0
and gauge.pulse
has never been called, then similarly nothing will be printed.
If maxUpdateFrequency
msec haven't passed since the last call to show
or
pulse
then similarly, nothing will be printed. (Actually, the update is
deferred until maxUpdateFrequency
msec have passed and if nothing else has
happened, the gauge update will happen.)
gauge.hide()
Removes the gauge from the terminal.
gauge.pulse([name])
- name – (optional) The specific thing that triggered this pulse
Spins the spinner in the gauge to show output. If name is included then
it will be combined with the last name passed to gauge.show
using the
subsection property of the theme (typically a right facing arrow).
gauge.disable()
Hides the gauge and ignores further calls to show
or pulse
.
gauge.enable()
Shows the gauge and resumes updating when show
or pulse
is called.
gauge.setTheme(theme)
Change the active theme, will be displayed with the next show or pulse
gauge.setTemplate(template)
Change the active template, will be displayed with the next show or pulse
Theme Objects
There are two theme objects available as a part of the module, Gauge.unicode
and Gauge.ascii
.
Theme objects have the follow properties:
Property | Unicode | ASCII |
---|---|---|
startgroup | ╢ | | |
endgroup | ╟ | | |
complete | █ | # |
incomplete | ░ | - |
spinner | ▀▐▄▌ | -\|/ |
subsection | → | -> |
startgroup, endgroup and subsection can be as many characters as you want.
complete and incomplete should be a single character width each.
spinner is a list of characters to use in turn when displaying an activity spinner. The Gauge will spin as many characters as you give here.
Template Objects
A template is an array of objects and strings that, after being evaluated, will be turned into the gauge line. The default template is:
[
{type: "name", separated: true, maxLength: 25, minLength: 25, align: "left"},
{type: "spinner", separated: true},
{type: "startgroup"},
{type: "completionbar"},
{type: "endgroup"}
]
The various template elements can either be plain strings, in which case they will be be included verbatum in the output.
If the template element is an object, it can have the following keys:
- type can be:
name
– The most recent name passed toshow
; if this is in response to apulse
then the name passed topulse
will be appended along with the subsection property from the theme.spinner
– If you've ever calledpulse
this will be one of the characters from the spinner property of the theme.startgroup
– Thestartgroup
property from the theme.completionbar
– This progress bar itselfendgroup
– Theendgroup
property from the theme.
- separated – If true, the element will be separated with spaces from things on either side (and margins count as space, so it won't be indented), but only if its included.
- maxLength – The maximum length for this element. If its value is longer it will be truncated.
- minLength – The minimum length for this element. If its value is shorter it will be padded according to the align value.
- align – (Default: left) Possible values "left", "right" and "center". Works as you'd expect from word processors.
- length – Provides a single value for both minLength and maxLength. If both length and *minLength or maxLength are specifed then the latter take precedence.
Tracking Completion
If you have more than one thing going on that you want to track completion
of, you may find the related are-we-there-yet helpful. It's change
event can be wired up to the show
method to get a more traditional
progress bar interface.