txtProgressBar
Text Progress Bar
Description
Text progress bar in the R console.
Usage
txtProgressBar(min = 0, max = 1, initial = 0, char = "=", width = NA, title, label, style = 1, file = "") getTxtProgressBar(pb) setTxtProgressBar(pb, value, title = NULL, label = NULL) ## S3 method for class 'txtProgressBar' close(con, ...)
Arguments
min, max | (finite) numeric values for the extremes of the progress bar. Must have |
initial, value | initial or new value for the progress bar. See ‘Details’ for what happens with invalid values. |
char | the character (or character string) to form the progress bar. |
width | the width of the progress bar, as a multiple of the width of |
style | the ‘style’ of the bar – see ‘Details’. |
file | an open connection object or |
pb, con | an object of class |
title, label | ignored, for compatibility with other progress bars. |
... | for consistency with the generic. |
Details
txtProgressBar
will display a progress bar on the R console (or a connection) via a text representation.
setTxtProgessBar
will update the value. Missing (NA
) and out-of-range values of value
will be (silently) ignored. (Such values of initial
cause the progress bar not to be displayed until a valid value is set.)
The progress bar should be close
d when finished with: this outputs the final newline character.
style = 1
and style = 2
just shows a line of char
. They differ in that style = 2
redraws the line each time, which is useful if other code might be writing to the R console. style = 3
marks the end of the range by |
and gives a percentage to the right of the bar.
Value
For txtProgressBar
an object of class "txtProgressBar"
.
For getTxtProgressBar
and setTxtProgressBar
, a length-one numeric vector giving the previous value (invisibly for setTxtProgressBar
).
Note
Using style
2 or 3 or reducing the value with style = 1
uses \r to return to the left margin – the interpretation of carriage return is up to the terminal or console in which R is running, and this is liable to produce ugly output on a connection other than a terminal, including when stdout()
is redirected to a file.
See Also
winProgressBar
(Windows only), tkProgressBar
(Unix-alike platforms).
Examples
# slow testit <- function(x = sort(runif(20)), ...) { pb <- txtProgressBar(...) for(i in c(0, x, 1)) {Sys.sleep(0.5); setTxtProgressBar(pb, i)} Sys.sleep(1) close(pb) } testit() testit(runif(10)) testit(style = 3)
Copyright (©) 1999–2012 R Foundation for Statistical Computing.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License.