Differences between revisions 12 and 15 (spanning 3 versions)
Revision 12 as of 2017-03-31 05:22:26
Size: 1318
Editor: r180-216-10-159
Comment: Empty line removed for aesthetic uniformity.
Revision 15 as of 2023-08-02 14:20:58
Size: 1637
Editor: 195
Comment: remove useless sleep calls
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 6: Line 6:
i=0
sp='/-\|'
n=${#sp}
printf ' '
sleep 0.1
while true; do
# Bash, with GNU sleep
spin() {
  local
i=0
  local sp='/-\|'
  local n=${#sp}
  printf ' '
  sleep 0.1
  while true; do
Line 14: Line 16:
done   done
}
Line 26: Line 29:
sp='/-\|'
printf ' '
sleep 0.1
while true; do
# POSIX sh
spin() {
  
sp='/-\|'
  printf ' '
  sleep 1
  while true; do
Line 32: Line 37:
    sleep 0.1
done
    sleep 1
  done
}
Line 36: Line 42:
If you already have a loop which does a lot of work, you can call the following function at the beginning of each iteration to update the spinner: One way to use these spinners in a script is to run them as background processes, and kill them when you're done. For example,
Line 39: Line 45:
# POSIX sh
spin & spinpid=$!
# long-running commands here
kill "$spinpid"
}}}

If you already have a loop which does a lot of work, you can write a function that "advances" the spinner one step at a time, and call it at the beginning of each iteration:

{{{
# Bash
Line 41: Line 57:
sn=${#sp}
Line 42: Line 59:
    printf "\b${sp:sc++:1}"
    ((sc==${#sp})) && sc=0
    sleep 0.1
    printf '\b%s' "${sp:sc++%sn:1}"
Line 47: Line 62:
    printf "\r%s\n" "$@"
    sleep 0.1
    printf '\r%s\n' "$*"
Line 50: Line 64:

Can I do a spinner in Bash?

Sure!

# Bash, with GNU sleep
spin() {
  local i=0
  local sp='/-\|'
  local n=${#sp}
  printf ' '
  sleep 0.1
  while true; do
    printf '\b%s' "${sp:i++%n:1}"
    sleep 0.1
  done
}

Each time the loop iterates, it displays the next character in the sp string, wrapping around as it reaches the end. (i is the position of the current character to display and ${#sp} is the length of the sp string).

The \b string is replaced by a 'backspace' character. Alternatively, you could play with \r to go back to the beginning of the line.

To slow it down, the sleep command is included inside the loop (after the printf).

A POSIX equivalent would be:

# POSIX sh
spin() {
  sp='/-\|'
  printf ' '
  sleep 1
  while true; do
    printf '\b%.1s' "$sp"
    sp=${sp#?}${sp%???}
    sleep 1
  done
}

One way to use these spinners in a script is to run them as background processes, and kill them when you're done. For example,

# POSIX sh
spin & spinpid=$!
# long-running commands here
kill "$spinpid"

If you already have a loop which does a lot of work, you can write a function that "advances" the spinner one step at a time, and call it at the beginning of each iteration:

# Bash
sp='/-\|'
sc=0
sn=${#sp}
spin() {
    printf '\b%s' "${sp:sc++%sn:1}"
}
endspin() {
    printf '\r%s\n' "$*"
}

until work_done; do
   spin
   some_work ...
done
endspin

A similar technique can be used to build progress bars.


CategoryShell

BashFAQ/034 (last edited 2023-10-26 18:03:57 by emanuele6)