How to update a printed message in terminal withou

2019-01-08 12:03发布

I want to make a progress bar for my terminal application that would work something like:

 [XXXXXXX       ] 

which would give a visual indication of how much time there is left before the process completes.

I know I can do something like printing more and more X's by adding them to the string and then simply printf, but that would look like:

 [XXXXXXX       ] 
 [XXXXXXXX      ] 
 [XXXXXXXXX     ] 
 [XXXXXXXXXX    ] 

or something like that (obviously you can play with the spacing.) But this is not visually aesthetic. Is there a way to update the printed text in a terminal with new text without reprinting? This is all under linux, c++.

8条回答
够拽才男人
2楼-- · 2019-01-08 12:41

'\r' will perform a carriage return. Imagine a printer doing a carriage return without a linefeed ('\n'). This will return the writing point back to the start of the line... then reprint your updated status on top of the original line.

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forever°为你锁心
3楼-- · 2019-01-08 12:43

I'd say that a library like ncurses would be used to such things. curses helps move the cursor around the screen and draw text and such.

NCurses

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\"骚年 ilove
4楼-- · 2019-01-08 12:45

I've written this loading bar utility some time ago. Might be useful...

https://github.com/BlaDrzz/CppUtility/tree/master/LoadingBar

You can customise basically anything in here.

int max = 1000;
LoadingBar* lb = new LoadingBar(10, 0, max);

for (size_t i = 0; i <= max; i++)
{
    lb->print();
    lb->iterate();
}
cout << lb->toString() << endl;

Very simple and customisable implementation..

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手持菜刀,她持情操
5楼-- · 2019-01-08 12:48

Something like this:

std::stringstream out;
for (int i = 0; i< 10; i++)
{
  out << "X";
  cout << "\r" << "[" << out.str() << "]";
}

The sneaky bit is the carriage return character "\r" which causes the cursor to move to the start of the line without going down to the next line.

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干净又极端
6楼-- · 2019-01-08 12:52

It's a different language, but this question might be of assistance to you. Basically, the escape character \r (carriage Return, as opposed to \n Newline) moves you back to the beginning of your current printed line so you can overwrite what you've already printed.

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混吃等死
7楼-- · 2019-01-08 12:52

Another option is to simply print one character at a time. Typically, stdout is line buffered, so you'll need to call fflush(stdout) --

for(int i = 0; i < 50; ++i) {
   putchar('X'); fflush(stdout);
   /* do some stuff here */
}
putchar('\n');

But this doesn't have the nice terminating "]" that indicates completion.

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