CLISpinner

main

Swifty Terminal Spinner
kiliankoe/CLISpinner

CLISpinner

Travis

60+ spinners for use in the terminal

Shamelessly ripped off from sindresorhus/cli-spinners.

Install

.package(url: "https://github.com/kiliankoe/CLISpinner", from: "see latest release")

Usage

Just want to display a simple spinner for two seconds?

let s = Spinner(pattern: .dots)
s.start()
sleep(2)
s.stop()

Want some changing text and patterns?

let s = Spinner(pattern: .dots, text: "Foobar...", color: .lightCyan)
s.start()
sleep(2)
s.succeed(text: "Barfoo")
// will change the displayed text to '✔ Barfoo'

Made your own custom pattern?

let pattern = try Pattern.load(from: "/path/to/your/pattern.json")
let s = spinner(pattern: pattern)
s.start()
sleep(2)
s.stop()

Want all the patterns from sindresorhus/cli-spinners?

let patterns = try Patterns(from: "/path/to/spinners.json")
let s = spinner(pattern: patterns["christmas"]!)
s.start()
sleep(2)
s.stop()

That's basically it 👌

Creating your own Pattern

The Pattern type can read in patterns from a JSON file using the following format:

{
    "frames": [
        "1",
        "2",
        "3",
        "4",
        "5"
    ],
    "speed": 0.08
}

To keep multiple patterns in a single file:

{
    "pattern-name1": {
        "frames": [
            "<(**<)",
            "<(**)>",
            "(>**)>"
        ],
        "speed": 0.01
    },
    "pattern-name2": {
        "frames": [
            "1",
            "2",
            "3",
            "2"
        ],
        "speed": 0.12
    }
}

Caveat

To look nice the spinner hides the user's cursor as long as it's running and displays it again when stopped. The issue with this is that the cursor will still be hidden if the user interrupts the process (by sending a SIGINT through ctrl+c for example). The best way to handle this is by setting up a signal handler in your code and calling spinner.unhideCursor() on exiting. This library purposefully does not do that for you so as not to interfere with any possible signal handlers you might already have set up.

See IBM-Swift/BlueSignals for a clean and safe way of handling signals. The appropriate signal handler for your project could look something like this.

import Signals

let spinner = Spinner(pattern: .dots)
// ...

Signals.trap(signal: .int) { _ in
    spinner.unhideCursor()
    exit(0)
}

Used by

Description

  • Swift Tools 5.0.0
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Dependencies

Last updated: Fri Oct 18 2024 00:44:42 GMT-0900 (Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight Time)