What Alan wrote makes sense if you just want to put out one mark per second till you stop.
But if you want a percentage of progress, you need some way to estimate what percent of the way you are to being done. You need to determine how many marks represent 100% such as 50 periods. You need to have your code pause periodically and assess if the current percentage requires more characters than have been put out so far. If you were at 10% last time and had put out 5 dots and are now at 16% and need 3 more dots, you might say something like this with n=3, and ch="." print(ch*n, end="", flush=True), sep="") Note you want to make sure the buffers are flushed to make it real time and when done may want to print a newline so any further output is not left dangling. The above print statement is for Python 3.x, and as Alan explained, in version 2.X you may need to use alternate syntax. Not sure how you flush buffers but you can skip the print statement and write in other ways to sys.stdout. -----Original Message----- From: Tutor <tutor-bounces+avigross=verizon....@python.org> On Behalf Of Alan Gauld via Tutor Sent: Wednesday, November 7, 2018 2:15 PM To: tutor@python.org Subject: Re: [Tutor] Displaying Status on the Command Line On 07/11/2018 16:22, Chip Wachob wrote: > What I would like to do is display, on a single line, in the terminal > / command line a progress percentage, or, simply a sequence of - / - > \, etc.. or even, accumulating period characters. > > What would the escape codes be, or is there a better way to handle this? It depends on your Python version. In Python v2 you simply put a comma after your output character to turn off the auto newline while someProcess(): # should probably be in a separate thread... time.sleep(1) # 1 second pause print '.', # comma suppresses newline If you want to suppress the spaces tyoo things get a tad more complex and you are probably best writing direct to sys.stdout In Python 3 there are parameters to print() while someProcess(): time.sleep(1) print('.', end='', sep='') # no newline and no spaces You shouldn't need any special escape codes. -- Alan G Author of the Learn to Program web site http://www.alan-g.me.uk/ http://www.amazon.com/author/alan_gauld Follow my photo-blog on Flickr at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/alangauldphotos _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor