Console progress bar for Rust Inspired from pb, support and tested on MacOS, Linux and Windows
- simple example
 
use pbr::ProgressBar;
use std::thread;
fn main() {
    let count = 1000;
    let mut pb = ProgressBar::new(count);
    pb.format("╢▌▌░╟");
    for _ in 0..count {
        pb.inc();
        thread::sleep_ms(200);
    }
    pb.finish_print("done");
}- MultiBar example. see full example here
 
use std::thread;
use pbr::MultiBar;
use std::time::Duration;
fn main() {
    let mut mb = MultiBar::new();
    let count = 100;
    mb.println("Application header:");
    let mut p1 = mb.create_bar(count);
    let _ = thread::spawn(move || {
        for _ in 0..count {
            p1.inc();
            thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(100));
        }
        // notify the multibar that this bar finished.
        p1.finish();
    });
    mb.println("add a separator between the two bars");
    let mut p2 = mb.create_bar(count * 2);
    let _ = thread::spawn(move || {
        for _ in 0..count * 2 {
            p2.inc();
            thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(100));
        }
        // notify the multibar that this bar finished.
        p2.finish();
    });
    // start listen to all bars changes.
    // this is a blocking operation, until all bars will finish.
    // to ignore blocking, you can run it in a different thread.
    mb.listen();
}- Broadcast writing (simple file copying)
 
#![feature(io)]
use std::io::copy;
use std::io::prelude::*;
use std::fs::File;
use pbr::{ProgressBar, Units};
fn main() {
    let mut file = File::open("/usr/share/dict/words").unwrap();
    let n_bytes = file.metadata().unwrap().len() as usize;
    let mut pb = ProgressBar::new(n_bytes);
    pb.set_units(Units::Bytes);
    let mut handle = File::create("copy-words").unwrap().broadcast(&mut pb);
    copy(&mut file, &mut handle).unwrap();
    pb.finish_print("done");
}MIT
