A simple, configurable, multi-platform terminal spinner.
Spinner running on a Mac. See the Linux and Windows demos.
Spinner is for giving the user visual feedback during processing in command line apps. It has the following features:
- Works cross-platform
- Completely customisable (messages, symbols, spinners)
- Sensible defaults for non-VT100 systems
- Smoooothe! (no ghost cursors, minimal text updates)
- Minimal memory allocation (Reusable spinner)
- Graceful handling of Ctrl-C interrupts
Tested on:
- Windows 10
- MacOS 10.13.5
- Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
go get -u github.com/leaanthony/spinner
Spinners are created using New(optionalMessage string), which takes an optional message to display.
myspinner := spinner.New("Processing images")
or
myspinner := spinner.New()
To start the spinner, simply call Start(optionalMessage string). If the optional message is passed, it will be used as the spinner message.
myspinner := spinner.New("Processing images")
myspinner.Start()
is equivalent to
myspinner := spinner.New()
myspinner.Start("Processing images")
It's possible to reuse an existing spinner by calling Start() on a spinner that has been previously stopped with Error() or Success().
The spinner message can be updated with UpdateMessage(string) whilst running.
myspinner := spinner.New()
myspinner.Start("Processing images")
time.Sleep(time.Second * 2)
myspinner.UpdateMessage("Adding funny text")
time.Sleep(time.Second * 2)
myspinner.Success("Your memes are ready")
To stop the spinner and indicate successful completion, call the Success(optionalMessage string) method. This will print a success symbol with the original message - all in green. If the optional string is given, it will be used instead of the original message.
// Default
myspinner := spinner.New("Processing images")
myspinner.Start()
time.Sleep(time.Second * 2)
myspinner.Success()
// Custom Message
myspinner := spinner.New("Processing audio")
myspinner.Start()
time.Sleep(time.Second * 2)
myspinner.Success("It took a while, but that was successful!")
To stop the spinner and indicate an error, call the Error(optionalMessage string) method. This has the same functionality as Success(), but will print an error symbol and it will all be in red.
// Default
myspinner := spinner.New("Processing images")
myspinner.Start()
time.Sleep(time.Second * 2)
myspinner.Error()
// Custom message
myspinner := spinner.New("Processing audio")
myspinner.Start()
time.Sleep(time.Second * 2)
myspinner.Error("Too many lolcats!")
In addition to Success() and Error(), there is Successf() and Errorf(). Both take the same parameters: (format string, args ...interface{}). This is identical to fmt.Sprintf (which it uses under the hood).
// Formatted Success
a = spinner.New("This is a formatted custom success message")
a.Start()
time.Sleep(time.Second * 2)
spin := "Spinner"
awesome := "Awesome"
a.Successf("%s is %s!", spin, awesome)
// Formatted Error
a = spinner.New("This is a formatted custom error message")
a.Start()
secs := 2
time.Sleep(time.Second * time.Duration(secs))
a.Errorf("I waited %d seconds to error!", secs)
Both Success() and Error() use symbols (as well as colour) to indicate their status. These symbols default to spaces on Windows and ✓ & ✗ on other (vt100 compatible) platforms. They can be set manually using the SetSuccessSymbol(symbol string) and SetErrorSymbol(symbol string) methods.
myspinner := spinner.New("Processing images")
// Custom symbols
myspinner.SetErrorSymbol("💩")
myspinner.SetSuccessSymbol("🏆")
myspinner.Start()
time.Sleep(time.Second * 2)
myspinner.Error("It broke :(")
By default, the spinner used is the spinning bar animation on Windows and the snake animation for other platforms. This can be customised using SetSpinFrames(frames []string). It takes a slice of strings defining the spinner symbols.
myspinner := spinner.New("Processing images")
myspinner.SetSpinFrames([]string{"^", ">", "v", "<"})
myspinner.Start()
time.Sleep(time.Second * 2)
myspinner.Success()
By default, Ctrl-C will error out the current spinner with the message "Aborted (ctrl-c)". A custom message can be set using SetAbortMessage(string).
myspinner := spinner.New("💣 Tick...tick...tick...")
myspinner.SetAbortMessage("Defused!")
myspinner.Start()
time.Sleep(time.Second * 5)
myspinner.Success("💥 Boom!")
I tried to find a simple, true cross platform spinner for Go that did what I wanted and couldn't find one. I'm sure they exist, but this was fun.
This project uses the awesome Color library. The code for handling windows cursor hiding and showing was split off into a different project (wincursor)