Update current line with command line tool in Swift - objective-c

I built a OS X command line tool in Swift (same problem in Objective-C) for downloading certain files. I am trying to update the command line with download progress. Unfortunately, I cannot prevent the print statement to jump to the next line.
According to my research, the carriage return \r should jump to the beginning of the same line (while \n would insert a new line).
All tests have been performed in the OS X Terminal app, not the Xcode console.
let logString = String(format: "%2i%% %.2fM \r", percentage, megaBytes)
print(logString)
Still, the display inserts a new line. How to prevent this?

Note: This won't work in Xcode's debugger window because it's not a real terminal emulator and doesn't fully support escape sequences. So, to test things, you have to compile it and then manually run it in a Terminal window.
\r should work to move to the beginning of the current line in most terminals, but you should also take a look at VT100 Terminal Control Escape Sequences. They work by sending an escape character, \u{1B} in Swift, and then a command. (Warning: they make some pretty ugly string definitions)
One that you'll probably need is \u{1B}[K which clears the line from the current cursor position to the end. If you don't do this and your progress output varies in length at all, you'll get artifacts left over from previous print statements.
Some other useful ones are:
Move to any (x, y) position: \u{1B}[\(y);\(x)H Note: x and y are Ints inserted with string interpolation.
Save cursor state and position: \u{1B}7
Restore cursor state and position: \u{1B}8
Clear screen: \u{1B}[2J
You can also do interesting things like set text foreground and background colors.
If for some reason you can't get \r to work, you could work around it by saving the cursor state/position just before you print your logString and then restoring it after:
let logString = String(format: "\u{1B}7%2i%% %.2fM \u{1B}8", percentage, megaBytes)
print(logString)
Or by moving to a pre-defined (x, y) position, before printing it:
let x = 0
let y = 1 // Rows typically start at 1 not 0, but it depends on the terminal and shell
let logString = String(format: "\u{1B}[\(y);\(x)H%2i%% %.2fM ", percentage, megaBytes)
print(logString)

Here's an example assuming some async task is taking place with callbacks that pass a Progress type.
// Print an empty string first otherwise whichever line is above the printed out progress will be removed
print("")
let someProgressCallback: ExampleAsyncCallbackType = { progress in
let percentage = Int(progress.fractionCompleted * 100)
print("\u{1B}[1A\u{1B}[KDownloaded: \(percentage)%")
}
The key part is \u{1B}[1A\u{1B}[K and then whatever you want to print out to the screen following.

Your example will only work on the actual command line, not in the debugger console. And you also need to flush stdout for every iteration, like this:
var logString = String(format: "%2i%% %.2fM \r", 10, 5)
print(logString)
fflush(__stdoutp)

Related

gnuplot 'set title' with sprintf : representing angle in terms of fractions of pi

I'd like to run a gnuplot .inp file so all the angles in the script show up automatically in the title as fractions based on the Greek letter pi - instead of a decimal form for the angle. I already know how to use {/Symbol p}, but that is a manual intervention that is impractical in this case.
I have an example sprintf line in a gnuplot input file which can produce nice title information :
angle=( (3*pi) /4 )
set title sprintf ("the angle is %g radians", angle)
plot sin(x)
... the output file (e.g. svg) or terminal (e.g. wxt) shows "2.35619", which is correct, however ; it would be nice to see the Greek letter for pi and the fraction itself, as is typically read off of a polar plot, e.g " 3/4 pi". Likewise for more complex or interesting representations of pi, such as "square root of two over two".
I already know I can manually go into the file and type in by hand "3{/Symbol p}/4", but this needs to be done automatically, because the actual title I am working with has numerous instances of pi showing up as a result of a setting of an angle.
I tried searching for examples of gnuplot being used with sprintf to produce the format of the angle I am interested in, and could not find anything. I am not aware of sprintf being capable of this. So if this is in fact impossible with gnuplot and sprintf, it will be helpful to know. Any tips on what to try next appreciated.
UPDATE: not a solution, but very interesting, might help :
use sprintf after the 'plot' to set the title that appears in the key (but not the overall title):
gnuplot setting line titles by variables
so for example here, the idea would be :
foo=20
plot sin(x)+foo t sprintf ("The angle is set to %g", foo)```
Here is an attempt to define a function to find fractions of Pi.
Basically, sum (check help sum) is used to find suitable multiples/fractions of Pi within a certain tolerance (here: 0.0001). It is "tested" until a denominator of 32. If no integer number is found, the number itself is returned.
In principle, the function could be extended to find multiples or fractions of roots, sqrt(2) or sqrt(3), etc.
This approach can certainly be improved, maybe there are smarter solutions.
Script:
### format number as multiple of pi
reset session
$Data <<EOD
1.5707963267949
-1.5707963267949
6.28318530717959
2.35619449019234
2.0943951023932
-0.98174770424681
2.24399475256414
1.0
1.04
1.047
1.0471
1.04719
EOD
set xrange[-10:10]
set yrange[:] reverse
set offset 0.25,0.25,0.25,0.25
set key noautotitle
dx = 0.0001
fPi(x) = (_x=x/pi, _p=sprintf("%g",x), _d=NaN, sum [_i=1:32] \
(_d!=_d && (abs(_x*_i - floor(_x*_i+dx)) < dx) ? \
(_n=floor(_x*_i+dx),_d=_i, \
_p=sprintf("%sπ%s",abs(_n)==1?_n<0?'-':'':sprintf("%d",_n),\
abs(_d)==1 ? '' : sprintf("/%d",_d)),0) : 0 ), _p)
plot $Data u (0):0:(fPi($1)) w labels font "Times New Roman, 16"
### end of script
Result:
I have [1] a workaround below that might be feasible, and [2] apparently what I was looking for below that (I am writing this in haste). I will mark the question "answered" anyway. To avoid reproducing theozh's script, I offer :
[1]:
add three lines to theozh's script - ideally, immediately before the 'plot' command :
set title sprintf ("Test: %g $\\sqrt{\\pi \\pi \\pi \\pi}$", pi)
set terminal tikz standalone
set output 'gnuplot_test.tex'
one can observe a little testing going on with nonsensical expressions of pi - it is just to see the vinculum extend, and this is a hasty thing - and the double-escapes - they appear to have made it to Stack Overflow correctly.
change the 'plot' line to remove the Times Roman part, but this might not be necessary :
plot $Data u (0):0:(fPi($1)) w labels
importantly, edit gnuplot_test.tex so an \end{document} is on the last line.
run 'pdflatex gnuplot_test.tex'.
This should help move things along - it appears the best approach is to go into the LaTeX world for this - thanks. I tried cairolatex pdf and eps but I was very confused with the LaTeX output. the tikz works almost perfectly.
[2]: What I was looking for : put this below the fPi(x) expression in gnuplot :
set title sprintf ("Testing : \n wxt terminal : \
%g %s %s %s \n tikz output : $\\sqrt{\\pi \\pi \\pi \\pi}$", \
pi, fPi(myAngle01), fPi(myAngle02), fPi(myAngle03) )
# set terminal tikz standalone
# set output 'gnuplot_test.tex'
plot $Data u (0):0:(fPi($1)) w labels t sprintf ("{/Symbol p}= %g, %s, %s, %s, %s", \
pi, fPi(pi), fPi(myAngle01), fPi(myAngle02), fPi(myAngle03) )
... the wxt terminal displays the angles as fractions of pi. I didn't test the output in the LaTeX pipeline - remove if undesired. I think the gnuplot script has to be written for the terminal or output desired - but at least the values can be computed - instead of writing them in "manually".

Ghostscript for PS integrity test: terminate at EOF, return error unless stack is empty

To test the integrity of PostScript files, I'd like to run Ghostscript in the following way:
Return 1 (or other error code) on error
Return 0 (success) at EOF if stack is empty
Return 1 (or other error code) otherwise
I could run gs in the background, and use a timeout to force termination if gs hangs with items left on the stack. Is there an easier solution?
Ghostscript won't hang if you send files as input (unless you write a program which enters an infinite loop or otherwise fails to reach a halting state). Having items on any of the stacks won't cause it to hang.
On the other hand, it won't give you an error if a PostScript program leaves operands on the operand stack (or dictionaries on the dictionary stack, clips on the clip stack or gstates on the graphics state stack). This is because that's not an error, and since PostScript interpreters normally run in a job server loop its not a problem either. Terminating the job returns control to the job server loop which does a save and restore round the total job, thereby clearing up anything left behind.
I'd suggest that if you really want to do this you need to adopt the same approach, you need to write a PostScript program which executes the PostScript program you want to 'test', then checks the operand stack (and other stacks if required) to see if anything is left. Note that you will want to execute the test program in a stopped context, as an error in the course of the program will clearly potentially leave stuff lying around.
Ghostscript returns 0 on a clean exit and a value less than 0 for errors, if I remember correctly. You would need to use signalerror in your test framework in order to raise an error if items are left at the end of a program.
[EDIT]
Anything supplied to Ghostscript on the command line by either -s or -d is defined in systemdict, so if we do -sInputFileName=/test.pdf then we will find in systemdict a key /InputFileName whose value is a string with the contents (/test.pdf). We can use that to pass the filename to our program.
The stopped operator takes an executable array as an argument, and returns either true or false depending on whether an error occurred while executing the array (3rd Edition PLRM, p 697).
So we need to run the program contained in the filename we've been given, and do it in a 'stopped' context. Something like this:
{InputFileName run} stopped
{
(Error occurred\n) print flush
%% Potentially check $error for more information.
}{
(program terminated normally\n) print flush
%% Here you could check the various stacks
} ifelse
The following, based 90% on KenS's answer, is 99% satisfactory:
Program checkIntegrity.ps:
{Script run} stopped
{
(\n===> Integrity test failed: ) print Script print ( has error\n\n) print
handleerror
(ignore this error which only serves to force a return value of 1) /syntaxerror signalerror
}{
% script passed, now check the stack
count dup 0 eq {
pop (\n===> Integrity test passed: ) print Script print ( terminated normally\n\n) print
} {
(\n===> Integrity test failed: ) print Script print ( left ) print
3 string cvs print ( item(s) on stack\n\n) print
Script /syntaxerror signalerror
} ifelse
} ifelse
quit
Execute with
gs -q -sScript=CodeToBeChecked.ps checkIntegrity.ps ; echo $?
For the last 1% of satisfaction I would need a replacement for
(blabla) /syntaxerror signalerror
It forces exit with return code 1, but is very verbous and distracts from the actual error in the checked script that is reported by handleerror. Therefore a cleaner way to exit(1) would be welcome.

How do you encrypt a message into a picture using Jython

I'm having problems with an assignment and am in no means looking for someone to do my homework for me. Our professor does not answer or provide adequate resources to our questions for our assignments. I have copied an example code that was given to us, but I am unable to make this itself run.
When I run this program all I receive in the command line is an ellipsis and nothing else.
Does anyone have an idea what the ellipsis means?
My code and command line screenshot
Screenshot of my example code
Attached will be the code:
def encode(msgPic,original):
# Assume msgPic and original have same dimensions
# First, make all red pixels even
for pxl in getPixels(original):
# Using modulo operator to test oddness
if (getRed(pxl) % 2) == 1:
setRed(pxl, getRed(pxl) - 1)
# Second, wherever there???s black in msgPic
# make odd the red in the corresponding original pixel
for x in range(0,getWidth(original)):
for y in range(0,getHeight(original)):
msgPxl = getPixel(msgPic,x,y)
origPxl = getPixel(original,x,y)
if (distance(getColor(msgPxl),black) < 100.0):
# It's a message pixel! Make the red value odd.
setRed(origPxl, getRed(origPxl)+1)
Below is the code that the example prompts to input into the command line:
- beach = makePicture(getMediaPath("beach.jpg"))
- explore(beach)"
- msg = makePicture(getMediaPath("msg.jpg"))
- encode(msg,beach)
- explore(beach)
- writePictureTo(beach,getMediaPath("beachHidden.png"))

Command line doesn't refresh immidately after carriage return

I have a code which does something similar to this one.
while(1){
printf("Telegrams received %d\r",telegrams); //notice \r
telegrams++;
sleep(); // for 0.2s
}
The output from this is one line in a command line which is being updated. However my problem is, that the line isn't updated after every telegram, but only after every 17... (which takes something like 3 seconds).
Is there any way, how to make this work to change every 0.2 seconds?
(when I press enter, there is displayed everything...)
I'm running this on raspberry pi with raspbian.
Thanks
Found an answer - I need to use fflush(stdout) after every printf.

Why doesn't io:write() write to the output file?

I'm writing a short script in Lua to replicate Search/Replace functionality. The goal is to enter a search term and a replacement term, and it will comb through all the files of a given extension (not input-determined yet) and replace the Search term with the Replacement term.
Everything seems to do what it's supposed to, except the files are not actually written to. My Lua interpreter (compiled by myself in Pelles-C) does not throw any errors or exit abnormally; the script completes as if it worked.
At first I didn't have i:flush(), but I added it after reading that it is supposed to save any written data to the file (see LUA docs). It didn't change anything, and files are still not written to.
I think it might have something to do with how I'm opening the file to edit it, since the "w" option works (but overwrites everything in my test files).
Source:
io.write("Enter your search term:")
term = io.read()
io.write("Enter your replace term:")
replacement = io.read()
io.stdin:read()
t = {}
for z in io.popen('dir /b /a-d'):lines() do
if string.match(string.lower(z), "%.txt$") then
print(z)
table.insert(t, z)
end
end
print("Second loop")
for _, w in pairs(t) do
print(w)
i = io.open(w, "r+")
print(i)
--i:seek("set", 6)
--i:write("cheese")
--i:flush()
for y in i:lines() do
print(y)
p, count = string.gsub(y, term, replacement, 1)
print(p)
i:write(p)
i:flush()
io.stdin:read()
end
i:close()
end
This is the output I get (which is what I want to happen), but in reality isn't being written to the file:
There was one time where it wrote output to a file, but it only output to one file and after that write my script crashed with the message: No error. The line number was at the for y in i:lines() do line, but I don't know why it broke there. I've noticed file:lines() will break if the file itself has nothing in it and give an odd/gibberish error, but there are things in my text files.
Edit1
I tried do this in my for loop:
for y in i:lines() do
print(y)
p, count = string.gsub(y, term, replacement, 1)
print(p)
i:write(p)
i:seek("set", 3) --New
i:write("TESTESTTEST") --New
i:flush()
io.stdin:read()
end
in order to see if I could force it to write regular text. It does but then it crashes with No error and still doesn't write the replacement string (just TESTESTTEST). I don't know what the problem could be.
I guess, one can't write to file while traversing its lines
for y in i:lines() do
i:write(p)
i:flush()
end