Printing an ASCII spinning "cursor" in the console

peter picture peter · Apr 21, 2012 · Viewed 11.1k times · Source

I have a Ruby script that does some long taking jobs. It is command-line only and I would like to show that the script is still running and not halted. I used to like the so called "spinning cursor" in the old days and I managed to reproduce it in Ruby under Windows.

Question: does this work in the other OS's? If not, is there an OS-independent way to accomplish this?

No IRB solutions please.

10.times {
  print "/"
  sleep(0.1)
  print "\b"
  print "-"
  sleep(0.1)
  print "\b"
  print "\\"
  sleep(0.1)
  print "\b"
  print "|"
  sleep(0.1)
  print "\b"
}

Answer

Phrogz picture Phrogz · Apr 21, 2012

Yes, this works on Windows, OS X, and Linux. Improving on Niklas' suggestion, you can make this more general like so:

def show_wait_cursor(seconds,fps=10)
  chars = %w[| / - \\]
  delay = 1.0/fps
  (seconds*fps).round.times{ |i|
    print chars[i % chars.length]
    sleep delay
    print "\b"
  }
end

show_wait_cursor(3)

If you don't know how long the process will take, you can do this in another thread:

def show_wait_spinner(fps=10)
  chars = %w[| / - \\]
  delay = 1.0/fps
  iter = 0
  spinner = Thread.new do
    while iter do  # Keep spinning until told otherwise
      print chars[(iter+=1) % chars.length]
      sleep delay
      print "\b"
    end
  end
  yield.tap{       # After yielding to the block, save the return value
    iter = false   # Tell the thread to exit, cleaning up after itself…
    spinner.join   # …and wait for it to do so.
  }                # Use the block's return value as the method's
end

print "Doing something tricky..."
show_wait_spinner{
  sleep rand(4)+2 # Simulate a task taking an unknown amount of time
}
puts "Done!"

This one outputs:

Doing something tricky...|
Doing something tricky.../
Doing something tricky...-
Doing something tricky...\ 
(et cetera)
Doing something tricky...done!