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MatlabProgressBar

This project hosts the source code to the original MATLAB FileExchange project and is place of active development.

A drawback in MATLAB's own waitbar() function is the lack of some functionalities and the loss of speed due to the rather laggy GUI updating process. Therefore, this MATLAB class aims to provide a smart progress bar in the command window and is optimized for progress information in simple iterations or large frameworks with full support of parallel parfor loops and asynchronous processing via parfeval() provided by the MATLAB Parallel Computing Toolbox.

A design target was to mimic the best features of the progress bar tqdm for Python. Thus, this project features a Unicode-based bar and some numeric information about the current progress and the average iterations per second.

Several projects exist on MATLAB's File Exchange but none incorporates the feature set shown below. That's why I decided to start this project.

Easy progress bar example

Supported features include (or are planned):

Note: Be sure to have a look at the Known Issues section for current known bugs and possible work-arounds.

Dependencies

No dependencies to toolboxes.

The code has been tested with MATLAB R2016a, R2016b and R2020b on Windows 10, Xubuntu 16.04.2 LTS and Linux Mint 20.

Installation

Put the files ProgressBar.m, progress.m and updateParallel.m into your MATLAB path or the directory of your MATLAB project.

Usage

Detailed information and examples about all features of ProgressBar are stated in the demo scripts in the ./demos/ directory.

Proposed Usage for Simple Loops

The simplest use in for-loops is to use the progress() function. It wraps the main ProgressBar class and is intended to only support the usual progress bar. Be aware that functionalities like printMessage(), printing success information or a step size different to 1 are not supported with progress.m. Also, this only works for non-parallel loops.

See the example below:

numIterations = 10e3;

% create the loop using the progress() class
for iIteration = progress(1:numIterations)
    % do some processing
end

Example 2

Extended Usage with all Features

The basic work flow is to instantiate a ProgressBar object and use either the step() method to update the progress state (MATLAB <= R2015b) or use the instantiated object directly as seen below. Refer to the method's help for information about input parameters. The shown call is the default call and sufficient. If you want to pass information about the step size, the iteration's success or if a new bar should be printed immediately (e.g. when iterations take long time) you can pass these information instead of empty matrices.

All settings are done using name-value pairs in the constructor. It is strongly encouraged to call the object's release() method after the loop is finished to clean up the internal state and avoid possibly unrobust behavior of following progress bars.

Usage obj = ProgressBar(totalIterations, varargin)

A simple but quite common example looks like this:

numIterations = 10e3;

% instantiate an object with an optional title and an update
% rate of 5 Hz, i.e. 5 bar updates per seconds, to save
% printing load.
progBar = ProgressBar(...
    numIterations, ...
    'Title', 'Awesome Computation' ...
    );

% begin the actual loop and update the object's progress
% state
for iIteration = 1:numIterations
    %%% do some processing here
    % ...

    progBar([], [], []);
    % or in releases <= R2015b
    % progBar.step([], [], []);
end
% call the 'release()' method to clean up
progBar.release();

Extended usage with the object method calls

Parallel Toolbox Support

If you use MATLAB's Parallel Computing Toolbox, refer to the following example or the demo file k_parallelSetup.m. Tested parallel functionalities are parfor and parfeval() for asynchronous processing.

numIterations = 10e3;

% Instantiate the object with the 'IsParallel' switch set to true
progBar = ProgressBar(numIterations, ...
    'IsParallel', true, ...
    'Title', 'Parallel Processing' ...
    );

% ALWAYS CALL THE SETUP() METHOD FIRST!!!
progBar.setup([], [], []);
parfor iIteration = 1:numIterations
    pause(0.1);

    % USE THIS FUNCTION AND NOT THE STEP() METHOD OF THE OBJECT!!!
    updateParallel([], pwd);
end
progBar.release();

As of v3.4.0, you can also nest the loops so that the inner one uses a parfor loop.

Known Issues

Flickering Bar or Flooding of the Command Window

MATLAB's speed to print to the command window is actually pretty low. If the update rate of the progress bar is high the mentioned effects can occur. Try to reduce the update rate from the default 5 Hz to something lower (say 3 Hz) with the 'UpdateRate', 3 name-value pair.

The Bar Gets Longer With Each Iteration

There seems to be a problem with the default font Monospaced in Windows. If this behavior is problematic, change the font for the command window to a different monospaced font, preferably with proper Unicode support.

If you do not want to or cannot change the font in the setting, you can set the class's OverrideDefaultFont to true while you are in the configuration phase. This will change MATLAB's coding font to Courier New for the duration in which the bar is alive (until the release() method is executed). After the object's lifetime, your previous font will be restored automatically.

For convenience, this property can also be set in the progress() wrapper to always trigger for the wrapper if desired.

Thanks @GenosseFlosse for the fix!

Strange Symbols in the Progress Bar

The display of the updating progress bar is highly dependent on the font you use in the command window. Be sure to use a proper font that can handle Unicode characters. Otherwise be sure to always use the 'Unicode', false switch in the constructor.

Remaining Timer Objects in MATLAB's Background

Sometimes, if the user cancels a loop in which a progress bar was used, the destructor is not called properly and the timer object remains in memory. This can lead to strange behavior of the next progress bar instantiated because it thinks it is nested. If you encounter strange behavior like wrong line breaks or disappearing progress bars after the bar has finished, just call the following static method to delete all remaining timer objects in memory which belong(ed) to progress bars and start over.

ProgressBar.deleteAllTimers();

Issues Concerning Parallel Processing

The work-flow when using the progress bar in a parallel setup is to instantiate the object with the IsParallel switch set to true and using the updateParallel() function to update the progress state instead of the step() method of the object. If this results in strange behavior check the following list. Generally, it is advisable to first be sure that the executed code or functions in the parallel setup run without errors or warnings. If not the execution may prevent the class destructor to properly clean up all files and timer objects.

TL/DR: clear all and delete(timerfindall('Tag', 'ProgressBar')) are your friend! Be sure that no files following the pattern progbarworker_* remain in the directory returned by tempdir().

Unit Tests

You can run all available tests in the project directory by navigating into the tests folder and executing runtests in MATLAB. However, if you want to omit the parallel tests (e.g. you don't have the Parallel Toolbox installed), just execute

runtests Tag NonParallel

License

The code is licensed under BSD 3-Clause as stated in the LICENSE file