The functions and classes in the humanfriendly package can be used to make text interfaces more user friendly. Some example features:
- Parsing and formatting numbers, file sizes, pathnames and timespans in simple, human friendly formats.
- Easy to use timers for long running operations, with human friendly formatting of the resulting timespans.
- Prompting the user to select a choice from a list of options by typing the option's number or a unique substring of the option.
- Terminal interaction including text styling (ANSI escape sequences), user friendly rendering of usage messages and querying the terminal for its size.
The humanfriendly package is currently tested on Python 2.7, 3.5+ and PyPy (2.7) on Linux and macOS. While the intention is to support Windows as well, you may encounter some rough edges.
It's very simple to start using the humanfriendly package:
>>> from humanfriendly import format_size, parse_size >>> from humanfriendly.prompts import prompt_for_input >>> user_input = prompt_for_input("Enter a readable file size: ") Enter a readable file size: 16G >>> num_bytes = parse_size(user_input) >>> print(num_bytes) 16000000000 >>> print("You entered:", format_size(num_bytes)) You entered: 16 GB >>> print("You entered:", format_size(num_bytes, binary=True)) You entered: 14.9 GiB
To get a demonstration of supported terminal text styles (based on ANSI escape sequences) you can run the following command:
$ humanfriendly --demo
Usage: humanfriendly [OPTIONS]
Human friendly input/output (text formatting) on the command line based on the Python package with the same name.
Supported options:
Option | Description |
---|---|
-c , --run-command |
Execute an external command (given as the positional arguments) and render a spinner and timer while the command is running. The exit status of the command is propagated. |
--format-table |
Read tabular data from standard input (each line is a row and each
whitespace separated field is a column), format the data as a table and
print the resulting table to standard output. See also the --delimiter
option. |
-d , --delimiter=VALUE |
Change the delimiter used by --format-table to VALUE (a string). By default
all whitespace is treated as a delimiter. |
-l , --format-length=LENGTH |
Convert a length count (given as the integer or float LENGTH ) into a human
readable string and print that string to standard output. |
-n , --format-number=VALUE |
Format a number (given as the integer or floating point number VALUE ) with
thousands separators and two decimal places (if needed) and print the
formatted number to standard output. |
-s , --format-size=BYTES |
Convert a byte count (given as the integer BYTES ) into a human readable
string and print that string to standard output. |
-b , --binary |
Change the output of -s , --format-size to use binary multiples of bytes
(base-2) instead of the default decimal multiples of bytes (base-10). |
-t , --format-timespan=SECONDS |
Convert a number of seconds (given as the floating point number SECONDS )
into a human readable timespan and print that string to standard output. |
--parse-length=VALUE |
Parse a human readable length (given as the string VALUE ) and print the
number of metres to standard output. |
--parse-size=VALUE |
Parse a human readable data size (given as the string VALUE ) and print the
number of bytes to standard output. |
--demo |
Demonstrate changing the style and color of the terminal font using ANSI escape sequences. |
-h , --help |
Show this message and exit. |
When I originally published the humanfriendly package I went with binary multiples of bytes (powers of two). It was pointed out several times that this was a poor choice (see issue #4 and pull requests #8 and #9) and thus the new default became decimal multiples of bytes (powers of ten):
Unit | Binary value | Decimal value |
KB | 1024 | 1000 |
MB | 1048576 | 1000000 |
GB | 1073741824 | 1000000000 |
TB | 1099511627776 | 1000000000000 |
etc |
The option to use binary multiples of bytes remains by passing the keyword argument binary=True to the format_size() and parse_size() functions.
Windows 10 gained native support for ANSI escape sequences which means commands
like humanfriendly --demo
should work out of the box (if your system is
up-to-date enough). If this doesn't work then you can install the colorama
package, it will be used automatically once installed.
The latest version of humanfriendly is available on PyPI and GitHub. The documentation is hosted on Read the Docs and includes a changelog. For bug reports please create an issue on GitHub. If you have questions, suggestions, etc. feel free to send me an e-mail at [email protected].
This software is licensed under the MIT license.
© 2021 Peter Odding.