tqdm is a Python module to easily print in the console a dynamically updating progressbar. For example
from tqdm import tqdm
from time import sleep
for _ in tqdm(range(10)):
sleep(0.1)
prints a dynamic progressbar in the console for 1sec as the iteration executes:
I have not figured out how to use tqdm with the builtin zip object.
The use case of this would be to iterate over two corresponding lists with a console progressbar.
For example, I would expect this to work:
for _, _ in tqdm(zip(range(10), range(10))):
sleep(0.1)
but the progressbar printed to the console in this case is not correct:
A workaround is to use tqdm with enumerate, however then an iterator index must be defined and managed.
tqdm
can be used with zip
if a total
keyword argument is provided in the tqdm
call.
The following example demonstrates iteration over corresponding elements in two lists with a working __tqdm__
progress bar for the case where a total
keyword argument is used:
The issue is that tqdm
needs to know the length of the iterable ahead of time. Because zip
is meant to handle iterables with different lengths, it does not have as an attribute a single length of its arguments.
So, __tqdm__
still works nicely with zip
, you just need to provide a little manual control with the total
keyword argument.