Source: python-ttystatus Maintainer: Debian QA Group Homepage: http://liw.fi/ttystatus/ Section: python Priority: optional Standards-Version: 3.9.8 Build-Depends: debhelper (>= 9), python-all (>= 2.7~), python3-all, python-coverage-test-runner, python3-coverage-test-runner, pycodestyle, pylint3 Package: python-ttystatus Architecture: all Depends: ${python:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}, python (>= 2.7) Description: terminal progress bar and status output for Python ttystatus is a Python library for showing progress reporting and status updates on terminals, for (Unix) command line programs. Output is automatically adapted to the width of the terminal: truncated if it does not fit, and re-sized if the terminal size changes. . Output is provided via widgets. Each widgets formats some data into a suitable form for output. It gets the data either via its initializer, or from key/value pairs maintained by the master object. The values are set by the user. Every time a value is updated, widgets get updated (although the terminal is only updated every so often to give user time to actually read the output). . The output from ttystatus goes to the terminal (`/dev/tty`) and is restricted to a single line. Package: python3-ttystatus Architecture: all Depends: ${python3:Depends}, ${misc:Depends}, python3 Description: terminal progress bar and status output for Python ttystatus is a Python library for showing progress reporting and status updates on terminals, for (Unix) command line programs. Output is automatically adapted to the width of the terminal: truncated if it does not fit, and re-sized if the terminal size changes. . Output is provided via widgets. Each widgets formats some data into a suitable form for output. It gets the data either via its initializer, or from key/value pairs maintained by the master object. The values are set by the user. Every time a value is updated, widgets get updated (although the terminal is only updated every so often to give user time to actually read the output). . The output from ttystatus goes to the terminal (`/dev/tty`) and is restricted to a single line.