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Go package to make lightweight ASCII line graph ╭┈╯ in command line apps with no other dependencies.

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guptarohit/asciigraph

asciigraph

Build status Go Report Card Coverage Status GoDoc License Mentioned in Awesome Go

Go package to make lightweight ASCII line graphs ╭┈╯.

image

Installation

go get -u github.com/guptarohit/asciigraph@latest

Usage

Basic graph

package main

import (
    "fmt"
    "github.com/guptarohit/asciigraph"
)

func main() {
    data := []float64{3, 4, 9, 6, 2, 4, 5, 8, 5, 10, 2, 7, 2, 5, 6}
    graph := asciigraph.Plot(data)

    fmt.Println(graph)
}

Running this example would render the following graph:

  10.00 ┤        ╭╮
   9.00 ┤ ╭╮     ││
   8.00 ┤ ││   ╭╮││
   7.00 ┤ ││   ││││╭╮
   6.00 ┤ │╰╮  ││││││ ╭
   5.00 ┤ │ │ ╭╯╰╯│││╭╯
   4.00 ┤╭╯ │╭╯   ││││
   3.00 ┼╯  ││    ││││
   2.00 ┤   ╰╯    ╰╯╰╯

Multiple Series

package main

import (
    "fmt"
    "github.com/guptarohit/asciigraph"
)

func main() {
	data := [][]float64{{0, 1, 2, 3, 3, 3, 2, 0}, {5, 4, 2, 1, 4, 6, 6}}
	graph := asciigraph.PlotMany(data)

	fmt.Println(graph)
}

Running this example would render the following graph:

 6.00 ┤    ╭─
 5.00 ┼╮   │
 4.00 ┤╰╮ ╭╯
 3.00 ┤ │╭│─╮
 2.00 ┤ ╰╮│ ╰╮
 1.00 ┤╭╯╰╯  │
 0.00 ┼╯     ╰

Colored graphs

package main

import (
    "fmt"
    "github.com/guptarohit/asciigraph"
)

func main() {
	data := make([][]float64, 4)

	for i := 0; i < 4; i++ {
		for x := -20; x <= 20; x++ {
			v := math.NaN()
			if r := 20 - i; x >= -r && x <= r {
				v = math.Sqrt(math.Pow(float64(r), 2)-math.Pow(float64(x), 2)) / 2
			}
			data[i] = append(data[i], v)
		}
	}
	graph := asciigraph.PlotMany(data, asciigraph.Precision(0), asciigraph.SeriesColors(
		asciigraph.Red,
		asciigraph.Yellow,
		asciigraph.Green,
		asciigraph.Blue,
	))

	fmt.Println(graph)
}

Running this example would render the following graph:

colored_graph_image

Legends for colored graphs

The graph can include legends for each series, making it easier to interpret.

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"github.com/guptarohit/asciigraph"
	"math"
)

func main() {
	data := make([][]float64, 3)
	for i := 0; i < 3; i++ {
		for x := -12; x <= 12; x++ {
			v := math.NaN()
			if r := 12 - i; x >= -r && x <= r {
				v = math.Sqrt(math.Pow(float64(r), 2)-math.Pow(float64(x), 2)) / 2
			}
			data[i] = append(data[i], v)
		}
	}
	graph := asciigraph.PlotMany(data,
		asciigraph.Precision(0),
		asciigraph.SeriesColors(asciigraph.Red, asciigraph.Green, asciigraph.Blue),
		asciigraph.SeriesLegends("Red", "Green", "Blue"),
		asciigraph.Caption("Series with legends"))
	fmt.Println(graph)
}

Running this example would render the following graph:

graph_with_legends_image

CLI Installation

This package also brings a small utility for command line usage.

Assuming $GOPATH/bin is in your $PATH, install CLI with following command:

go install github.com/guptarohit/asciigraph/cmd/asciigraph@latest

or pull Docker image:

docker pull ghcr.io/guptarohit/asciigraph:latest

or download binaries from the releases page.

CLI Usage

> asciigraph --help
Usage of asciigraph:
  asciigraph [options]
Options:
  -ac axis color
    	y-axis color of the plot
  -b buffer
    	data points buffer when realtime graph enabled, default equal to `width`
  -c caption
    	caption for the graph
  -cc caption color
    	caption color of the plot
  -d delimiter
    	data delimiter for splitting data points in the input stream (default ",")
  -f fps
    	set fps to control how frequently graph to be rendered when realtime graph enabled (default 24)
  -h height
    	height in text rows, 0 for auto-scaling
  -lb lower bound
    	lower bound set the minimum value for the vertical axis (ignored if series contains lower values) (default +Inf)
  -lc label color
    	y-axis label color of the plot
  -o offset
    	offset in columns, for the label (default 3)
  -p precision
    	precision of data point labels along the y-axis (default 2)
  -r realtime
    	enables realtime graph for data stream
  -sc series colors
    	comma-separated series colors corresponding to each series
  -sl series legends
    	comma-separated series legends corresponding to each series
  -sn number of series
    	number of series (columns) in the input data (default 1)
  -ub upper bound
    	upper bound set the maximum value for the vertical axis (ignored if series contains larger values) (default -Inf)
  -w width
    	width in columns, 0 for auto-scaling
asciigraph expects data points from stdin. Invalid values are logged to stderr.

Feed it data points via stdin:

seq 1 72 | asciigraph -h 10 -c "plot data from stdin"

or use Docker image:

seq 1 72 | docker run -i --rm ghcr.io/guptarohit/asciigraph -h 10 -c "plot data from stdin"

Output:

 72.00 ┤                                                                  ╭────
 64.90 ┤                                                           ╭──────╯
 57.80 ┤                                                    ╭──────╯
 50.70 ┤                                             ╭──────╯
 43.60 ┤                                      ╭──────╯
 36.50 ┤                              ╭───────╯
 29.40 ┤                       ╭──────╯
 22.30 ┤                ╭──────╯
 15.20 ┤         ╭──────╯
  8.10 ┤  ╭──────╯
  1.00 ┼──╯
                                  plot data from stdin

Example of real-time graph for data points stream via stdin:

Realtime graph for data points via stdin (google ping) using asciigraph

command for above graph
ping -i.2 google.com | grep -oP '(?<=time=).*(?=ms)' --line-buffered | asciigraph -r -h 10 -w 40 -c "realtime plot data (google ping in ms) from stdin"

Example of multi-series real-time graph for data points stream via stdin:

Ping latency comparison: Google (Blue) vs. DuckDuckGo (Red) with asciigraph

command for above graph
{unbuffer paste -d, <(ping -i 0.4 google.com | sed -u -n -E 's/.*time=(.*)ms.*/\1/p') <(ping -i 0.4 duckduckgo.com | sed -u -n -E 's/.*time=(.*)ms.*/\1/p') } | asciigraph -r -h 15 -w 60 -sn 2 -sc "blue,red" -c "Ping Latency Comparison" -sl "Google, DuckDuckGo"

Acknowledgement

This package started as golang port of asciichart.

Contributing

Feel free to make a pull request! :octocat: