dotfiles/bin/executable_spark

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#!/usr/bin/env bash
#
# spark
# https://github.com/holman/spark
#
# Generates sparklines for a set of data.
#
# Here's a a good web-based sparkline generator that was a bit of inspiration
# for spark:
#
# https://datacollective.org/sparkblocks
#
# spark takes a comma-separated list of data and then prints a sparkline out of
# it.
#
# Examples:
#
# spark 1 5 22 13 53
# # => ▁▁▃▂▇
#
# spark 0 30 55 80 33 150
# # => ▁▂▃▅▂▇
#
# spark -h
# # => Prints the spark help text.
# Generates sparklines.
#
# $1 - The data we'd like to graph.
spark()
{
local n numbers=
# find min/max values
local min=0xffffffff max=0
for n in ${@//,/ }
do
# on Linux (or with bash4) we could use `printf %.0f $n` here to
# round the number but that doesn't work on OS X (bash3) nor does
# `awk '{printf "%.0f",$1}' <<< $n` work, so just cut it off
n=${n%.*}
(( n < min )) && min=$n
(( n > max )) && max=$n
numbers=$numbers${numbers:+ }$n
done
# print ticks
local ticks=(▁ ▂ ▃ ▄ ▅ ▆ ▇ █)
local f=$(( (($max-$min)<<8)/(${#ticks[@]}-1) ))
(( f < 1 )) && f=1
for n in $numbers
do
echo -n ${ticks[$(( ((($n-$min)<<8)/$f) ))]}
done
echo
}
# If we're being sourced, don't worry about such things
if [ "$BASH_SOURCE" == "$0" ]; then
# Prints the help text for spark.
help()
{
cat <<EOF
USAGE:
spark [-h] VALUE,...
EXAMPLES:
spark 1 5 22 13 53
▁▁▃▂█
spark 0,30,55,80,33,150
▁▂▃▄▂█
echo 9 13 5 17 1 | spark
▄▆▂█▁
EOF
}
# show help for no arguments if stdin is a terminal
if { [ -z "$1" ] && [ -t 0 ] ; } || [ "$1" == '-h' ]
then
help
exit 0
fi
spark ${@:-`cat`}
fi