# # Copyright (C) 2013 The Android Open Source Project # # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. # You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under the License. # """Histogram generation tools.""" from __future__ import absolute_import from __future__ import division from collections import defaultdict from update_payload import format_utils class Histogram(object): """A histogram generating object. This object serves the sole purpose of formatting (key, val) pairs as an ASCII histogram, including bars and percentage markers, and taking care of label alignment, scaling, etc. In addition to the standard __init__ interface, two static methods are provided for conveniently converting data in different formats into a histogram. Histogram generation is exported via its __str__ method, and looks as follows: Yes |################ | 5 (83.3%) No |### | 1 (16.6%) TODO(garnold) we may want to add actual methods for adding data or tweaking the output layout and formatting. For now, though, this is fine. """ def __init__(self, data, scale=20, formatter=None): """Initialize a histogram object. Args: data: list of (key, count) pairs constituting the histogram scale: number of characters used to indicate 100% formatter: function used for formatting raw histogram values """ self.data = data self.scale = scale self.formatter = formatter or str self.max_key_len = max([len(str(key)) for key, count in self.data]) self.total = sum([count for key, count in self.data]) @staticmethod def FromCountDict(count_dict, scale=20, formatter=None, key_names=None): """Takes a dictionary of counts and returns a histogram object. This simply converts a mapping from names to counts into a list of (key, count) pairs, optionally translating keys into name strings, then generating and returning a histogram for them. This is a useful convenience call for clients that update a dictionary of counters as they (say) scan a data stream. Args: count_dict: dictionary mapping keys to occurrence counts scale: number of characters used to indicate 100% formatter: function used for formatting raw histogram values key_names: dictionary mapping keys to name strings Returns: A histogram object based on the given data. """ namer = None if key_names: namer = lambda key: key_names[key] else: namer = lambda key: key hist = [(namer(key), count) for key, count in count_dict.items()] return Histogram(hist, scale, formatter) @staticmethod def FromKeyList(key_list, scale=20, formatter=None, key_names=None): """Takes a list of (possibly recurring) keys and returns a histogram object. This converts the list into a dictionary of counters, then uses FromCountDict() to generate the actual histogram. For example: ['a', 'a', 'b', 'a', 'b'] --> {'a': 3, 'b': 2} --> ... Args: key_list: list of (possibly recurring) keys scale: number of characters used to indicate 100% formatter: function used for formatting raw histogram values key_names: dictionary mapping keys to name strings Returns: A histogram object based on the given data. """ count_dict = defaultdict(int) # Unset items default to zero for key in key_list: count_dict[key] += 1 return Histogram.FromCountDict(count_dict, scale, formatter, key_names) def __str__(self): hist_lines = [] hist_bar = '|' for key, count in self.data: if self.total: bar_len = count * self.scale // self.total hist_bar = '|%s|' % ('#' * bar_len).ljust(self.scale) line = '%s %s %s' % ( str(key).ljust(self.max_key_len), hist_bar, self.formatter(count)) percent_str = format_utils.NumToPercent(count, self.total) if percent_str: line += ' (%s)' % percent_str hist_lines.append(line) return '\n'.join(hist_lines) def GetKeys(self): """Returns the keys of the histogram.""" return [key for key, _ in self.data]