-@node Progress
-@section Reporting Operation Progress
-@cindex progress reporting
-
-When an operation can take a while to finish, you should inform the
-user about the progress it makes. This way the user can estimate
-remaining time and clearly see that Emacs is busy working, not hung.
-
-Functions listed in this section provide simple and efficient way of
-reporting operation progress. Here is a working example that does
-nothing useful:
-
-@example
-(let ((progress-reporter
- (make-progress-reporter "Collecting some mana for Emacs..."
- 0 500)))
- (dotimes (k 500)
- (sit-for 0.01)
- (progress-reporter-update progress-reporter k))
- (progress-reporter-done progress-reporter))
-@end example
-
-@defun make-progress-reporter message min-value max-value &optional current-value min-change min-time
-This function creates a progress reporter---the object you will use as
-an argument for all other functions listed here. The idea is to
-precompute as much data as possible to make progress reporting very
-fast.
-
-The @var{message} will be displayed in the echo area, followed by
-progress percentage. @var{message} is treated as a simple string. If
-you need it to depend on a filename, for instance, use @code{format}
-before calling this function.
-
-@var{min-value} and @var{max-value} arguments stand for starting and
-final states of your operation. For instance, if you scan a buffer,
-they should be the results of @code{point-min} and @code{point-max}
-correspondingly. It is required that @var{max-value} is greater than
-@var{min-value}. If you create progress reporter when some part of
-the operation has already been completed, then specify
-@var{current-value} argument. But normally you should omit it or set
-it to @code{nil}---it will default to @var{min-value} then.
-
-Remaining arguments control the rate of echo area updates. Progress
-reporter will wait for at least @var{min-change} more percents of the
-operation to be completed before printing next message.
-@var{min-time} specifies the minimum time in seconds to pass between
-successive prints. It can be fractional. Depending on Emacs and
-system capabilities, progress reporter may or may not respect this
-last argument or do it with varying precision. Default value for
-@var{min-change} is 1 (one percent), for @var{min-time}---0.2
-(seconds.)
-
-This function calls @code{progress-reporter-update}, so the first
-message is printed immediately.
-@end defun
-
-@defun progress-reporter-update reporter value
-This function does the main work of reporting progress of your
-operation. It print the message of @var{reporter} followed by
-progress percentage determined by @var{value}. If percentage is zero,
-then it is not printed at all.
-
-@var{reporter} must be the result of a call to
-@code{make-progress-reporter}. @var{value} specifies the current
-state of your operation and must be between @var{min-value} and
-@var{max-value} (inclusive) as passed to
-@code{make-progress-reporter}. For instance, if you scan a buffer,
-then @var{value} should be the result of a call to @code{point}.
-
-This function respects @var{min-change} and @var{min-time} as passed
-to @code{make-progress-reporter} and so does not output new messages
-on every invocation. It is thus very fast and normally you should not
-try to reduce the number of calls to it: resulting overhead will most
-likely negate your effort.
-@end defun
-
-@defun progress-reporter-force-update reporter value &optional new-message
-This function is similar to @code{progress-reporter-update} except
-that it prints a message in the echo area unconditionally.
-
-The first two arguments have the same meaning as for
-@code{progress-reporter-update}. Optional @var{new-message} allows
-you to change the message of the @var{reporter}. Since this functions
-always updates the echo area, such a change will be immediately
-presented to the user.
-@end defun
-
-@defun progress-reporter-done reporter
-This function should be called when the operation is finished. It
-prints the message of @var{reporter} followed by word ``done'' in the
-echo area.
-
-You should always call this function and not hope for
-@code{progress-reporter-update} to print ``100%.'' Firstly, it may
-never print it, there are many good reasons for this not to happen.
-Secondly, ``done'' is more explicit.
-@end defun
-
-@defmac dotimes-with-progress-reporter (var count [result]) message body...
-This is a convenience macro that works the same way as @code{dotimes}
-does, but also reports loop progress using the functions described
-above. It allows you to save some typing.
-
-You can rewrite the example in the beginning of this node using
-this macro this way:
-
-@example
-(dotimes-with-progress-reporter
- (k 500)
- "Collecting some mana for Emacs..."
- (sit-for 0.01))
-@end example
-@end defmac
-