CSV (comma-separated variables) data is a text representation of a table:
A row separator delimits table rows. A common row separator is the newline character "\n"
.
A column separator delimits fields in a row. A common column separator is the comma character ","
.
This CSV String, with row separator "\n"
and column separator ","
, has three rows and two columns:
"foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
Despite the name CSV, a CSV representation can use different separators.
For more about tables, see the Wikipedia article “Table (information)”, especially its section “Simple table”
Class CSV provides methods for:
Parsing CSV data from a String object, a File (via its file path), or an IO object.
Generating CSV data to a String object.
To make CSV available:
require 'csv'
All examples here assume that this has been done.
A CSV object has dozens of instance methods that offer fine-grained control of parsing and generating CSV data. For many needs, though, simpler approaches will do.
This section summarizes the singleton methods in CSV that allow you to parse and generate without explicitly creating CSV objects. For details, follow the links.
Parsing methods commonly return either of:
An Array of Arrays of Strings:
The outer Array is the entire “table”.
Each inner Array is a row.
Each String is a field.
A CSV::Table
object. For details, see CSV with Headers.
The input to be parsed can be a string:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
Method CSV.parse
returns the entire CSV data:
CSV.parse(string) # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Method CSV.parse_line
returns only the first row:
CSV.parse_line(string) # => ["foo", "0"]
CSV extends class String with instance method String#parse_csv, which also returns only the first row:
string.parse_csv # => ["foo", "0"]
The input to be parsed can be in a file:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string)
Method CSV.read
returns the entire CSV data:
CSV.read(path) # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Method CSV.foreach
iterates, passing each row to the given block:
CSV.foreach(path) do |row| p row end
Output:
["foo", "0"] ["bar", "1"] ["baz", "2"]
Method CSV.table
returns the entire CSV data as a CSV::Table
object:
CSV.table(path) # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:3>
The input to be parsed can be in an open IO stream:
Method CSV.read
returns the entire CSV data:
File.open(path) do |file| CSV.read(file) end # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
As does method CSV.parse
:
File.open(path) do |file| CSV.parse(file) end # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Method CSV.parse_line
returns only the first row:
File.open(path) do |file| CSV.parse_line(file) end # => ["foo", "0"]
Method CSV.foreach
iterates, passing each row to the given block:
File.open(path) do |file| CSV.foreach(file) do |row| p row end end
Output:
["foo", "0"] ["bar", "1"] ["baz", "2"]
Method CSV.table
returns the entire CSV data as a CSV::Table
object:
File.open(path) do |file| CSV.table(file) end # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:3>
Method CSV.generate
returns a String; this example uses method CSV#<<
to append the rows that are to be generated:
output_string = CSV.generate do |csv| csv << ['foo', 0] csv << ['bar', 1] csv << ['baz', 2] end output_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
Method CSV.generate_line
returns a String containing the single row constructed from an Array:
CSV.generate_line(['foo', '0']) # => "foo,0\n"
CSV extends class Array with instance method Array#to_csv
, which forms an Array into a String:
['foo', '0'].to_csv # => "foo,0\n"
Method CSV.filter
provides a Unix-style filter for CSV data. The input data is processed to form the output data:
in_string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" out_string = '' CSV.filter(in_string, out_string) do |row| row[0] = row[0].upcase row[1] *= 4 end out_string # => "FOO,0000\nBAR,1111\nBAZ,2222\n"
There are three ways to create a CSV object:
Method CSV.new
returns a new CSV object.
Method CSV.instance
returns a new or cached CSV object.
Method CSV() also returns a new or cached CSV object.
CSV has three groups of instance methods:
Its own internally defined instance methods.
Methods included by module Enumerable.
Methods delegated to class IO. See below.
For convenience, a CSV
object will delegate to many methods in class IO. (A few have wrapper “guard code” in CSV.) You may call:
IO#binmode
IO#close
IO#close_read
IO#close_write
IO#closed?
IO#external_encoding
IO#fcntl
IO#fileno
IO#flush
IO#fsync
IO#internal_encoding
IO#isatty
IO#pid
IO#pos
IO#pos=
IO#reopen
IO#seek
IO#string
IO#sync
IO#sync=
IO#tell
IO#truncate
IO#tty?
The default values for options are:
DEFAULT_OPTIONS = { # For both parsing and generating. col_sep: ",", row_sep: :auto, quote_char: '"', # For parsing. field_size_limit: nil, converters: nil, unconverted_fields: nil, headers: false, return_headers: false, header_converters: nil, skip_blanks: false, skip_lines: nil, liberal_parsing: false, nil_value: nil, empty_value: "", # For generating. write_headers: nil, quote_empty: true, force_quotes: false, write_converters: nil, write_nil_value: nil, write_empty_value: "", strip: false, }
Options for parsing, described in detail below, include:
row_sep
: Specifies the row separator; used to delimit rows.
col_sep
: Specifies the column separator; used to delimit fields.
quote_char
: Specifies the quote character; used to quote fields.
field_size_limit
: Specifies the maximum field size allowed.
converters
: Specifies the field converters to be used.
unconverted_fields
: Specifies whether unconverted fields are to be available.
headers
: Specifies whether data contains headers, or specifies the headers themselves.
return_headers
: Specifies whether headers are to be returned.
header_converters
: Specifies the header converters to be used.
skip_blanks
: Specifies whether blanks lines are to be ignored.
skip_lines
: Specifies how comments lines are to be recognized.
strip
: Specifies whether leading and trailing whitespace are to be stripped from fields..
liberal_parsing
: Specifies whether CSV should attempt to parse non-compliant data.
nil_value
: Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each null (no-text) field.
empty_value
: Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each empty field.
row_sep
¶ ↑Specifies the row separator, a String or the Symbol :auto
(see below), to be used for both parsing and generating.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:row_sep) # => :auto
When row_sep
is a String, that String becomes the row separator. The String will be transcoded into the data's Encoding before use.
Using "\n"
:
row_sep = "\n" str = CSV.generate(row_sep: row_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using |
(pipe):
row_sep = '|' str = CSV.generate(row_sep: row_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0|bar,1|baz,2|" ary = CSV.parse(str, row_sep: row_sep) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using --
(two hyphens):
row_sep = '--' str = CSV.generate(row_sep: row_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0--bar,1--baz,2--" ary = CSV.parse(str, row_sep: row_sep) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using ''
(empty string):
row_sep = '' str = CSV.generate(row_sep: row_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0bar,1baz,2" ary = CSV.parse(str, row_sep: row_sep) ary # => [["foo", "0bar", "1baz", "2"]]
When row_sep
is the Symbol :auto
(the default), generating uses "\n"
as the row separator:
str = CSV.generate do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
Parsing, on the other hand, invokes auto-discovery of the row separator.
Auto-discovery reads ahead in the data looking for the next \r\n
, \n
, or \r
sequence. The sequence will be selected even if it occurs in a quoted field, assuming that you would have the same line endings there.
Example:
str = CSV.generate do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
The default $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR
($/
) is used if any of the following is true:
None of those sequences is found.
Data is ARGF
, STDIN
, STDOUT
, or STDERR
.
The stream is only available for output.
Obviously, discovery takes a little time. Set manually if speed is important. Also note that IO objects should be opened in binary mode on Windows if this feature will be used as the line-ending translation can cause problems with resetting the document position to where it was before the read ahead.
Raises an exception if the given value is not String-convertible:
row_sep = BasicObject.new # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `to_s' for #<BasicObject:>) CSV.generate(ary, row_sep: row_sep) # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `to_s' for #<BasicObject:>) CSV.parse(str, row_sep: row_sep)
col_sep
¶ ↑Specifies the String field separator to be used for both parsing and generating. The String will be transcoded into the data's Encoding before use.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:col_sep) # => "," (comma)
Using the default (comma):
str = CSV.generate do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using :
(colon):
col_sep = ':' str = CSV.generate(col_sep: col_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo:0\nbar:1\nbaz:2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str, col_sep: col_sep) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using ::
(two colons):
col_sep = '::' str = CSV.generate(col_sep: col_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo::0\nbar::1\nbaz::2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str, col_sep: col_sep) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using ''
(empty string):
col_sep = '' str = CSV.generate(col_sep: col_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo0\nbar1\nbaz2\n"
Raises an exception if parsing with the empty String:
col_sep = '' # Raises ArgumentError (:col_sep must be 1 or more characters: "") CSV.parse("foo0\nbar1\nbaz2\n", col_sep: col_sep)
Raises an exception if the given value is not String-convertible:
col_sep = BasicObject.new # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `to_s' for #<BasicObject:>) CSV.generate(line, col_sep: col_sep) # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `to_s' for #<BasicObject:>) CSV.parse(str, col_sep: col_sep)
quote_char
¶ ↑Specifies the character (String of length 1) used used to quote fields in both parsing and generating. This String will be transcoded into the data's Encoding before use.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:quote_char) # => "\"" (double quote)
This is useful for an application that incorrectly uses '
(single-quote) to quote fields, instead of the correct "
(double-quote).
Using the default (double quote):
str = CSV.generate do |csv| csv << ['foo', 0] csv << ["'bar'", 1] csv << ['"baz"', 2] end str # => "foo,0\n'bar',1\n\"\"\"baz\"\"\",2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["'bar'", "1"], ["\"baz\"", "2"]]
Using '
(single-quote):
quote_char = "'" str = CSV.generate(quote_char: quote_char) do |csv| csv << ['foo', 0] csv << ["'bar'", 1] csv << ['"baz"', 2] end str # => "foo,0\n'''bar''',1\n\"baz\",2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str, quote_char: quote_char) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["'bar'", "1"], ["\"baz\"", "2"]]
Raises an exception if the String length is greater than 1:
# Raises ArgumentError (:quote_char has to be nil or a single character String) CSV.new('', quote_char: 'xx')
Raises an exception if the value is not a String:
# Raises ArgumentError (:quote_char has to be nil or a single character String) CSV.new('', quote_char: :foo)
field_size_limit
¶ ↑Specifies the Integer field size limit.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:field_size_limit) # => nil
This is a maximum size CSV
will read ahead looking for the closing quote for a field. (In truth, it reads to the first line ending beyond this size.) If a quote cannot be found within the limit CSV
will raise a MalformedCSVError
, assuming the data is faulty. You can use this limit to prevent what are effectively DoS attacks on the parser. However, this limit can cause a legitimate parse to fail; therefore the default value is nil
(no limit).
For the examples in this section:
str = <<~EOT "a","b" " 2345 ","" EOT str # => "\"a\",\"b\"\n\"\n2345\n\",\"\"\n"
Using the default nil
:
ary = CSV.parse(str) ary # => [["a", "b"], ["\n2345\n", ""]]
Using 50
:
field_size_limit = 50 ary = CSV.parse(str, field_size_limit: field_size_limit) ary # => [["a", "b"], ["\n2345\n", ""]]
Raises an exception if a field is too long:
big_str = "123456789\n" * 1024 # Raises CSV::MalformedCSVError (Field size exceeded in line 1.) CSV.parse('valid,fields,"' + big_str + '"', field_size_limit: 2048)
converters
¶ ↑Specifies converters to be used in parsing fields. See Field Converters
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:converters) # => nil
The value may be a field converter name (see Stored Converters):
str = '1,2,3' # Without a converter array = CSV.parse_line(str) array # => ["1", "2", "3"] # With built-in converter :integer array = CSV.parse_line(str, converters: :integer) array # => [1, 2, 3]
The value may be a converter list (see Converter Lists):
str = '1,3.14159' # Without converters array = CSV.parse_line(str) array # => ["1", "3.14159"] # With built-in converters array = CSV.parse_line(str, converters: [:integer, :float]) array # => [1, 3.14159]
The value may be a Proc custom converter: (see Custom Field Converters):
str = ' foo , bar , baz ' # Without a converter array = CSV.parse_line(str) array # => [" foo ", " bar ", " baz "] # With a custom converter array = CSV.parse_line(str, converters: proc {|field| field.strip }) array # => ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
See also Custom Field Converters
Raises an exception if the converter is not a converter name or a Proc:
str = 'foo,0' # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `arity' for nil:NilClass) CSV.parse(str, converters: :foo)
unconverted_fields
¶ ↑Specifies the boolean that determines whether unconverted field values are to be available.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:unconverted_fields) # => nil
The unconverted field values are those found in the source data, prior to any conversions performed via option converters
.
When option unconverted_fields
is true
, each returned row (Array or CSV::Row) has an added method, unconverted_fields
, that returns the unconverted field values:
str = <<-EOT foo,0 bar,1 baz,2 EOT # Without unconverted_fields csv = CSV.parse(str, converters: :integer) csv # => [["foo", 0], ["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]] csv.first.respond_to?(:unconverted_fields) # => false # With unconverted_fields csv = CSV.parse(str, converters: :integer, unconverted_fields: true) csv # => [["foo", 0], ["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]] csv.first.respond_to?(:unconverted_fields) # => true csv.first.unconverted_fields # => ["foo", "0"]
headers
¶ ↑Specifies a boolean, Symbol, Array, or String to be used to define column headers.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:headers) # => false
Without headers
:
str = <<-EOT Name,Count foo,0 bar,1 bax,2 EOT csv = CSV.new(str) csv # => #<CSV io_type:StringIO encoding:UTF-8 lineno:0 col_sep:"," row_sep:"\n" quote_char:"\""> csv.headers # => nil csv.shift # => ["Name", "Count"]
If set to true
or the Symbol :first_row
, the first row of the data is treated as a row of headers:
str = <<-EOT Name,Count foo,0 bar,1 bax,2 EOT csv = CSV.new(str, headers: true) csv # => #<CSV io_type:StringIO encoding:UTF-8 lineno:2 col_sep:"," row_sep:"\n" quote_char:"\"" headers:["Name", "Count"]> csv.headers # => ["Name", "Count"] csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Count":"1">
If set to an Array, the Array elements are treated as headers:
str = <<-EOT foo,0 bar,1 bax,2 EOT csv = CSV.new(str, headers: ['Name', 'Count']) csv csv.headers # => ["Name", "Count"] csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Count":"1">
If set to a String str
, method CSV::parse_line(str, options)
is called with the current options
, and the returned Array is treated as headers:
str = <<-EOT foo,0 bar,1 bax,2 EOT csv = CSV.new(str, headers: 'Name,Count') csv csv.headers # => ["Name", "Count"] csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Count":"1">
return_headers
¶ ↑Specifies the boolean that determines whether method shift
returns or ignores the header row.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:return_headers) # => false
Examples:
str = <<-EOT Name,Count foo,0 bar,1 bax,2 EOT # Without return_headers first row is str. csv = CSV.new(str, headers: true) csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Count":"0"> # With return_headers first row is headers. csv = CSV.new(str, headers: true, return_headers: true) csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"Name" "Count":"Count">
header_converters
¶ ↑Specifies converters to be used in parsing headers. See Header Converters
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:header_converters) # => nil
Identical in functionality to option converters except that:
The converters apply only to the header row.
The built-in header converters are :downcase
and :symbol
.
This section assumes prior execution of:
str = <<-EOT Name,Value foo,0 bar,1 baz,2 EOT # With no header converter table = CSV.parse(str, headers: true) table.headers # => ["Name", "Value"]
The value may be a header converter name (see Stored Converters):
table = CSV.parse(str, headers: true, header_converters: :downcase) table.headers # => ["name", "value"]
The value may be a converter list (see Converter Lists):
header_converters = [:downcase, :symbol] table = CSV.parse(str, headers: true, header_converters: header_converters) table.headers # => [:name, :value]
The value may be a Proc custom converter (see Custom Header Converters):
upcase_converter = proc {|field| field.upcase } table = CSV.parse(str, headers: true, header_converters: upcase_converter) table.headers # => ["NAME", "VALUE"]
See also Custom Header Converters
skip_blanks
¶ ↑Specifies a boolean that determines whether blank lines in the input will be ignored; a line that contains a column separator is not considered to be blank.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:skip_blanks) # => false
See also option skiplines.
For examples in this section:
str = <<-EOT foo,0 bar,1 baz,2 , EOT
Using the default, false
:
ary = CSV.parse(str) ary # => [["foo", "0"], [], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"], [], [nil, nil]]
Using true
:
ary = CSV.parse(str, skip_blanks: true) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"], [nil, nil]]
Using a truthy value:
ary = CSV.parse(str, skip_blanks: :foo) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"], [nil, nil]]
skip_lines
¶ ↑Specifies an object to use in identifying comment lines in the input that are to be ignored:
If a Regexp, ignores lines that match it.
If a String, converts it to a Regexp, ignores lines that match it.
If nil
, no lines are considered to be comments.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:skip_lines) # => nil
For examples in this section:
str = <<-EOT # Comment foo,0 bar,1 baz,2 # Another comment EOT str # => "# Comment\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n# Another comment\n"
Using the default, nil
:
ary = CSV.parse(str) ary # => [["# Comment"], ["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"], ["# Another comment"]]
Using a Regexp:
ary = CSV.parse(str, skip_lines: /^#/) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using a String:
ary = CSV.parse(str, skip_lines: '#') ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Raises an exception if given an object that is not a Regexp, a String, or nil
:
# Raises ArgumentError (:skip_lines has to respond to #match: 0) CSV.parse(str, skip_lines: 0)
strip
¶ ↑Specifies the boolean value that determines whether whitespace is stripped from each input field.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:strip) # => false
With default value false
:
ary = CSV.parse_line(' a , b ') ary # => [" a ", " b "]
With value true
:
ary = CSV.parse_line(' a , b ', strip: true) ary # => ["a", "b"]
liberal_parsing
¶ ↑Specifies the boolean value that determines whether CSV
will attempt to parse input not conformant with RFC 4180, such as double quotes in unquoted fields.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:liberal_parsing) # => false
For examples in this section:
str = 'is,this "three, or four",fields'
Without liberal_parsing
:
# Raises CSV::MalformedCSVError (Illegal quoting in str 1.) CSV.parse_line(str)
With liberal_parsing
:
ary = CSV.parse_line(str, liberal_parsing: true) ary # => ["is", "this \"three", " or four\"", "fields"]
nil_value
¶ ↑Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each null (no-text) field.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:nil_value) # => nil
With the default, nil
:
CSV.parse_line('a,,b,,c') # => ["a", nil, "b", nil, "c"]
With a different object:
CSV.parse_line('a,,b,,c', nil_value: 0) # => ["a", 0, "b", 0, "c"]
empty_value
¶ ↑Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each field that has an empty String.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:empty_value) # => "" (empty string)
With the default, ""
:
CSV.parse_line('a,"",b,"",c') # => ["a", "", "b", "", "c"]
With a different object:
CSV.parse_line('a,"",b,"",c', empty_value: 'x') # => ["a", "x", "b", "x", "c"]
Options for generating, described in detail below, include:
row_sep
: Specifies the row separator; used to delimit rows.
col_sep
: Specifies the column separator; used to delimit fields.
quote_char
: Specifies the quote character; used to quote fields.
write_headers
: Specifies whether headers are to be written.
force_quotes
: Specifies whether each output field is to be quoted.
quote_empty
: Specifies whether each empty output field is to be quoted.
write_converters
: Specifies the field converters to be used in writing.
write_nil_value
: Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each nil
-valued field.
write_empty_value
: Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each empty field.
row_sep
¶ ↑Specifies the row separator, a String or the Symbol :auto
(see below), to be used for both parsing and generating.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:row_sep) # => :auto
When row_sep
is a String, that String becomes the row separator. The String will be transcoded into the data's Encoding before use.
Using "\n"
:
row_sep = "\n" str = CSV.generate(row_sep: row_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using |
(pipe):
row_sep = '|' str = CSV.generate(row_sep: row_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0|bar,1|baz,2|" ary = CSV.parse(str, row_sep: row_sep) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using --
(two hyphens):
row_sep = '--' str = CSV.generate(row_sep: row_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0--bar,1--baz,2--" ary = CSV.parse(str, row_sep: row_sep) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using ''
(empty string):
row_sep = '' str = CSV.generate(row_sep: row_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0bar,1baz,2" ary = CSV.parse(str, row_sep: row_sep) ary # => [["foo", "0bar", "1baz", "2"]]
When row_sep
is the Symbol :auto
(the default), generating uses "\n"
as the row separator:
str = CSV.generate do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
Parsing, on the other hand, invokes auto-discovery of the row separator.
Auto-discovery reads ahead in the data looking for the next \r\n
, \n
, or \r
sequence. The sequence will be selected even if it occurs in a quoted field, assuming that you would have the same line endings there.
Example:
str = CSV.generate do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
The default $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR
($/
) is used if any of the following is true:
None of those sequences is found.
Data is ARGF
, STDIN
, STDOUT
, or STDERR
.
The stream is only available for output.
Obviously, discovery takes a little time. Set manually if speed is important. Also note that IO objects should be opened in binary mode on Windows if this feature will be used as the line-ending translation can cause problems with resetting the document position to where it was before the read ahead.
Raises an exception if the given value is not String-convertible:
row_sep = BasicObject.new # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `to_s' for #<BasicObject:>) CSV.generate(ary, row_sep: row_sep) # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `to_s' for #<BasicObject:>) CSV.parse(str, row_sep: row_sep)
col_sep
¶ ↑Specifies the String field separator to be used for both parsing and generating. The String will be transcoded into the data's Encoding before use.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:col_sep) # => "," (comma)
Using the default (comma):
str = CSV.generate do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using :
(colon):
col_sep = ':' str = CSV.generate(col_sep: col_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo:0\nbar:1\nbaz:2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str, col_sep: col_sep) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using ::
(two colons):
col_sep = '::' str = CSV.generate(col_sep: col_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo::0\nbar::1\nbaz::2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str, col_sep: col_sep) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Using ''
(empty string):
col_sep = '' str = CSV.generate(col_sep: col_sep) do |csv| csv << [:foo, 0] csv << [:bar, 1] csv << [:baz, 2] end str # => "foo0\nbar1\nbaz2\n"
Raises an exception if parsing with the empty String:
col_sep = '' # Raises ArgumentError (:col_sep must be 1 or more characters: "") CSV.parse("foo0\nbar1\nbaz2\n", col_sep: col_sep)
Raises an exception if the given value is not String-convertible:
col_sep = BasicObject.new # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `to_s' for #<BasicObject:>) CSV.generate(line, col_sep: col_sep) # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `to_s' for #<BasicObject:>) CSV.parse(str, col_sep: col_sep)
quote_char
¶ ↑Specifies the character (String of length 1) used used to quote fields in both parsing and generating. This String will be transcoded into the data's Encoding before use.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:quote_char) # => "\"" (double quote)
This is useful for an application that incorrectly uses '
(single-quote) to quote fields, instead of the correct "
(double-quote).
Using the default (double quote):
str = CSV.generate do |csv| csv << ['foo', 0] csv << ["'bar'", 1] csv << ['"baz"', 2] end str # => "foo,0\n'bar',1\n\"\"\"baz\"\"\",2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["'bar'", "1"], ["\"baz\"", "2"]]
Using '
(single-quote):
quote_char = "'" str = CSV.generate(quote_char: quote_char) do |csv| csv << ['foo', 0] csv << ["'bar'", 1] csv << ['"baz"', 2] end str # => "foo,0\n'''bar''',1\n\"baz\",2\n" ary = CSV.parse(str, quote_char: quote_char) ary # => [["foo", "0"], ["'bar'", "1"], ["\"baz\"", "2"]]
Raises an exception if the String length is greater than 1:
# Raises ArgumentError (:quote_char has to be nil or a single character String) CSV.new('', quote_char: 'xx')
Raises an exception if the value is not a String:
# Raises ArgumentError (:quote_char has to be nil or a single character String) CSV.new('', quote_char: :foo)
write_headers
¶ ↑Specifies the boolean that determines whether a header row is included in the output; ignored if there are no headers.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:write_headers) # => nil
Without write_headers
:
file_path = 't.csv' CSV.open(file_path,'w', :headers => ['Name','Value'] ) do |csv| csv << ['foo', '0'] end CSV.open(file_path) do |csv| csv.shift end # => ["foo", "0"]
With write_headers
“:
CSV.open(file_path,'w', :write_headers=> true, :headers => ['Name','Value'] ) do |csv| csv << ['foo', '0'] end CSV.open(file_path) do |csv| csv.shift end # => ["Name", "Value"]
force_quotes
¶ ↑Specifies the boolean that determines whether each output field is to be double-quoted.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:force_quotes) # => false
For examples in this section:
ary = ['foo', 0, nil]
Using the default, false
:
str = CSV.generate_line(ary) str # => "foo,0,\n"
Using true
:
str = CSV.generate_line(ary, force_quotes: true) str # => "\"foo\",\"0\",\"\"\n"
quote_empty
¶ ↑Specifies the boolean that determines whether an empty value is to be double-quoted.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:quote_empty) # => true
With the default true
:
CSV.generate_line(['"', ""]) # => "\"\"\"\",\"\"\n"
With false
:
CSV.generate_line(['"', ""], quote_empty: false) # => "\"\"\"\",\n"
write_converters
¶ ↑Specifies converters to be used in generating fields. See Write Converters
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:write_converters) # => nil
With no write converter:
str = CSV.generate_line(["\na\n", "\tb\t", " c "]) str # => "\"\na\n\",\tb\t, c \n"
With a write converter:
strip_converter = proc {|field| field.strip } str = CSV.generate_line(["\na\n", "\tb\t", " c "], write_converters: strip_converter) str # => "a,b,c\n"
With two write converters (called in order):
upcase_converter = proc {|field| field.upcase } downcase_converter = proc {|field| field.downcase } write_converters = [upcase_converter, downcase_converter] str = CSV.generate_line(['a', 'b', 'c'], write_converters: write_converters) str # => "a,b,c\n"
See also Write Converters
Raises an exception if the converter returns a value that is neither nil
nor String-convertible:
bad_converter = proc {|field| BasicObject.new } # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `is_a?' for #<BasicObject:>) CSV.generate_line(['a', 'b', 'c'], write_converters: bad_converter)#
write_nil_value
¶ ↑Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each nil
-valued field.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:write_nil_value) # => nil
Without the option:
str = CSV.generate_line(['a', nil, 'c', nil]) str # => "a,,c,\n"
With the option:
str = CSV.generate_line(['a', nil, 'c', nil], write_nil_value: "x") str # => "a,x,c,x\n"
write_empty_value
¶ ↑Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each field that has an empty String.
Default value:
CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS.fetch(:write_empty_value) # => ""
Without the option:
str = CSV.generate_line(['a', '', 'c', '']) str # => "a,\"\",c,\"\"\n"
With the option:
str = CSV.generate_line(['a', '', 'c', ''], write_empty_value: "x") str # => "a,x,c,x\n"
CSV
allows to specify column names of CSV
file, whether they are in data, or provided separately. If headers are specified, reading methods return an instance of CSV::Table
, consisting of CSV::Row
.
# Headers are part of data data = CSV.parse(<<~ROWS, headers: true) Name,Department,Salary Bob,Engineering,1000 Jane,Sales,2000 John,Management,5000 ROWS data.class #=> CSV::Table data.first #=> #<CSV::Row "Name":"Bob" "Department":"Engineering" "Salary":"1000"> data.first.to_h #=> {"Name"=>"Bob", "Department"=>"Engineering", "Salary"=>"1000"} # Headers provided by developer data = CSV.parse('Bob,Engineering,1000', headers: %i[name department salary]) data.first #=> #<CSV::Row name:"Bob" department:"Engineering" salary:"1000">
By default, each value (field or header) parsed by CSV is formed into a String. You can use a field converter or header converter to intercept and modify the parsed values:
See Field Converters.
See Header Converters.
Also by default, each value to be written during generation is written 'as-is'. You can use a write converter to modify values before writing.
See Write Converters.
You can specify converters for parsing or generating in the options
argument to various CSV methods:
Option converters
for converting parsed field values.
Option header_converters
for converting parsed header values.
Option write_converters
for converting values to be written (generated).
There are three forms for specifying converters:
A converter proc: executable code to be used for conversion.
A converter name: the name of a stored converter.
A converter list: an array of converter procs, converter names, and converter lists.
This converter proc, strip_converter
, accepts a value field
and returns field.strip
:
strip_converter = proc {|field| field.strip }
In this call to CSV.parse
, the keyword argument converters: string_converter
specifies that:
Proc string_converter
is to be called for each parsed field.
The converter's return value is to replace the field
value.
Example:
string = " foo , 0 \n bar , 1 \n baz , 2 \n" array = CSV.parse(string, converters: strip_converter) array # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
A converter proc can receive a second argument, field_info
, that contains details about the field. This modified strip_converter
displays its arguments:
strip_converter = proc do |field, field_info| p [field, field_info] field.strip end string = " foo , 0 \n bar , 1 \n baz , 2 \n" array = CSV.parse(string, converters: strip_converter) array # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Output:
[" foo ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=1, header=nil>] [" 0 ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=1, header=nil>] [" bar ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=2, header=nil>] [" 1 ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=2, header=nil>] [" baz ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=3, header=nil>] [" 2 ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=3, header=nil>]
Each CSV::Info object shows:
The 0-based field index.
The 1-based line index.
The field header, if any.
A converter may be given a name and stored in a structure where the parsing methods can find it by name.
The storage structure for field converters is the Hash CSV::Converters
. It has several built-in converter procs:
:integer
: converts each String-embedded integer into a true Integer.
:float
: converts each String-embedded float into a true Float.
:date
: converts each String-embedded date into a true Date.
:date_time
: converts each String-embedded date-time into a true DateTime
. This example creates a converter proc, then stores it:
strip_converter = proc {|field| field.strip } CSV::Converters[:strip] = strip_converter
Then the parsing method call can refer to the converter by its name, :strip
:
string = " foo , 0 \n bar , 1 \n baz , 2 \n" array = CSV.parse(string, converters: :strip) array # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
The storage structure for header converters is the Hash CSV::HeaderConverters
, which works in the same way. It also has built-in converter procs:
:downcase
: Downcases each header.
:symbol
: Converts each header to a Symbol.
There is no such storage structure for write headers.
A converter list is an Array that may include any assortment of:
Converter procs.
Names of stored converters.
Nested converter lists.
Examples:
numeric_converters = [:integer, :float] date_converters = [:date, :date_time] [numeric_converters, strip_converter] [strip_converter, date_converters, :float]
Like a converter proc, a converter list may be named and stored in either CSV::Converters or CSV::HeaderConverters:
CSV::Converters[:custom] = [strip_converter, date_converters, :float] CSV::HeaderConverters[:custom] = [:downcase, :symbol]
There are two built-in converter lists:
CSV::Converters[:numeric] # => [:integer, :float] CSV::Converters[:all] # => [:date_time, :numeric]
With no conversion, all parsed fields in all rows become Strings:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" ary = CSV.parse(string) ary # => # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
When you specify a field converter, each parsed field is passed to the converter; its return value becomes the stored value for the field. A converter might, for example, convert an integer embedded in a String into a true Integer. (In fact, that's what built-in field converter :integer
does.)
There are three ways to use field converters.
Using option converters with a parsing method:
ary = CSV.parse(string, converters: :integer) ary # => [0, 1, 2] # => [["foo", 0], ["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]]
Using option converters with a new CSV instance:
csv = CSV.new(string, converters: :integer) # Field converters in effect: csv.converters # => [:integer] csv.read # => [["foo", 0], ["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]]
Using method convert
to add a field converter to a CSV instance:
csv = CSV.new(string) # Add a converter. csv.convert(:integer) csv.converters # => [:integer] csv.read # => [["foo", 0], ["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]]
Installing a field converter does not affect already-read rows:
csv = CSV.new(string) csv.shift # => ["foo", "0"] # Add a converter. csv.convert(:integer) csv.converters # => [:integer] csv.read # => [["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]]
There are additional built-in converters, and custom converters are also supported.
The built-in field converters are in Hash CSV::Converters:
Each key is a field converter name.
Each value is one of:
A Proc field converter.
An Array of field converter names.
Display:
CSV::Converters.each_pair do |name, value| if value.kind_of?(Proc) p [name, value.class] else p [name, value] end end
Output:
[:integer, Proc] [:float, Proc] [:numeric, [:integer, :float]] [:date, Proc] [:date_time, Proc] [:all, [:date_time, :numeric]]
Each of these converters transcodes values to UTF-8 before attempting conversion. If a value cannot be transcoded to UTF-8 the conversion will fail and the value will remain unconverted.
Converter :integer
converts each field that Integer() accepts:
data = '0,1,2,x' # Without the converter csv = CSV.parse_line(data) csv # => ["0", "1", "2", "x"] # With the converter csv = CSV.parse_line(data, converters: :integer) csv # => [0, 1, 2, "x"]
Converter :float
converts each field that Float() accepts:
data = '1.0,3.14159,x' # Without the converter csv = CSV.parse_line(data) csv # => ["1.0", "3.14159", "x"] # With the converter csv = CSV.parse_line(data, converters: :float) csv # => [1.0, 3.14159, "x"]
Converter :numeric
converts with both :integer
and :float
..
Converter :date
converts each field that Date::parse accepts:
data = '2001-02-03,x' # Without the converter csv = CSV.parse_line(data) csv # => ["2001-02-03", "x"] # With the converter csv = CSV.parse_line(data, converters: :date) csv # => [#<Date: 2001-02-03 ((2451944j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>, "x"]
Converter :date_time
converts each field that DateTime::parse accepts:
data = '2020-05-07T14:59:00-05:00,x' # Without the converter csv = CSV.parse_line(data) csv # => ["2020-05-07T14:59:00-05:00", "x"] # With the converter csv = CSV.parse_line(data, converters: :date_time) csv # => [#<DateTime: 2020-05-07T14:59:00-05:00 ((2458977j,71940s,0n),-18000s,2299161j)>, "x"]
Converter :numeric
converts with both :date_time
and :numeric
..
As seen above, method convert
adds converters to a CSV instance, and method converters
returns an Array of the converters in effect:
csv = CSV.new('0,1,2') csv.converters # => [] csv.convert(:integer) csv.converters # => [:integer] csv.convert(:date) csv.converters # => [:integer, :date]
You can define a custom field converter:
strip_converter = proc {|field| field.strip } string = " foo , 0 \n bar , 1 \n baz , 2 \n" array = CSV.parse(string, converters: strip_converter) array # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
You can register the converter in Converters Hash, which allows you to refer to it by name:
CSV::Converters[:strip] = strip_converter string = " foo , 0 \n bar , 1 \n baz , 2 \n" array = CSV.parse(string, converters: :strip) array # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Header converters operate only on headers (and not on other rows).
There are three ways to use header converters; these examples use built-in header converter :dowhcase
, which downcases each parsed header.
Option header_converters
with a singleton parsing method:
string = "Name,Count\nFoo,0\n,Bar,1\nBaz,2" tbl = CSV.parse(string, headers: true, header_converters: :downcase) tbl.class # => CSV::Table tbl.headers # => ["name", "count"]
Option header_converters
with a new CSV instance:
csv = CSV.new(string, header_converters: :downcase) # Header converters in effect: csv.header_converters # => [:downcase] tbl = CSV.parse(string, headers: true) tbl.headers # => ["Name", "Count"]
Method header_convert
adds a header converter to a CSV instance:
csv = CSV.new(string) # Add a header converter. csv.header_convert(:downcase) csv.header_converters # => [:downcase] tbl = CSV.parse(string, headers: true) tbl.headers # => ["Name", "Count"]
The built-in header converters are in Hash CSV::HeaderConverters
. The keys there are the names of the converters:
CSV::HeaderConverters.keys # => [:downcase, :symbol]
Converter :downcase
converts each header by downcasing it:
string = "Name,Count\nFoo,0\n,Bar,1\nBaz,2" tbl = CSV.parse(string, headers: true, header_converters: :downcase) tbl.class # => CSV::Table tbl.headers # => ["name", "count"]
Converter :symbol
converts each header by making it into a Symbol:
string = "Name,Count\nFoo,0\n,Bar,1\nBaz,2" tbl = CSV.parse(string, headers: true, header_converters: :symbol) tbl.headers # => [:name, :count]
Details:
Strips leading and trailing whitespace.
Downcases the header.
Replaces embedded spaces with underscores.
Removes non-word characters.
Makes the string into a Symbol.
You can define a custom header converter:
upcase_converter = proc {|header| header.upcase } string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" table = CSV.parse(string, headers: true, header_converters: upcase_converter) table # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4> table.headers # => ["NAME", "VALUE"]
You can register the converter in HeaderConverters Hash, which allows you to refer to it by name:
CSV::HeaderConverters[:upcase] = upcase_converter table = CSV.parse(string, headers: true, header_converters: :upcase) table # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4> table.headers # => ["NAME", "VALUE"]
When you specify a write converter for generating CSV, each field to be written is passed to the converter; its return value becomes the new value for the field. A converter might, for example, strip whitespace from a field.
Using no write converter (all fields unmodified):
output_string = CSV.generate do |csv| csv << [' foo ', 0] csv << [' bar ', 1] csv << [' baz ', 2] end output_string # => " foo ,0\n bar ,1\n baz ,2\n"
Using option write_converters
with two custom write converters:
strip_converter = proc {|field| field.respond_to?(:strip) ? field.strip : field } upcase_converter = proc {|field| field.respond_to?(:upcase) ? field.upcase : field } write_converters = [strip_converter, upcase_converter] output_string = CSV.generate(write_converters: write_converters) do |csv| csv << [' foo ', 0] csv << [' bar ', 1] csv << [' baz ', 2] end output_string # => "FOO,0\nBAR,1\nBAZ,2\n"
This new CSV
parser is m17n savvy. The parser works in the Encoding of the IO or String object being read from or written to. Your data is never transcoded (unless you ask Ruby to transcode it for you) and will literally be parsed in the Encoding it is in. Thus CSV
will return Arrays or Rows of Strings in the Encoding of your data. This is accomplished by transcoding the parser itself into your Encoding.
Some transcoding must take place, of course, to accomplish this multiencoding support. For example, :col_sep
, :row_sep
, and :quote_char
must be transcoded to match your data. Hopefully this makes the entire process feel transparent, since CSV's defaults should just magically work for your data. However, you can set these values manually in the target Encoding to avoid the translation.
It's also important to note that while all of CSV's core parser is now Encoding agnostic, some features are not. For example, the built-in converters will try to transcode data to UTF-8 before making conversions. Again, you can provide custom converters that are aware of your Encodings to avoid this translation. It's just too hard for me to support native conversions in all of Ruby's Encodings.
Anyway, the practical side of this is simple: make sure IO and String objects passed into CSV
have the proper Encoding set and everything should just work. CSV
methods that allow you to open IO objects (CSV::foreach()
, CSV::open()
, CSV::read()
, and CSV::readlines()
) do allow you to specify the Encoding.
One minor exception comes when generating CSV
into a String with an Encoding that is not ASCII compatible. There's no existing data for CSV
to use to prepare itself and thus you will probably need to manually specify the desired Encoding for most of those cases. It will try to guess using the fields in a row of output though, when using CSV::generate_line()
or Array#to_csv().
I try to point out any other Encoding issues in the documentation of methods as they come up.
This has been tested to the best of my ability with all non-“dummy” Encodings Ruby ships with. However, it is brave new code and may have some bugs. Please feel free to report any issues you find with it.
The encoding used by all converters.
A Hash containing the names and Procs for the built-in field converters. See Built-In Field Converters.
This Hash is intentionally left unfrozen, and may be extended with custom field converters. See Custom Field Converters.
Default values for method options.
A Regexp used to find and convert some common Date formats.
A Regexp used to find and convert some common DateTime formats.
A FieldInfo
Struct contains details about a field's position in the data source it was read from. CSV
will pass this Struct to some blocks that make decisions based on field structure. See CSV.convert_fields() for an example.
index
The zero-based index of the field in its row.
line
The line of the data source this row is from.
header
The header for the column, when available.
A Hash containing the names and Procs for the built-in header converters. See Built-In Header Converters.
This Hash is intentionally left unfrozen, and may be extended with custom field converters. See Custom Header Converters.
The version of the installed library.
:call-seq:
csv.encoding -> endcoding
Returns the encoding used for parsing and generating; see Character Encodings (M17n or Multilingualization):
CSV.new('').encoding # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
Reads CSV input and writes CSV output.
For each input row:
Forms the data into:
A CSV::Row
object, if headers are in use.
An Array of Arrays, otherwise.
Calls the block with that object.
Appends the block's return value to the output.
Arguments:
CSV source:
Argument in_string
, if given, should be a String object; it will be put into a new StringIO object positioned at the beginning.
Argument in_io
, if given, should be an IO object that is open for reading; on return, the IO object will be closed.
If neither in_string
nor in_io
is given, the input stream defaults to ARGF.
CSV output:
Argument out_string
, if given, should be a String object; it will be put into a new StringIO object positioned at the beginning.
Argument out_io
, if given, should be an IO object that is ppen for writing; on return, the IO object will be closed.
If neither out_string
nor out_io
is given, the output stream defaults to $stdout
.
Argument options
should be keyword arguments.
Each argument name that is prefixed with in_
or input_
is stripped of its prefix and is treated as an option for parsing the input. Option input_row_sep
defaults to $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR
.
Each argument name that is prefixed with out_
or output_
is stripped of its prefix and is treated as an option for generating the output. Option output_row_sep
defaults to $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR
.
Each argument not prefixed as above is treated as an option both for parsing the input and for generating the output.
Example:
in_string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" out_string = '' CSV.filter(in_string, out_string) do |row| row[0] = row[0].upcase row[1] *= 4 end out_string # => "FOO,0000\nBAR,1111\nBAZ,2222\n"
# File csv.rb, line 1052 def filter(input=nil, output=nil, **options) # parse options for input, output, or both in_options, out_options = Hash.new, {row_sep: $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR} options.each do |key, value| case key.to_s when /\Ain(?:put)?_(.+)\Z/ in_options[$1.to_sym] = value when /\Aout(?:put)?_(.+)\Z/ out_options[$1.to_sym] = value else in_options[key] = value out_options[key] = value end end # build input and output wrappers input = new(input || ARGF, **in_options) output = new(output || $stdout, **out_options) # process headers need_manual_header_output = (in_options[:headers] and out_options[:headers] == true and out_options[:write_headers]) if need_manual_header_output first_row = input.shift if first_row if first_row.is_a?(Row) headers = first_row.headers yield headers output << headers end yield first_row output << first_row end end # read, yield, write input.each do |row| yield row output << row end end
Calls the block with each row read from source path
or io
.
Argument path
, if given, must be the path to a file.
Argument io
should be an IO object that is:
Open for reading; on return, the IO object will be closed.
Positioned at the beginning. To position at the end, for appending, use method CSV.generate
. For any other positioning, pass a preset StringIO object instead.
Argument mode
, if given, must be a File mode See Open Mode.
Arguments **options
must be keyword options. See Options for Parsing.
This method optionally accepts an additional :encoding
option that you can use to specify the Encoding of the data read from path
or io
. You must provide this unless your data is in the encoding given by Encoding::default_external
. Parsing will use this to determine how to parse the data. You may provide a second Encoding to have the data transcoded as it is read. For example,
encoding: 'UTF-32BE:UTF-8'
would read UTF-32BE
data from the file but transcode it to UTF-8
before parsing.
headers
¶ ↑Without option headers
, returns each row as an Array object.
These examples assume prior execution of:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string)
Read rows from a file at path
:
CSV.foreach(path) {|row| p row }
Output:
["foo", "0"] ["bar", "1"] ["baz", "2"]
Read rows from an IO object:
File.open(path) do |file| CSV.foreach(file) {|row| p row } end
Output:
["foo", "0"] ["bar", "1"] ["baz", "2"]
Returns a new Enumerator if no block given:
CSV.foreach(path) # => #<Enumerator: CSV:foreach("t.csv", "r")> CSV.foreach(File.open(path)) # => #<Enumerator: CSV:foreach(#<File:t.csv>, "r")>
Issues a warning if an encoding is unsupported:
CSV.foreach(File.open(path), encoding: 'foo:bar') {|row| }
Output:
warning: Unsupported encoding foo ignored warning: Unsupported encoding bar ignored
headers
¶ ↑With option headers, returns each row as a CSV::Row
object.
These examples assume prior execution of:
string = "Name,Count\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string)
Read rows from a file at path
:
CSV.foreach(path, headers: true) {|row| p row }
Output:
#<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Count":"0"> #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Count":"1"> #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Count":"2">
Read rows from an IO object:
File.open(path) do |file| CSV.foreach(file, headers: true) {|row| p row } end
Output:
#<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Count":"0"> #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Count":"1"> #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Count":"2">
Raises an exception if path
is a String, but not the path to a readable file:
# Raises Errno::ENOENT (No such file or directory @ rb_sysopen - nosuch.csv): CSV.foreach('nosuch.csv') {|row| }
Raises an exception if io
is an IO object, but not open for reading:
io = File.open(path, 'w') {|row| } # Raises TypeError (no implicit conversion of nil into String): CSV.foreach(io) {|row| }
Raises an exception if mode
is invalid:
# Raises ArgumentError (invalid access mode nosuch): CSV.foreach(path, 'nosuch') {|row| }
# File csv.rb, line 1203 def foreach(path, mode="r", **options, &block) return to_enum(__method__, path, mode, **options) unless block_given? open(path, mode, **options) do |csv| csv.each(&block) end end
Argument csv_string
, if given, must be a String object; defaults to a new empty String.
Arguments options
, if given, should be generating options. See Options for Generating.
Creates a new CSV object via CSV.new(csv_string, **options)
; calls the block with the CSV object, which the block may modify; returns the String generated from the CSV object.
Note that a passed String is modified by this method. Pass csv_string
.dup if the String must be preserved.
This method has one additional option: :encoding
, which sets the base Encoding for the output if no no str
is specified. CSV
needs this hint if you plan to output non-ASCII compatible data.
Add lines:
input_string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" output_string = CSV.generate(input_string) do |csv| csv << ['bat', 3] csv << ['bam', 4] end output_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\nbat,3\nbam,4\n" input_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\nbat,3\nbam,4\n" output_string.equal?(input_string) # => true # Same string, modified
Add lines into new string, preserving old string:
input_string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" output_string = CSV.generate(input_string.dup) do |csv| csv << ['bat', 3] csv << ['bam', 4] end output_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\nbat,3\nbam,4\n" input_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" output_string.equal?(input_string) # => false # Different strings
Create lines from nothing:
output_string = CSV.generate do |csv| csv << ['foo', 0] csv << ['bar', 1] csv << ['baz', 2] end output_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
Raises an exception if csv_string
is not a String object:
# Raises TypeError (no implicit conversion of Integer into String) CSV.generate(0)
# File csv.rb, line 1269 def generate(str=nil, **options) encoding = options[:encoding] # add a default empty String, if none was given if str str = StringIO.new(str) str.seek(0, IO::SEEK_END) str.set_encoding(encoding) if encoding else str = +"" str.force_encoding(encoding) if encoding end csv = new(str, **options) # wrap yield csv # yield for appending csv.string # return final String end
Returns the String created by generating CSV from ary
using the specified options
.
Argument ary
must be an Array.
Special options:
Option :row_sep
defaults to $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR
($/
).:
$INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR # => "\n"
This method accepts an additional option, :encoding
, which sets the base Encoding for the output. This method will try to guess your Encoding from the first non-nil
field in row
, if possible, but you may need to use this parameter as a backup plan.
For other options
, see Options for Generating.
Returns the String generated from an Array:
CSV.generate_line(['foo', '0']) # => "foo,0\n"
Raises an exception if ary
is not an Array:
# Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `find' for :foo:Symbol) CSV.generate_line(:foo)
# File csv.rb, line 1317 def generate_line(row, **options) options = {row_sep: $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR}.merge(options) str = +"" if options[:encoding] str.force_encoding(options[:encoding]) else fallback_encoding = nil output_encoding = nil row.each do |field| next unless field.is_a?(String) fallback_encoding ||= field.encoding next if field.ascii_only? output_encoding = field.encoding break end output_encoding ||= fallback_encoding if output_encoding str.force_encoding(output_encoding) end end (new(str, **options) << row).string end
Creates or retrieves cached CSV objects. For arguments and options, see CSV.new
.
With no block given, returns a CSV object.
The first call to instance
creates and caches a CSV object:
s0 = 's0' csv0 = CSV.instance(s0) csv0.class # => CSV
Subsequent calls to instance
with that same string
or io
retrieve that same cached object:
csv1 = CSV.instance(s0) csv1.class # => CSV csv1.equal?(csv0) # => true # Same CSV object
A subsequent call to instance
with a different string
or io
creates and caches a different CSV object.
s1 = 's1' csv2 = CSV.instance(s1) csv2.equal?(csv0) # => false # Different CSV object
All the cached objects remains available:
csv3 = CSV.instance(s0) csv3.equal?(csv0) # true # Same CSV object csv4 = CSV.instance(s1) csv4.equal?(csv2) # true # Same CSV object
When a block is given, calls the block with the created or retrieved CSV object; returns the block's return value:
CSV.instance(s0) {|csv| :foo } # => :foo
# File csv.rb, line 981 def instance(data = $stdout, **options) # create a _signature_ for this method call, data object and options sig = [data.object_id] + options.values_at(*DEFAULT_OPTIONS.keys.sort_by { |sym| sym.to_s }) # fetch or create the instance for this signature @@instances ||= Hash.new instance = (@@instances[sig] ||= new(data, **options)) if block_given? yield instance # run block, if given, returning result else instance # or return the instance end end
Returns the new CSV object created using string
or io
and the specified options
.
Argument string
should be a String object; it will be put into a new StringIO object positioned at the beginning.
Argument io
should be an IO object that is:
Open for reading; on return, the IO object will be closed.
Positioned at the beginning. To position at the end, for appending, use method CSV.generate
. For any other positioning, pass a preset StringIO object instead.
Argument options
: See:
For performance reasons, the options cannot be overridden in a CSV object, so those specified here will endure.
In addition to the CSV instance methods, several IO methods are delegated. See Delegated Methods.
Create a CSV object from a String object:
csv = CSV.new('foo,0') csv # => #<CSV io_type:StringIO encoding:UTF-8 lineno:0 col_sep:"," row_sep:"\n" quote_char:"\"">
Create a CSV object from a File object:
File.write('t.csv', 'foo,0') csv = CSV.new(File.open('t.csv')) csv # => #<CSV io_type:File io_path:"t.csv" encoding:UTF-8 lineno:0 col_sep:"," row_sep:"\n" quote_char:"\"">
Raises an exception if the argument is nil
:
# Raises ArgumentError (Cannot parse nil as CSV): CSV.new(nil)
# File csv.rb, line 1732 def initialize(data, col_sep: ",", row_sep: :auto, quote_char: '"', field_size_limit: nil, converters: nil, unconverted_fields: nil, headers: false, return_headers: false, write_headers: nil, header_converters: nil, skip_blanks: false, force_quotes: false, skip_lines: nil, liberal_parsing: false, internal_encoding: nil, external_encoding: nil, encoding: nil, nil_value: nil, empty_value: "", quote_empty: true, write_converters: nil, write_nil_value: nil, write_empty_value: "", strip: false) raise ArgumentError.new("Cannot parse nil as CSV") if data.nil? if data.is_a?(String) @io = StringIO.new(data) @io.set_encoding(encoding || data.encoding) else @io = data end @encoding = determine_encoding(encoding, internal_encoding) @base_fields_converter_options = { nil_value: nil_value, empty_value: empty_value, } @write_fields_converter_options = { nil_value: write_nil_value, empty_value: write_empty_value, } @initial_converters = converters @initial_header_converters = header_converters @initial_write_converters = write_converters @parser_options = { column_separator: col_sep, row_separator: row_sep, quote_character: quote_char, field_size_limit: field_size_limit, unconverted_fields: unconverted_fields, headers: headers, return_headers: return_headers, skip_blanks: skip_blanks, skip_lines: skip_lines, liberal_parsing: liberal_parsing, encoding: @encoding, nil_value: nil_value, empty_value: empty_value, strip: strip, } @parser = nil @parser_enumerator = nil @eof_error = nil @writer_options = { encoding: @encoding, force_encoding: (not encoding.nil?), force_quotes: force_quotes, headers: headers, write_headers: write_headers, column_separator: col_sep, row_separator: row_sep, quote_character: quote_char, quote_empty: quote_empty, } @writer = nil writer if @writer_options[:write_headers] end
possible options elements:
hash form: :invalid => nil # raise error on invalid byte sequence (default) :invalid => :replace # replace invalid byte sequence :undef => :replace # replace undefined conversion :replace => string # replacement string ("?" or "\uFFFD" if not specified)
Argument path
, if given, must be the path to a file.
Argument io
should be an IO object that is:
Open for reading; on return, the IO object will be closed.
Positioned at the beginning. To position at the end, for appending, use method CSV.generate
. For any other positioning, pass a preset StringIO object instead.
Argument mode
, if given, must be a File mode See Open Mode.
Arguments **options
must be keyword options. See Options for Generating.
This method optionally accepts an additional :encoding
option that you can use to specify the Encoding of the data read from path
or io
. You must provide this unless your data is in the encoding given by Encoding::default_external
. Parsing will use this to determine how to parse the data. You may provide a second Encoding to have the data transcoded as it is read. For example,
encoding: 'UTF-32BE:UTF-8'
would read UTF-32BE
data from the file but transcode it to UTF-8
before parsing.
These examples assume prior execution of:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string)
With no block given, returns a new CSV object.
Create a CSV object using a file path:
csv = CSV.open(path) csv # => #<CSV io_type:File io_path:"t.csv" encoding:UTF-8 lineno:0 col_sep:"," row_sep:"\n" quote_char:"\"">
Create a CSV object using an open File:
csv = CSV.open(File.open(path)) csv # => #<CSV io_type:File io_path:"t.csv" encoding:UTF-8 lineno:0 col_sep:"," row_sep:"\n" quote_char:"\"">
With a block given, calls the block with the created CSV object; returns the block's return value:
Using a file path:
csv = CSV.open(path) {|csv| p csv} csv # => #<CSV io_type:File io_path:"t.csv" encoding:UTF-8 lineno:0 col_sep:"," row_sep:"\n" quote_char:"\"">
Output:
#<CSV io_type:File io_path:"t.csv" encoding:UTF-8 lineno:0 col_sep:"," row_sep:"\n" quote_char:"\"">
Using an open File:
csv = CSV.open(File.open(path)) {|csv| p csv} csv # => #<CSV io_type:File io_path:"t.csv" encoding:UTF-8 lineno:0 col_sep:"," row_sep:"\n" quote_char:"\"">
Output:
#<CSV io_type:File io_path:"t.csv" encoding:UTF-8 lineno:0 col_sep:"," row_sep:"\n" quote_char:"\"">
Raises an exception if the argument is not a String object or IO object:
# Raises TypeError (no implicit conversion of Symbol into String) CSV.open(:foo)
# File csv.rb, line 1412 def open(filename, mode="r", **options) # wrap a File opened with the remaining +args+ with no newline # decorator file_opts = {universal_newline: false}.merge(options) options.delete(:invalid) options.delete(:undef) options.delete(:replace) begin f = File.open(filename, mode, **file_opts) rescue ArgumentError => e raise unless /needs binmode/.match?(e.message) and mode == "r" mode = "rb" file_opts = {encoding: Encoding.default_external}.merge(file_opts) retry end begin csv = new(f, **options) rescue Exception f.close raise end # handle blocks like Ruby's open(), not like the CSV library if block_given? begin yield csv ensure csv.close end else csv end end
Parses string
or io
using the specified options
.
Argument string
should be a String object; it will be put into a new StringIO object positioned at the beginning.
Argument io
should be an IO object that is:
Open for reading; on return, the IO object will be closed.
Positioned at the beginning. To position at the end, for appending, use method CSV.generate
. For any other positioning, pass a preset StringIO object instead.
Argument options
: see Options for Parsing
headers
¶ ↑Without option headers case.
These examples assume prior execution of:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string)
With no block given, returns an Array of Arrays formed from the source.
Parse a String:
a_of_a = CSV.parse(string) a_of_a # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
Parse an open File:
a_of_a = File.open(path) do |file| CSV.parse(file) end a_of_a # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
With a block given, calls the block with each parsed row:
Parse a String:
CSV.parse(string) {|row| p row }
Output:
["foo", "0"] ["bar", "1"] ["baz", "2"]
Parse an open File:
File.open(path) do |file| CSV.parse(file) {|row| p row } end
Output:
["foo", "0"] ["bar", "1"] ["baz", "2"]
headers
¶ ↑With option headers case.
These examples assume prior execution of:
string = "Name,Count\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string)
With no block given, returns a CSV::Table
object formed from the source.
Parse a String:
csv_table = CSV.parse(string, headers: ['Name', 'Count']) csv_table # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:5>
Parse an open File:
csv_table = File.open(path) do |file| CSV.parse(file, headers: ['Name', 'Count']) end csv_table # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
With a block given, calls the block with each parsed row, which has been formed into a CSV::Row
object:
Parse a String:
CSV.parse(string, headers: ['Name', 'Count']) {|row| p row }
Output:
# <CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Count":"0"> # <CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Count":"1"> # <CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Count":"2">
Parse an open File:
File.open(path) do |file| CSV.parse(file, headers: ['Name', 'Count']) {|row| p row } end
Output:
# <CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Count":"0"> # <CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Count":"1"> # <CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Count":"2">
Raises an exception if the argument is not a String object or IO object:
# Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `close' for :foo:Symbol) CSV.parse(:foo)
# File csv.rb, line 1559 def parse(str, **options, &block) csv = new(str, **options) return csv.each(&block) if block_given? # slurp contents, if no block is given begin csv.read ensure csv.close end end
Returns the data created by parsing the first line of string
or io
using the specified options
.
Argument string
should be a String object; it will be put into a new StringIO object positioned at the beginning.
Argument io
should be an IO object that is:
Open for reading; on return, the IO object will be closed.
Positioned at the beginning. To position at the end, for appending, use method CSV.generate
. For any other positioning, pass a preset StringIO object instead.
Argument options
: see Options for Parsing
headers
¶ ↑Without option headers
, returns the first row as a new Array.
These examples assume prior execution of:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string)
Parse the first line from a String object:
CSV.parse_line(string) # => ["foo", "0"]
Parse the first line from a File object:
File.open(path) do |file| CSV.parse_line(file) # => ["foo", "0"] end # => ["foo", "0"]
Returns nil
if the argument is an empty String:
CSV.parse_line('') # => nil
headers
¶ ↑With option headers, returns the first row as a CSV::Row
object.
These examples assume prior execution of:
string = "Name,Count\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string)
Parse the first line from a String object:
CSV.parse_line(string, headers: true) # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Count":"0">
Parse the first line from a File object:
File.open(path) do |file| CSV.parse_line(file, headers: true) end # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Count":"0">
Raises an exception if the argument is nil
:
# Raises ArgumentError (Cannot parse nil as CSV): CSV.parse_line(nil)
# File csv.rb, line 1632 def parse_line(line, **options) new(line, **options).each.first end
Opens the given source
with the given options
(see CSV.open
), reads the source (see CSV#read
), and returns the result, which will be either an Array of Arrays or a CSV::Table
.
Without headers:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string) CSV.read(path) # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
With headers:
string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string) CSV.read(path, headers: true) # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
# File csv.rb, line 1656 def read(path, **options) open(path, **options) { |csv| csv.read } end
Alias for CSV.read
.
# File csv.rb, line 1664 def readlines(path, **options) read(path, **options) end
Calls CSV.read
with source
, options
, and certain default options:
headers
: true
converbers
: :numeric
header_converters
: :symbol
Returns a CSV::Table
object.
Example:
string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string) CSV.table(path) # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
# File csv.rb, line 1683 def table(path, **options) default_options = { headers: true, converters: :numeric, header_converters: :symbol, } options = default_options.merge(options) read(path, **options) end
Appends a row to self
.
Argument row
must be an Array object or a CSV::Row
object.
The output stream must be open for writing.
Append Arrays:
CSV.generate do |csv| csv << ['foo', 0] csv << ['bar', 1] csv << ['baz', 2] end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
Append CSV::Rows:
headers = [] CSV.generate do |csv| csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['foo', 0]) csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['bar', 1]) csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['baz', 2]) end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
Headers in CSV::Row
objects are not appended:
headers = ['Name', 'Count'] CSV.generate do |csv| csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['foo', 0]) csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['bar', 1]) csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['baz', 2]) end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
Raises an exception if row
is not an Array or CSV::Row:
CSV.generate do |csv| # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `collect' for :foo:Symbol) csv << :foo end
Raises an exception if the output stream is not opened for writing:
path = 't.csv' File.write(path, '') File.open(path) do |file| CSV.open(file) do |csv| # Raises IOError (not opened for writing) csv << ['foo', 0] end end
# File csv.rb, line 2162 def <<(row) writer << row self end
# File csv.rb, line 2051 def binmode? if @io.respond_to?(:binmode?) @io.binmode? else false end end
Returns the encoded column separator; used for parsing and writing; see Option col_sep:
CSV.new('').col_sep # => ","
# File csv.rb, line 1821 def col_sep parser.column_separator end
With no block, installs a field converter (a Proc).
With a block, defines and installs a custom field converter.
Returns the Array of installed field converters.
Argument converter_name
, if given, should be the name of an existing field converter.
See Field Converters.
With no block, installs a field converter:
csv = CSV.new('') csv.convert(:integer) csv.convert(:float) csv.convert(:date) csv.converters # => [:integer, :float, :date]
The block, if given, is called for each field:
Argument field
is the field value.
Argument field_info
is a CSV::FieldInfo
object containing details about the field.
The examples here assume the prior execution of:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string)
Example giving a block:
csv = CSV.open(path) csv.convert {|field, field_info| p [field, field_info]; field.upcase } csv.read # => [["FOO", "0"], ["BAR", "1"], ["BAZ", "2"]]
Output:
["foo", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=1, header=nil>] ["0", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=1, header=nil>] ["bar", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=2, header=nil>] ["1", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=2, header=nil>] ["baz", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=3, header=nil>] ["2", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=3, header=nil>]
The block need not return a String object:
csv = CSV.open(path) csv.convert {|field, field_info| field.to_sym } csv.read # => [[:foo, :"0"], [:bar, :"1"], [:baz, :"2"]]
If converter_name
is given, the block is not called:
csv = CSV.open(path) csv.convert(:integer) {|field, field_info| fail 'Cannot happen' } csv.read # => [["foo", 0], ["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]]
Raises a parse-time exception if converter_name
is not the name of a built-in field converter:
csv = CSV.open(path) csv.convert(:nosuch) => [nil] # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `arity' for nil:NilClass) csv.read
# File csv.rb, line 2233 def convert(name = nil, &converter) parser_fields_converter.add_converter(name, &converter) end
Returns an Array containing field converters; see Field Converters:
csv = CSV.new('') csv.converters # => [] csv.convert(:integer) csv.converters # => [:integer] csv.convert(proc {|x| x.to_s }) csv.converters
# File csv.rb, line 1876 def converters parser_fields_converter.map do |converter| name = Converters.rassoc(converter) name ? name.first : converter end end
Calls the block with each successive row. The data source must be opened for reading.
Without headers:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" csv = CSV.new(string) csv.each do |row| p row end
Output:
["foo", "0"] ["bar", "1"] ["baz", "2"]
With headers:
string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" csv = CSV.new(string, headers: true) csv.each do |row| p row end
Output:
<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0"> <CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1"> <CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">
Raises an exception if the source is not opened for reading:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" csv = CSV.new(string) csv.close # Raises IOError (not opened for reading) csv.each do |row| p row end
# File csv.rb, line 2344 def each(&block) parser_enumerator.each(&block) end
# File csv.rb, line 2087 def eof? return false if @eof_error begin parser_enumerator.peek false rescue MalformedCSVError => error @eof_error = error false rescue StopIteration true end end
Returns the limit for field size; used for parsing; see Option field_size_limit:
CSV.new('').field_size_limit # => nil
# File csv.rb, line 1851 def field_size_limit parser.field_size_limit end
# File csv.rb, line 2059 def flock(*args) raise NotImplementedError unless @io.respond_to?(:flock) @io.flock(*args) end
Returns the value that determines whether all output fields are to be quoted; used for generating; see Option force_quotes:
CSV.new('').force_quotes? # => false
# File csv.rb, line 1962 def force_quotes? @writer_options[:force_quotes] end
The block need not return a String object:
csv = CSV.open(path, headers: true) csv.header_convert {|header, field_info| header.to_sym } table = csv.read table.headers # => [:Name, :Value]
If converter_name
is given, the block is not called:
csv = CSV.open(path, headers: true) csv.header_convert(:downcase) {|header, field_info| fail 'Cannot happen' } table = csv.read table.headers # => ["name", "value"]
Raises a parse-time exception if converter_name
is not the name of a built-in field converter:
csv = CSV.open(path, headers: true) csv.header_convert(:nosuch) # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `arity' for nil:NilClass) csv.read
# File csv.rb, line 2299 def header_convert(name = nil, &converter) header_fields_converter.add_converter(name, &converter) end
Returns an Array containing header converters; used for parsing; see Header Converters:
CSV.new('').header_converters # => []
# File csv.rb, line 1938 def header_converters header_fields_converter.map do |converter| name = HeaderConverters.rassoc(converter) name ? name.first : converter end end
Returns true
if the next row to be read is a header row; false
otherwise.
Without headers:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" csv = CSV.new(string) csv.header_row? # => false
With headers:
string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" csv = CSV.new(string, headers: true) csv.header_row? # => true csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0"> csv.header_row? # => false
Raises an exception if the source is not opened for reading:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" csv = CSV.new(string) csv.close # Raises IOError (not opened for reading) csv.header_row?
# File csv.rb, line 2415 def header_row? parser.header_row? end
Returns the value that determines whether headers are used; used for parsing; see Option headers:
CSV.new('').headers # => nil
# File csv.rb, line 1900 def headers if @writer @writer.headers else parsed_headers = parser.headers return parsed_headers if parsed_headers raw_headers = @parser_options[:headers] raw_headers = nil if raw_headers == false raw_headers end end
Returns a String showing certain properties of self
:
string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" csv = CSV.new(string, headers: true) s = csv.inspect s # => "#<CSV io_type:StringIO encoding:UTF-8 lineno:0 col_sep:\",\" row_sep:\"\\n\" quote_char:\"\\\"\" headers:true>"
# File csv.rb, line 2474 def inspect str = ["#<", self.class.to_s, " io_type:"] # show type of wrapped IO if @io == $stdout then str << "$stdout" elsif @io == $stdin then str << "$stdin" elsif @io == $stderr then str << "$stderr" else str << @io.class.to_s end # show IO.path(), if available if @io.respond_to?(:path) and (p = @io.path) str << " io_path:" << p.inspect end # show encoding str << " encoding:" << @encoding.name # show other attributes ["lineno", "col_sep", "row_sep", "quote_char"].each do |attr_name| if a = __send__(attr_name) str << " " << attr_name << ":" << a.inspect end end ["skip_blanks", "liberal_parsing"].each do |attr_name| if a = __send__("#{attr_name}?") str << " " << attr_name << ":" << a.inspect end end _headers = headers str << " headers:" << _headers.inspect if _headers str << ">" begin str.join('') rescue # any encoding error str.map do |s| e = Encoding::Converter.asciicompat_encoding(s.encoding) e ? s.encode(e) : s.force_encoding("ASCII-8BIT") end.join('') end end
# File csv.rb, line 2064 def ioctl(*args) raise NotImplementedError unless @io.respond_to?(:ioctl) @io.ioctl(*args) end
Returns the value that determines whether illegal input is to be handled; used for parsing; see Option liberal_parsing:
CSV.new('').liberal_parsing? # => false
# File csv.rb, line 1972 def liberal_parsing? parser.liberal_parsing? end
Returns the line most recently read:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string) CSV.open(path) do |csv| csv.each do |row| p [csv.lineno, csv.line] end end
Output:
[1, "foo,0\n"] [2, "bar,1\n"] [3, "baz,2\n"]
# File csv.rb, line 2037 def line parser.line end
Returns the count of the rows parsed or generated.
Parsing:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string) CSV.open(path) do |csv| csv.each do |row| p [csv.lineno, row] end end
Output:
[1, ["foo", "0"]] [2, ["bar", "1"]] [3, ["baz", "2"]]
Generating:
CSV.generate do |csv| p csv.lineno; csv << ['foo', 0] p csv.lineno; csv << ['bar', 1] p csv.lineno; csv << ['baz', 2] end
Output:
0 1 2
# File csv.rb, line 2013 def lineno if @writer @writer.lineno else parser.lineno end end
# File csv.rb, line 2069 def path @io.path if @io.respond_to?(:path) end
Returns the encoded quote character; used for parsing and writing; see Option quote_char:
CSV.new('').quote_char # => "\""
# File csv.rb, line 1841 def quote_char parser.quote_character end
Forms the remaining rows from self
into:
A CSV::Table
object, if headers are in use.
An Array of Arrays, otherwise.
The data source must be opened for reading.
Without headers:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string) csv = CSV.open(path) csv.read # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
With headers:
string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" path = 't.csv' File.write(path, string) csv = CSV.open(path, headers: true) csv.read # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
Raises an exception if the source is not opened for reading:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" csv = CSV.new(string) csv.close # Raises IOError (not opened for reading) csv.read
# File csv.rb, line 2379 def read rows = to_a if parser.use_headers? Table.new(rows, headers: parser.headers) else rows end end
Returns the value that determines whether headers are to be returned; used for parsing; see Option return_headers:
CSV.new('').return_headers? # => false
# File csv.rb, line 1918 def return_headers? parser.return_headers? end
Rewinds the underlying IO object and resets CSV's lineno() counter.
# File csv.rb, line 2102 def rewind @parser = nil @parser_enumerator = nil @eof_error = nil @writer.rewind if @writer @io.rewind end
Returns the encoded row separator; used for parsing and writing; see Option row_sep:
CSV.new('').row_sep # => "\n"
# File csv.rb, line 1831 def row_sep parser.row_separator end
Returns the next row of data as:
An Array if no headers are used.
A CSV::Row
object if headers are used.
The data source must be opened for reading.
Without headers:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" csv = CSV.new(string) csv.shift # => ["foo", "0"] csv.shift # => ["bar", "1"] csv.shift # => ["baz", "2"] csv.shift # => nil
With headers:
string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" csv = CSV.new(string, headers: true) csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0"> csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1"> csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2"> csv.shift # => nil
Raises an exception if the source is not opened for reading:
string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n" csv = CSV.new(string) csv.close # Raises IOError (not opened for reading) csv.shift
# File csv.rb, line 2452 def shift if @eof_error eof_error, @eof_error = @eof_error, nil raise eof_error end begin parser_enumerator.next rescue StopIteration nil end end
Returns the value that determines whether blank lines are to be ignored; used for parsing; see Option skip_blanks:
CSV.new('').skip_blanks? # => false
# File csv.rb, line 1951 def skip_blanks? parser.skip_blanks? end
Returns the Regexp used to identify comment lines; used for parsing; see Option skip_lines:
CSV.new('').skip_lines # => nil
# File csv.rb, line 1861 def skip_lines parser.skip_lines end
# File csv.rb, line 2073 def stat(*args) raise NotImplementedError unless @io.respond_to?(:stat) @io.stat(*args) end
# File csv.rb, line 2078 def to_i raise NotImplementedError unless @io.respond_to?(:to_i) @io.to_i end
# File csv.rb, line 2083 def to_io @io.respond_to?(:to_io) ? @io.to_io : @io end
Returns the value that determines whether unconverted fields are to be available; used for parsing; see Option unconverted_fields:
CSV.new('').unconverted_fields? # => nil
# File csv.rb, line 1890 def unconverted_fields? parser.unconverted_fields? end
Returns the value that determines whether headers are to be written; used for generating; see Option write_headers:
CSV.new('').write_headers? # => nil
# File csv.rb, line 1928 def write_headers? @writer_options[:write_headers] end