It works well for CSVs that can easily be fully loaded into memory (easily up to a hundred MB). Currently, there isn't a "large" file mode with proper readers and writers for ingesting CSVs in bulk with a fixed amount of memory. It correctly handles both `\n` (LF) and `\r\n` (CRLF) line endings (ie it should work with Windows and Mac/Linux line endings) and has UTF-8 support.
## Installing
You can either grab `ftcsv.lua` from here or install via luarocks:
ftcsv will load the entire csv file into memory, then parse it in one go, returning a lua table with the parsed data. It has only two required parameters - a file name and delimiter (limited to one character). A few optional parameters can be passed in via a table (examples below).
Just loading a csv file:
```lua
local ftcsv = require('ftcsv')
local zipcodes = ftcsv.parse("free-zipcode-database.csv", ",")
```
### Options
The following are optional parameters passed in via the third argument as a table. For example if you wanted to `loadFromString` and not use `headers`, you could use the following:
Set `headers` to `false` if the file you are reading doesn't have any headers. This will cause ftcsv to create indexed tables rather than a key-value tables for the output.
```lua
local options = {loadFromString=true, headers=false}
local actual = ftcsv.parse("apple>banana>carrot\ndiamond>emerald>pearl", ">", options)
```
Note: Header-less files can still use the `rename` option and after a field has been renamed, it can specified as a field to keep. The `rename` syntax changes a little bit:
```lua
local options = {loadFromString=true, headers=false, rename={"a","b","c"}, fieldsToKeep={"a","b"}}
local actual = ftcsv.parse("apple>banana>carrot\ndiamond>emerald>pearl", ">", options)
```
In the above example, the first field becomes 'a', the second field becomes 'b' and so on.
For all tested examples, take a look in /spec/feature_spec.lua
ftcsv can also take a lua table and turn it into a text string to be written to a file. It has two required parameters, an inputTable and a delimiter. You can use it to write out a file like this:
```lua
local fileOutput = ftcsv.encode(users, ",")
local file = assert(io.open("ALLUSERS.csv", "w"))
file:write(fileOutput)
file:close()
```
### Options
-`fieldsToKeep`
if `fieldsToKeep` is set in the encode process, only the fields specified will be written out to a file.
```lua
local output = ftcsv.encode(everyUser, ",", {fieldsToKeep={"Name", "Phone", "City"}})
```
## Performance
I did some basic testing and found that in lua, if you want to iterate over a string character-by-character and look for single chars, `string.byte` performs better than `string.sub`. As such, ftcsv iterates over the whole file and does byte compares to find quotes and delimiters and then generates a table from it. If you have thoughts on how to improve performance (either big picture or specifically within the code), create a GitHub issue - I'd love to hear about it!
ftcsv returns a litany of errors when passed a bad csv file or incorrect parameters. You can find a more detailed explanation of the more cryptic errors in [ERRORS.md](ERRORS.md)
- Some of the test CSVs are from [csv-spectrum](https://github.com/maxogden/csv-spectrum) (BSD-2-Clause) which includes some from [csvkit](https://github.com/wireservice/csvkit) (MIT License)