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92 lines
3.0 KiB
Markdown
92 lines
3.0 KiB
Markdown
# Lua-CSV - delimited file reading
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## 1. What?
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Lua-CSV is a Lua module for reading delimited text files (popularly CSV and
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tab-separated files, but you can specify the separator).
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Lua-CSV tries to auto-detect whether a file is delimited with commas or tabs,
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copes with non-native newlines, survives newlines and quotes inside quoted
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fields and offers an iterator interface so it can handle large files.
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## 2. How?
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local csv = require("csv")
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local f = csv.open("file.csv")
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for fields in f:lines() do
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for i, v in ipairs(fields) do print(i, v) end
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end
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`csv.open` takes a second argument `parameters`, a table of parameters
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controlling how the file is read:
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+ `separator` sets the separator. It'll probably guess the separator
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correctly if it's a comma or a tab (unless, say, the first field in a
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tab-delimited file contains a comma), but if you want something else you'll
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have to set this. It could be more than one character, but it's used as
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part of a set: `"["..sep.."\n\r]"`
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+ Set `header` to true if the file contains a header and each set of fields
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will be keyed by the names in the header rather than by integer index.
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+ `columns` provides a mechanism for column remapping.
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Suppose you have a csv file as follows:
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Word,Number
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ONE,10
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And columns is:
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+ `{ word = true }` then the only field in the file would be
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`{ word = "ONE" }`
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+ `{ first = { name = "word"} }` then it would be `{ first = "ONE" }`
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+ `{ word = { transform = string.lower }}` would give `{ word = "one" }`
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+ finally,
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{ word = true
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number = { transform = function(x) return tonumber(x) / 10 end }}
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would give `{ word = "ONE", number = 1 }`
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A column can have more than one name:
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`{ first = { names = {"word", "worm"}}}` to help cope with badly specified
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file formats and spelling mistakes.
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+ `buffer_size` controls the size of the blocks the file is read in. The
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default is 1MB. It used to be 4096 bytes which is what `pagesize` says on
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my system, but that seems kind of small.
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`csv.openstring` works exactly like `csv.open` except the first argument
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is the contents of the csv file. In this case `buffer_size` is set to
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the length of the string.
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## 3. Requirements
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Lua 5.1, 5.2 or LuaJIT.
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## 4. Issues
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+ Some whitespace-delimited files might use more than one space between
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fields, for example if the columns are "manually" aligned:
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street nr city
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"Oneway Street" 1 Toontown
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It won't cope with this - you'll get lots of extra empty fields.
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## 5. Wishlist
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+ Tests would be nice.
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+ So would better LDoc documentation.
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## 6. Alternatives
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+ [Penlight](http://github.com/stevedonovan/penlight) contains delimited
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file reading. It reads the whole file in one go.
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+ The Lua Wiki contains two pages on CSV
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[here](http://lua-users.org/wiki/LuaCsv) and
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[here](http://lua-users.org/wiki/CsvUtils).
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+ There's an example using [LPeg](http://www.inf.puc-rio.br/~roberto/lpeg/)
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to parse CSV [here](http://www.inf.puc-rio.br/~roberto/lpeg/#CSV)
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