Go to file
2013-12-04 22:16:11 +13:00
lua first commit of lua-csv 2013-12-04 22:16:11 +13:00
rockspecs first commit of lua-csv 2013-12-04 22:16:11 +13:00
.gitignore first commit of lua-csv 2013-12-04 22:16:11 +13:00
AUTHORS first commit of lua-csv 2013-12-04 22:16:11 +13:00
LICENSE first commit of lua-csv 2013-12-04 22:16:11 +13:00
README.md first commit of lua-csv 2013-12-04 22:16:11 +13:00

Lua-CSV - delimited file reading

1. What?

Lua-CSV is a Lua module for reading delimited text files (popularly CSV and tab-separated files, but you can specify the separator).

Lua-CSV tries to auto-detect whether a file is delimited with commas or tabs, copes with non-native newlines, survives newlines and quotes inside quoted fields and offers an iterator interface so it can handle large files.

2. How?

local csv = require("csv")
local f = csv.open("file.csv")
for fields in f:lines() do
  for i, v in ipairs(fields) do print(i, v) end
end

csv.open takes a second argument parameters, a table of parameters controlling how the file is read:

  • separator sets the separator. It'll probably guess the separator correctly if it's a comma or a tab (unless, say, the first field in a tab-delimited file contains a comma), but if you want something else you'll have to set this. It could be more than one character, but it's used as part of a set: "["..sep.."\n\r]"

  • Set header to true if the file contains a header and each set of fields will be keyed by the names in the header rather than by integer index.

  • columns provides a mechanism for column remapping. Suppose you have a csv file as follows:

      Word,Number
      ONE,10
    

    And columns is:

    + `{ word = true }` then the only field in the file would be
      `{ word = "ONE" }`
    + `{ first = { name = "word"} }` then it would be { first = "ONE" }
    + `{ word = { transform = string.lower }}` would give { word = "one" }
    +
          { word = true
            number = { transform = function(x) return tonumber(x) / 10 end }}
      would give `{ word = "ONE", number = 1 }`
    

    A column can have more than one name: { first = { names = {"word", "worm"}}} to help cope with badly specified file formats and spelling mistakes.

  • buffer_size controls the size of the blocks the file is read in. The default is 4096, which is what pagesize says on my system.

3. Requirements

Lua 5.1 or 5.1 or LuaJIT.

4. Issues

  • It won't cope with multiple delimiter characters between fields as might be seen in a whitespace delimited file. Instead it'll think there's lots of empty fields.

5. Wishlist

  • Tests would be nice.
  • So would better LDoc documentation.

6. Alternatives

  • Penlight contains delimited file reading. It reads the whole file in one go.
  • The Lua Wiki contains two pages on CSV here and here.
  • There's an example using LPeg to parse CSV here