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class CSV
This class provides a complete interface to CSV files and data. It offers tools to enable you to read and write to and from Strings or IO objects, as needed.
The most generic interface of the library is:
csv = CSV.new(string_or_io, **options)
# Reading: IO object should be open for read
csv.read # => array of rows
# or
csv.each do |row|
# ...
end
# or
row = csv.shift
# Writing: IO object should be open for write
csv << row
There are several specialized class methods for one-statement reading or writing, described in the Specialized Methods section.
If a String is passed into ::new, it is internally wrapped into a StringIO object.
options can be used for specifying the particular CSV flavor (column separators, row separators, value quoting and so on), and for data conversion, see Data Conversion section for the description of the latter.
Specialized Methods
Reading
# From a file: all at once
arr_of_rows = CSV.read("path/to/file.csv", **options)
# iterator-style:
CSV.foreach("path/to/file.csv", **options) do |row|
# ...
end
# From a string
arr_of_rows = CSV.parse("CSV,data,String", **options)
# or
CSV.parse("CSV,data,String", **options) do |row|
# ...
end
Writing
# To a file
CSV.open("path/to/file.csv", "wb") do |csv|
csv << ["row", "of", "CSV", "data"]
csv << ["another", "row"]
# ...
end
# To a String
csv_string = CSV.generate do |csv|
csv << ["row", "of", "CSV", "data"]
csv << ["another", "row"]
# ...
end
Shortcuts
# Core extensions for converting one line
csv_string = ["CSV", "data"].to_csv # to CSV
csv_array = "CSV,String".parse_csv # from CSV
# CSV() method
CSV { |csv_out| csv_out << %w{my data here} } # to $stdout
CSV(csv = "") { |csv_str| csv_str << %w{my data here} } # to a String
CSV($stderr) { |csv_err| csv_err << %w{my data here} } # to $stderr
CSV($stdin) { |csv_in| csv_in.each { |row| p row } } # from $stdin
Conversion
CSV with headers
CSV allows to specify column names of CSV file, whether they are in data, or provided separately. If headers 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,Engeneering,1000', headers: %i[name department salary])
data.first #=> #<CSV::Row name:"Bob" department:"Engineering" salary:"1000">
Typed data reading
CSV allows to provide a set of data converters e.g. transformations to try on input data. Converter could be a symbol from CSV::Converters constant's keys, or lambda.
# Without any converters:
CSV.parse('Bob,2018-03-01,100')
#=> [["Bob", "2018-03-01", "100"]]
# With built-in converters:
CSV.parse('Bob,2018-03-01,100', converters: %i[numeric date])
#=> [["Bob", #<Date: 2018-03-01>, 100]]
# With custom converters:
CSV.parse('Bob,2018-03-01,100', converters: [->(v) { Time.parse(v) rescue v }])
#=> [["Bob", 2018-03-01 00:00:00 +0200, "100"]]
CSV and Character Encodings (M17n or Multilingualization)
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.
Constants
- ConverterEncoding
-
The encoding used by all converters.
- Converters
-
This
Hashholds the built-in converters ofCSVthat can be accessed by name. You can selectConverterswithCSV.convert()or through theoptionsHashpassed toCSV::new().:integer-
Converts any field Integer() accepts.
:float-
Converts any field Float() accepts.
:numeric-
A combination of
:integerand:float. :date-
Converts any field
Date::parse()accepts. :date_time-
Converts any field
DateTime::parse()accepts. :all-
All built-in converters. A combination of
:date_timeand:numeric.
All built-in converters transcode field data to UTF-8 before attempting a conversion. If your data cannot be transcoded to UTF-8 the conversion will fail and the field will remain unchanged.
This
Hashis intentionally left unfrozen and users should feel free to add values to it that can be accessed by allCSVobjects.To add a combo field, the value should be an
Arrayof names. Combo fields can be nested with other combo fields. - DEFAULT_OPTIONS
-
The options used when no overrides are given by calling code. They are:
:col_sep-
"," :row_sep-
:auto :quote_char-
'"' :field_size_limit-
nil :converters-
nil :unconverted_fields-
nil :headers-
false :return_headers-
false :header_converters-
nil :skip_blanks-
false :force_quotes-
false :skip_lines-
nil :liberal_parsing-
false :quote_empty-
true
- DateMatcher
- DateTimeMatcher
-
A
Regexpused to find and convert some commonDateTimeformats. - FieldInfo
-
A
FieldInfoStructcontains details about a field's position in the data source it was read from.CSVwill pass thisStructto some blocks that make decisions based on field structure. SeeCSV.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.
- HeaderConverters
-
This
Hashholds the built-in header converters ofCSVthat can be accessed by name. You can selectHeaderConverterswithCSV.header_convert()or through theoptionsHashpassed toCSV::new().:downcase-
Calls downcase() on the header
String. :symbol-
Leading/trailing spaces are dropped, string is downcased, remaining spaces are replaced with underscores, non-word characters are dropped, and finally to_sym() is called.
All built-in header converters transcode header data to UTF-8 before attempting a conversion. If your data cannot be transcoded to UTF-8 the conversion will fail and the header will remain unchanged.
This
Hashis intentionally left unfrozen and users should feel free to add values to it that can be accessed by allCSVobjects.To add a combo field, the value should be an
Arrayof names. Combo fields can be nested with other combo fields. - VERSION
-
The version of the installed library.
Attributes
Public Class Methods
# File lib/csv.rb, line 468
def self.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)
# read, yield, write
input.each do |row|
yield row
output << row
end
end
This method is a convenience for building Unix-like filters for CSV data. Each row is yielded to the provided block which can alter it as needed. After the block returns, the row is appended to output altered or not.
The input and output arguments can be anything CSV::new() accepts (generally String or IO objects). If not given, they default to ARGF and $stdout.
The options parameter is also filtered down to CSV::new() after some clever key parsing. Any key beginning with :in_ or :input_ will have that leading identifier stripped and will only be used in the options Hash for the input object. Keys starting with :out_ or :output_ affect only output. All other keys are assigned to both objects.
The :output_row_sep option defaults to $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR ($/).
# File lib/csv.rb, line 507
def self.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
This method is intended as the primary interface for reading CSV files. You pass a path and any options you wish to set for the read. Each row of file will be passed to the provided block in turn.
The options parameter can be anything CSV::new() understands. This method also understands an additional :encoding parameter that you can use to specify the Encoding of the data in the file to be read. You must provide this unless your data is in Encoding::default_external(). CSV 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 CSV parses it.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 532
def self.generate(str=nil, **options)
# add a default empty String, if none was given
if str
str = StringIO.new(str)
str.seek(0, IO::SEEK_END)
else
encoding = options[:encoding]
str = +""
str.force_encoding(encoding) if encoding
end
csv = new(str, options) # wrap
yield csv # yield for appending
csv.string # return final String
end
This method wraps a String you provide, or an empty default String, in a CSV object which is passed to the provided block. You can use the block to append CSV rows to the String and when the block exits, the final String will be returned.
Note that a passed String is modified by this method. Call dup() before passing if you need a new String.
The options parameter can be anything CSV::new() understands. This method understands an additional :encoding parameter when not passed a String to set the base Encoding for the output. CSV needs this hint if you plan to output non-ASCII compatible data.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 560
def self.generate_line(row, **options)
options = {row_sep: $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR}.merge(options)
str = +""
if options[:encoding]
str.force_encoding(options[:encoding])
elsif field = row.find {|f| f.is_a?(String)}
str.force_encoding(field.encoding)
end
(new(str, options) << row).string
end
This method is a shortcut for converting a single row (Array) into a CSV String.
The options parameter can be anything CSV::new() understands. This method understands an additional :encoding parameter to set 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.
The :row_sep option defaults to $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR ($/) when calling this method.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 428
def self.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
This method will return a CSV instance, just like CSV::new(), but the instance will be cached and returned for all future calls to this method for the same data object (tested by Object#object_id()) with the same options.
If a block is given, the instance is passed to the block and the return value becomes the return value of the block.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 898
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?
# create the IO object we will read from
@io = data.is_a?(String) ? StringIO.new(data) : data
@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
@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
This constructor will wrap either a String or IO object passed in data for reading and/or writing. In addition to the CSV instance methods, several IO methods are delegated. (See CSV::open() for a complete list.) If you pass a String for data, you can later retrieve it (after writing to it, for example) with CSV.string().
Note that a wrapped String will be positioned at the beginning (for reading). If you want it at the end (for writing), use CSV::generate(). If you want any other positioning, pass a preset StringIO object instead.
You may set any reading and/or writing preferences in the options Hash. Available options are:
:col_sep-
The
Stringplaced between each field. ThisStringwill be transcoded into the data'sEncodingbefore parsing. :row_sep-
The
Stringappended to the end of each row. This can be set to the special:autosetting, which requests thatCSVautomatically discover this from the data. Auto-discovery reads ahead in the data looking for the next"\r\n","\n", or"\r"sequence. A sequence will be selected even if it occurs in a quoted field, assuming that you would have the same line endings there. If none of those sequences is found,dataisARGF,STDIN,STDOUT, orSTDERR, or the stream is only available for output, the default$INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR($/) is used. Obviously, discovery takes a little time.Setmanually if speed is important. Also note thatIOobjects 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. ThisStringwill be transcoded into the data'sEncodingbefore parsing. :quote_char-
The character used to quote fields. This has to be a single character
String. This is useful for application that incorrectly use'as the quote character instead of the correct".CSVwill always consider a double sequence of this character to be an escaped quote. ThisStringwill be transcoded into the data'sEncodingbefore parsing. :field_size_limit-
This is a maximum size
CSVwill 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 limitCSVwill raise aMalformedCSVError, 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 and thus is set tonil, or off, by default. :converters-
An
Arrayof names from theConvertersHashand/or lambdas that handle custom conversion. A single converter doesn't have to be in anArray. All built-in converters try to transcode fields to UTF-8 before converting. The conversion will fail if the data cannot be transcoded, leaving the field unchanged. :unconverted_fields-
If set to
true, an unconverted_fields() method will be added to all returned rows (Array orCSV::Row) that will return the fields as they were before conversion. Note that:headerssupplied byArrayorStringwere not fields of the document and thus will have an emptyArrayattached. :headers-
If set to
:first_rowortrue, the initial row of theCSVfile will be treated as a row of headers. If set to anArray, the contents will be used as the headers. If set to aString, theStringis run through a call ofCSV::parse_line()with the same:col_sep,:row_sep, and:quote_charas this instance to produce anArrayof headers. This setting causesCSV#shift()to return rows asCSV::Rowobjects instead of Arrays andCSV#read()to returnCSV::Tableobjects instead of anArrayof Arrays. :return_headers-
When
false, header rows are silently swallowed. If set totrue, header rows are returned in aCSV::Rowobject with identical headers and fields (save that the fields do not go through the converters). :write_headers-
When
trueand:headersis set, a header row will be added to the output. :header_converters-
Identical in functionality to
:converterssave that the conversions are only made to header rows. All built-in converters try to transcode headers to UTF-8 before converting. The conversion will fail if the data cannot be transcoded, leaving the header unchanged. :skip_blanks-
When set to a
truevalue,CSVwill skip over any empty rows. Note that this setting will not skip rows that contain column separators, even if the rows contain no actual data. If you want to skip rows that contain separators but no content, consider using:skip_lines, or inspecting fields.compact.empty? on each row. :force_quotes-
When set to a
truevalue,CSVwill quote allCSVfields it creates. :skip_lines-
When set to an object responding to
match, every line matching it is considered a comment and ignored during parsing. When set to aString, it is first converted to aRegexp. When set tonilno line is considered a comment. If the passed object does not respond tomatch,ArgumentErroris thrown. :liberal_parsing-
When set to a
truevalue,CSVwill attempt to parse input not conformant with RFC 4180, such as double quotes in unquoted fields. :nil_value-
When set an object, any values of an empty field are replaced by the set object, not nil.
:empty_value-
When set an object, any values of a blank string field is replaced by the set object.
:quote_empty-
TODO
:write_converters-
TODO
:write_nil_value-
TODO
:write_empty_value-
TODO
:strip-
TODO
See CSV::DEFAULT_OPTIONS for the default settings.
Options cannot be overridden in the instance methods for performance reasons, so be sure to set what you want here.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 634
def self.open(filename, mode="r", **options)
# wrap a File opened with the remaining +args+ with no newline
# decorator
file_opts = {universal_newline: false}.merge(options)
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
This method opens an IO object, and wraps that with CSV. This is intended as the primary interface for writing a CSV file.
You must pass a filename and may optionally add a mode for Ruby's open(). You may also pass an optional Hash containing any options CSV::new() understands as the final argument.
This method works like Ruby's open() call, in that it will pass a CSV object to a provided block and close it when the block terminates, or it will return the CSV object when no block is provided. (Note: This is different from the Ruby 1.8 CSV library which passed rows to the block. Use CSV::foreach() for that behavior.)
You must provide a mode with an embedded Encoding designator unless your data is in Encoding::default_external(). CSV will check the Encoding of the underlying IO object (set by the mode you pass) to determine how to parse the data. You may provide a second Encoding to have the data transcoded as it is read just as you can with a normal call to IO::open(). For example, "rb:UTF-32BE:UTF-8" would read UTF-32BE data from the file but transcode it to UTF-8 before CSV parses it.
An opened CSV object will delegate to many IO methods for convenience. You may call:
# File lib/csv.rb, line 678
def self.parse(*args, &block)
csv = new(*args)
return csv.each(&block) if block_given?
# slurp contents, if no block is given
begin
csv.read
ensure
csv.close
end
end
This method can be used to easily parse CSV out of a String. You may either provide a block which will be called with each row of the String in turn, or just use the returned Array of Arrays (when no block is given).
You pass your str to read from, and an optional options containing anything CSV::new() understands.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 698
def self.parse_line(line, **options)
new(line, options).shift
end
This method is a shortcut for converting a single line of a CSV String into an Array. Note that if line contains multiple rows, anything beyond the first row is ignored.
The options parameter can be anything CSV::new() understands.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 713
def self.read(path, *options)
open(path, *options) { |csv| csv.read }
end
Use to slurp a CSV file into an Array of Arrays. Pass the path to the file and any options CSV::new() understands. This method also understands an additional :encoding parameter that you can use to specify the Encoding of the data in the file to be read. You must provide this unless your data is in Encoding::default_external(). CSV 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 CSV parses it.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 718
def self.readlines(*args)
read(*args)
end
Alias for CSV::read().
# File lib/csv.rb, line 729
def self.table(path, **options)
read( path, { headers: true,
converters: :numeric,
header_converters: :symbol }.merge(options) )
end
A shortcut for:
CSV.read( path, { headers: true,
converters: :numeric,
header_converters: :symbol }.merge(options) )
Public Instance Methods
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1185
def <<(row)
writer << row
self
end
The primary write method for wrapped Strings and IOs, row (an Array or CSV::Row) is converted to CSV and appended to the data source. When a CSV::Row is passed, only the row's fields() are appended to the output.
The data source must be open for writing.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1122
def binmode?
if @io.respond_to?(:binmode?)
@io.binmode?
else
false
end
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 979
def col_sep
parser.column_separator
end
The encoded :col_sep used in parsing and writing. See CSV::new for details.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1207
def convert(name = nil, &converter)
parser_fields_converter.add_converter(name, &converter)
end
You can use this method to install a CSV::Converters built-in, or provide a block that handles a custom conversion.
If you provide a block that takes one argument, it will be passed the field and is expected to return the converted value or the field itself. If your block takes two arguments, it will also be passed a CSV::FieldInfo Struct, containing details about the field. Again, the block should return a converted field or the field itself.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1014
def converters
parser_fields_converter.map do |converter|
name = Converters.rassoc(converter)
name ? name.first : converter
end
end
Returns the current list of converters in effect. See CSV::new for details. Built-in converters will be returned by name, while others will be returned as is.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1235
def each(&block)
parser_enumerator.each(&block)
end
Yields each row of the data source in turn.
Support for Enumerable.
The data source must be open for reading.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1158
def eof?
begin
parser_enumerator.peek
false
rescue StopIteration
true
end
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1000
def field_size_limit
parser.field_size_limit
end
The limit for field size, if any. See CSV::new for details.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1130
def flock(*args)
raise NotImplementedError unless @io.respond_to?(:flock)
@io.flock(*args)
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1078
def force_quotes?
@writer_options[:force_quotes]
end
Returns true if all output fields are quoted. See CSV::new for details.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1222
def header_convert(name = nil, &converter)
header_fields_converter.add_converter(name, &converter)
end
Identical to CSV#convert(), but for header rows.
Note that this method must be called before header rows are read to have any effect.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1062
def header_converters
header_fields_converter.map do |converter|
name = HeaderConverters.rassoc(converter)
name ? name.first : converter
end
end
Returns the current list of converters in effect for headers. See CSV::new for details. Built-in converters will be returned by name, while others will be returned as is.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1255
def header_row?
parser.header_row?
end
Returns true if the next row read will be a header row.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1033
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 nil if headers will not be used, true if they will but have not yet been read, or the actual headers after they have been read. See CSV::new for details.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1280
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
Returns a simplified description of the key CSV attributes in an ASCII compatible String.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1135
def ioctl(*args)
raise NotImplementedError unless @io.respond_to?(:ioctl)
@io.ioctl(*args)
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1083
def liberal_parsing?
parser.liberal_parsing?
end
Returns true if illegal input is handled. See CSV::new for details.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1108
def line
parser.line
end
The last row read from this file.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1097
def lineno
if @writer
@writer.lineno
else
parser.lineno
end
end
The line number of the last row read from this file. Fields with nested line-end characters will not affect this count.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1140
def path
@io.path if @io.respond_to?(:path)
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 995
def quote_char
parser.quote_character
end
The encoded :quote_char used in parsing and writing. See CSV::new for details.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1244
def read
rows = to_a
if parser.use_headers?
Table.new(rows, headers: parser.headers)
else
rows
end
end
Slurps the remaining rows and returns an Array of Arrays.
The data source must be open for reading.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1048
def return_headers?
parser.return_headers?
end
Returns true if headers will be returned as a row of results. See CSV::new for details.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1169
def rewind
@parser = nil
@parser_enumerator = nil
@writer.rewind if @writer
@io.rewind
end
Rewinds the underlying IO object and resets CSV's lineno() counter.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 987
def row_sep
parser.row_separator
end
The encoded :row_sep used in parsing and writing. See CSV::new for details.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1266
def shift
begin
parser_enumerator.next
rescue StopIteration
nil
end
end
The primary read method for wrapped Strings and IOs, a single row is pulled from the data source, parsed and returned as an Array of fields (if header rows are not used) or a CSV::Row (when header rows are used).
The data source must be open for reading.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1073
def skip_blanks?
parser.skip_blanks?
end
Returns true blank lines are skipped by the parser. See CSV::new for details.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1005
def skip_lines
parser.skip_lines
end
The regex marking a line as a comment. See CSV::new for details
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1144
def stat(*args)
raise NotImplementedError unless @io.respond_to?(:stat)
@io.stat(*args)
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1149
def to_i
raise NotImplementedError unless @io.respond_to?(:to_i)
@io.to_i
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1154
def to_io
@io.respond_to?(:to_io) ? @io.to_io : @io
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1024
def unconverted_fields?
parser.unconverted_fields?
end
Returns true if unconverted_fields() to parsed results. See CSV::new for details.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1053
def write_headers?
@writer_options[:write_headers]
end
Returns true if headers are written in output. See CSV::new for details.
Private Instance Methods
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1412
def build_fields_converter(initial_converters, options)
fields_converter = FieldsConverter.new(options)
normalize_converters(initial_converters).each do |name, converter|
fields_converter.add_converter(name, &converter)
end
fields_converter
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1394
def build_header_fields_converter
specific_options = {
builtin_converters: HeaderConverters,
accept_nil: true,
}
options = @base_fields_converter_options.merge(specific_options)
build_fields_converter(@initial_header_converters, options)
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1382
def build_parser_fields_converter
specific_options = {
builtin_converters: Converters,
}
options = @base_fields_converter_options.merge(specific_options)
build_fields_converter(@initial_converters, options)
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1407
def build_writer_fields_converter
build_fields_converter(@initial_write_converters,
@write_fields_converter_options)
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1357
def convert_fields(fields, headers = false)
if headers
header_fields_converter.convert(fields, nil, 0)
else
parser_fields_converter.convert(fields, @headers, lineno)
end
end
Processes fields with @converters, or @header_converters if headers is passed as true, returning the converted field set. Any converter that changes the field into something other than a String halts the pipeline of conversion for that field. This is primarily an efficiency shortcut.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1320
def determine_encoding(encoding, internal_encoding)
# honor the IO encoding if we can, otherwise default to ASCII-8BIT
io_encoding = raw_encoding
return io_encoding if io_encoding
return Encoding.find(internal_encoding) if internal_encoding
if encoding
encoding, = encoding.split(":", 2) if encoding.is_a?(String)
return Encoding.find(encoding)
end
Encoding.default_internal || Encoding.default_external
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1390
def header_fields_converter
@header_fields_converter ||= build_header_fields_converter
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1335
def normalize_converters(converters)
converters ||= []
unless converters.is_a?(Array)
converters = [converters]
end
converters.collect do |converter|
case converter
when Proc # custom code block
[nil, converter]
else # by name
[converter, nil]
end
end
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1420
def parser
@parser ||= Parser.new(@io, parser_options)
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1429
def parser_enumerator
@parser_enumerator ||= parser.parse
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1378
def parser_fields_converter
@parser_fields_converter ||= build_parser_fields_converter
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1424
def parser_options
@parser_options.merge(header_fields_converter: header_fields_converter,
fields_converter: parser_fields_converter)
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1368
def raw_encoding
if @io.respond_to? :internal_encoding
@io.internal_encoding || @io.external_encoding
elsif @io.respond_to? :encoding
@io.encoding
else
nil
end
end
Returns the encoding of the internal IO object.
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1433
def writer
@writer ||= Writer.new(@io, writer_options)
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1403
def writer_fields_converter
@writer_fields_converter ||= build_writer_fields_converter
end
# File lib/csv.rb, line 1437
def writer_options
@writer_options.merge(header_fields_converter: header_fields_converter,
fields_converter: writer_fields_converter)
end
Ruby Core © 1993–2017 Yukihiro Matsumoto
Licensed under the Ruby License.
Ruby Standard Library © contributors
Licensed under their own licenses.