Awesome
CSVLixir
A CSV reader/writer for Elixir. Operates on files or strings.
Installation
Add CSVLixir to your mix.exs
dependencies:
def deps do
[{:csvlixir, "~> 2.0.3"}]
end
Run mix deps.get
. Done.
Reading
Files
To read CSV data from a file, use CSVLixir.read
. It takes a path to a file
and returns a Stream
that generates and returns rows of CSV data.
CSVLixir.read("path/to/my.csv") |> Enum.to_list
#=> [["row", "one"], ["row", "two"]]
Strings
Parsing CSV data from a string returns a list of lists. Use
CSVLixir.parse
.
CSVLixir.parse("abc,def,ghi\n123,456,789")
#=> [["abc","def","ghi"],["123","456","789"]]
CSVLixir.parse(~s{abc,def,"gh"",""i"})
#=> [["abc", "def", "gh\",\"i"]]
CSVLixir.parse(File.read!("/tmp/foo.csv"))
#=> [["row", "one"], ["row", "two"]]
Writing
CSVLixir.write
transforms a possibly lazy list of lists into a stream of
CSV strings. Each generated string ends with a newline.
CSVLixir.write([["first", "row"], [123, 456]]) |> Enum.to_list
#=> ["first,row\n", "123,456\n"]
CSVLixir.write([["abc", "def", "gh\",\"i"], [123, 456, 789]])
|> Enum.each(&IO.write/1)
#=> abc,def,"gh"",""i"
#=> 123,456,789
#=> :ok
CSVLixir.write_row
takes a single list and returns a single string.
CSVLixir.write_row(["a", "b", "c"])
#=> "a,b,c\n"
Writing to a file
Writing using streams:
f = File.open!("/tmp/csvlixir.csv", [:write])
1..3
|> Stream.map(&([&1, &1+1 ,&1+2]))
|> CSVLixir.write
|> Stream.each(&(IO.write(f, &1)))
|> Stream.run
File.close(f)
File.read!("/tmp/csvlixir.csv")
# => "1,2,3\n2,3,4\n3,4,5\n"
Writing a line at a time:
f = File.open!("/tmp/csvlixir.csv", [:write, :utf8])
IO.write(f, CSVLixir.write_row(["garçon", "waiter"]))
IO.write(f, CSVLixir.write_row(["résumé", "resume"]))
File.close(f)
File.read!("/tmp/csvlixir.csv")
# => "garçon,waiter\nrésumé,resume\n"
Don't forget to specify :utf8
when opening the file for writing if needed.
(I often forget.)
Changes from 1.0
Adds reading from/writing to files. Removes support for char lists.
To Do
- Allow different separator characters besides comma.
- Handle headers. Return map instead of list, perhaps?