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CSV Util

A small set of ruby utilities for working with CSV files packaged as a gem with executables and a library of functions.

Functions

  • csv-filter- accept an input CSV, a column name and string or regex to matching that column, returning only matching rows
  • csv-cut- accept an input CSV and a list of columns, returning a new CSV with only the selected columns
  • csv-cat - concatenate two or more CSVs returning a new CSV with a Union of the columns from the input CSVs
    • Potential optional behavior: return a CSV of the intersection of the input CSVs' columns
  • csv-slice - accept an input CSV and slice specification and output a new CSV of the specified rows

Maybe also

  • cvs-merge - join two CSVs based on a key column
    • Question: when there are other shared columns, do you prefer one CVS's column values?, do you represent all columns?
    • Question: what about non-matching rows? Are they discarded or added to the end?
  • csv-paste - csv version of paste command, filling blank column values in joined files
    • Question: If the paste command does all these things, is this worth doing?
      • Not everyone knows paste.
      • This completes the functions of the suite.
      • If these functions are turned into a library, an in-library paste function could be useful.

An excursus on paste vs the proposed csv-paste

Note that paste does not fill blank columns with commas (,s) to maintain column header correspondence in its output.

Given abc.csv:

a,b,c
5,6,7
3,4,5
1,2,3
3,4,5

And efg.csv:

e,f,g
egg,fig,grape
elbow,foot,gut
easel,floor,girder

The desired result of csv-paste efg.csv abc.csv would be:

e,f,g,a,b,c
egg,fig,grape,5,6,7
elbow,foot,gut,3,4,5
easel,floor,girder,1,2,3
,,,3,4,5

Thus maintaining the column-value alignemnt in the last row: { e: '', f, '', g: '', a: 3, b: 4, c: 5 }. The paste command does not do this:

$ paste -d, efg.csv abc.csv
e,f,g,a,b,c
egg,fig,grape,5,6,7
elbow,foot,gut,3,4,5
easel,floor,girder,1,2,3
,3,4,5

Thus yielding the wrong column-value correspondences: { e: '', f: 3, g: 4, a: 5, b: '', c: '' }

Features of all scripts

  • Accept input CSV from piped STDIN
    • Exception: csv-cat can accept only a list of CSVs
  • Output result CSV to STDOUT
    • Potential optional behavior: allow specification of output file name

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Tools for working with CSV files.

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