Text::CSV_PP(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Text::CSV_PP(3pm)
NAME
Text::CSV_PP - Text::CSV_XS compatible pure-Perl module
SYNOPSIS
This section is taken from Text::CSV_XS.
# Functional interface
use Text::CSV_PP qw( csv );
# Read whole file in memory
my $aoa = csv (in => "data.csv"); # as array of array
my $aoh = csv (in => "data.csv",
headers => "auto"); # as array of hash
# Write array of arrays as csv file
csv (in => $aoa, out => "file.csv", sep_char=> ";");
# Only show lines where "code" is odd
csv (in => "data.csv", filter => { code => sub { $_ % 2 }});
# Object interface
use Text::CSV_PP;
my @rows;
# Read/parse CSV
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ binary => 1, auto_diag => 1 });
open my $fh, "<:encoding(utf8)", "test.csv" or die "test.csv: $!";
while (my $row = $csv->getline ($fh)) {
$row->[2] =~ m/pattern/ or next; # 3rd field should match
push @rows, $row;
}
close $fh;
# and write as CSV
open $fh, ">:encoding(utf8)", "new.csv" or die "new.csv: $!";
$csv->say ($fh, $_) for @rows;
close $fh or die "new.csv: $!";
DESCRIPTION
Text::CSV_PP is a pure-perl module that provides facilities for the
composition and decomposition of comma-separated values. This is
(almost) compatible with much faster Text::CSV_XS, and mainly used as
its fallback module when you use Text::CSV module without having
installed Text::CSV_XS. If you don't have any reason to use this module
directly, use Text::CSV for speed boost and portability (or maybe
Text::CSV_XS when you write an one-off script and don't need to care
about portability).
The following caveats are taken from the doc of Text::CSV_XS.
Embedded newlines
Important Note: The default behavior is to accept only ASCII
characters in the range from 0x20 (space) to 0x7E (tilde). This means
that the fields can not contain newlines. If your data contains
newlines embedded in fields, or characters above 0x7E (tilde), or
binary data, you must set "binary => 1" in the call to "new". To cover
the widest range of parsing options, you will always want to set
binary.
But you still have the problem that you have to pass a correct line to
the "parse" method, which is more complicated from the usual point of
usage:
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ binary => 1, eol => $/ });
while (<>) { # WRONG!
$csv->parse ($_);
my @fields = $csv->fields ();
}
this will break, as the "while" might read broken lines: it does not
care about the quoting. If you need to support embedded newlines, the
way to go is to not pass "eol" in the parser (it accepts "\n", "\r",
and "\r\n" by default) and then
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ binary => 1 });
open my $fh, "<", $file or die "$file: $!";
while (my $row = $csv->getline ($fh)) {
my @fields = @$row;
}
The old(er) way of using global file handles is still supported
while (my $row = $csv->getline (*ARGV)) { ... }
Unicode
Unicode is only tested to work with perl-5.8.2 and up.
See also "BOM".
The simplest way to ensure the correct encoding is used for in- and
output is by either setting layers on the filehandles, or setting the
"encoding" argument for "csv".
open my $fh, "<:encoding(UTF-8)", "in.csv" or die "in.csv: $!";
or
my $aoa = csv (in => "in.csv", encoding => "UTF-8");
open my $fh, ">:encoding(UTF-8)", "out.csv" or die "out.csv: $!";
or
csv (in => $aoa, out => "out.csv", encoding => "UTF-8");
On parsing (both for "getline" and "parse"), if the source is marked
being UTF8, then all fields that are marked binary will also be marked
UTF8.
On combining ("print" and "combine"): if any of the combining fields
was marked UTF8, the resulting string will be marked as UTF8. Note
however that all fields before the first field marked UTF8 and
contained 8-bit characters that were not upgraded to UTF8, these will
be "bytes" in the resulting string too, possibly causing unexpected
errors. If you pass data of different encoding, or you don't know if
there is different encoding, force it to be upgraded before you pass
them on:
$csv->print ($fh, [ map { utf8::upgrade (my $x = $_); $x } @data ]);
For complete control over encoding, please use Text::CSV::Encoded:
use Text::CSV::Encoded;
my $csv = Text::CSV::Encoded->new ({
encoding_in => "iso-8859-1", # the encoding comes into Perl
encoding_out => "cp1252", # the encoding comes out of Perl
});
$csv = Text::CSV::Encoded->new ({ encoding => "utf8" });
# combine () and print () accept *literally* utf8 encoded data
# parse () and getline () return *literally* utf8 encoded data
$csv = Text::CSV::Encoded->new ({ encoding => undef }); # default
# combine () and print () accept UTF8 marked data
# parse () and getline () return UTF8 marked data
BOM
BOM (or Byte Order Mark) handling is available only inside the
"header" method. This method supports the following encodings:
"utf-8", "utf-1", "utf-32be", "utf-32le", "utf-16be", "utf-16le",
"utf-ebcdic", "scsu", "bocu-1", and "gb-18030". See Wikipedia
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte_order_mark>.
If a file has a BOM, the easiest way to deal with that is
my $aoh = csv (in => $file, detect_bom => 1);
All records will be encoded based on the detected BOM.
This implies a call to the "header" method, which defaults to also
set the "column_names". So this is not the same as
my $aoh = csv (in => $file, headers => "auto");
which only reads the first record to set "column_names" but ignores
any meaning of possible present BOM.
METHODS
This section is also taken from Text::CSV_XS.
version
(Class method) Returns the current module version.
new
(Class method) Returns a new instance of class Text::CSV_PP. The
attributes are described by the (optional) hash ref "\%attr".
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ attributes ... });
The following attributes are available:
eol
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ eol => $/ });
$csv->eol (undef);
my $eol = $csv->eol;
The end-of-line string to add to rows for "print" or the record
separator for "getline".
When not passed in a parser instance, the default behavior is to
accept "\n", "\r", and "\r\n", so it is probably safer to not specify
"eol" at all. Passing "undef" or the empty string behave the same.
When not passed in a generating instance, records are not terminated
at all, so it is probably wise to pass something you expect. A safe
choice for "eol" on output is either $/ or "\r\n".
Common values for "eol" are "\012" ("\n" or Line Feed), "\015\012"
("\r\n" or Carriage Return, Line Feed), and "\015" ("\r" or Carriage
Return). The "eol" attribute cannot exceed 7 (ASCII) characters.
If both $/ and "eol" equal "\015", parsing lines that end on only a
Carriage Return without Line Feed, will be "parse"d correct.
sep_char
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ sep_char => ";" });
$csv->sep_char (";");
my $c = $csv->sep_char;
The char used to separate fields, by default a comma. (","). Limited
to a single-byte character, usually in the range from 0x20 (space) to
0x7E (tilde). When longer sequences are required, use "sep".
The separation character can not be equal to the quote character or to
the escape character.
sep
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ sep => "\N{FULLWIDTH COMMA}" });
$csv->sep (";");
my $sep = $csv->sep;
The chars used to separate fields, by default undefined. Limited to 8
bytes.
When set, overrules "sep_char". If its length is one byte it acts as
an alias to "sep_char".
quote_char
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ quote_char => "'" });
$csv->quote_char (undef);
my $c = $csv->quote_char;
The character to quote fields containing blanks or binary data, by
default the double quote character ("""). A value of undef suppresses
quote chars (for simple cases only). Limited to a single-byte
character, usually in the range from 0x20 (space) to 0x7E (tilde).
When longer sequences are required, use "quote".
"quote_char" can not be equal to "sep_char".
quote
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ quote => "\N{FULLWIDTH QUOTATION MARK}" });
$csv->quote ("'");
my $quote = $csv->quote;
The chars used to quote fields, by default undefined. Limited to 8
bytes.
When set, overrules "quote_char". If its length is one byte it acts as
an alias to "quote_char".
This method does not support "undef". Use "quote_char" to disable
quotation.
escape_char
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ escape_char => "\\" });
$csv->escape_char (":");
my $c = $csv->escape_char;
The character to escape certain characters inside quoted fields.
This is limited to a single-byte character, usually in the range
from 0x20 (space) to 0x7E (tilde).
The "escape_char" defaults to being the double-quote mark ("""). In
other words the same as the default "quote_char". This means that
doubling the quote mark in a field escapes it:
"foo","bar","Escape ""quote mark"" with two ""quote marks""","baz"
If you change the "quote_char" without changing the
"escape_char", the "escape_char" will still be the double-quote
("""). If instead you want to escape the "quote_char" by doubling it
you will need to also change the "escape_char" to be the same as what
you have changed the "quote_char" to.
Setting "escape_char" to <undef> or "" will disable escaping completely
and is greatly discouraged. This will also disable "escape_null".
The escape character can not be equal to the separation character.
binary
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ binary => 1 });
$csv->binary (0);
my $f = $csv->binary;
If this attribute is 1, you may use binary characters in quoted
fields, including line feeds, carriage returns and "NULL" bytes. (The
latter could be escaped as ""0".) By default this feature is off.
If a string is marked UTF8, "binary" will be turned on automatically
when binary characters other than "CR" and "NL" are encountered. Note
that a simple string like "\x{00a0}" might still be binary, but not
marked UTF8, so setting "{ binary => 1 }" is still a wise option.
strict
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ strict => 1 });
$csv->strict (0);
my $f = $csv->strict;
If this attribute is set to 1, any row that parses to a different
number of fields than the previous row will cause the parser to throw
error 2014.
skip_empty_rows
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ skip_empty_rows => 1 });
$csv->skip_empty_rows (0);
my $f = $csv->skip_empty_rows;
If this attribute is set to 1, any row that has an "eol" immediately
following the start of line will be skipped. Default behavior is to
return one single empty field.
This attribute is only used in parsing.
formula_handling
formula
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ formula => "none" });
$csv->formula ("none");
my $f = $csv->formula;
This defines the behavior of fields containing formulas. As formulas
are considered dangerous in spreadsheets, this attribute can define an
optional action to be taken if a field starts with an equal sign ("=").
For purpose of code-readability, this can also be written as
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ formula_handling => "none" });
$csv->formula_handling ("none");
my $f = $csv->formula_handling;
Possible values for this attribute are
none
Take no specific action. This is the default.
$csv->formula ("none");
die
Cause the process to "die" whenever a leading "=" is encountered.
$csv->formula ("die");
croak
Cause the process to "croak" whenever a leading "=" is encountered.
(See Carp)
$csv->formula ("croak");
diag
Report position and content of the field whenever a leading "=" is
found. The value of the field is unchanged.
$csv->formula ("diag");
empty
Replace the content of fields that start with a "=" with the empty
string.
$csv->formula ("empty");
$csv->formula ("");
undef
Replace the content of fields that start with a "=" with "undef".
$csv->formula ("undef");
$csv->formula (undef);
a callback
Modify the content of fields that start with a "=" with the return-
value of the callback. The original content of the field is
available inside the callback as $_;
# Replace all formula's with 42
$csv->formula (sub { 42; });
# same as $csv->formula ("empty") but slower
$csv->formula (sub { "" });
# Allow =4+12
$csv->formula (sub { s/^=(\d+\+\d+)$/$1/eer });
# Allow more complex calculations
$csv->formula (sub { eval { s{^=([-+*/0-9()]+)$}{$1}ee }; $_ });
All other values will give a warning and then fallback to "diag".
decode_utf8
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ decode_utf8 => 1 });
$csv->decode_utf8 (0);
my $f = $csv->decode_utf8;
This attributes defaults to TRUE.
While parsing, fields that are valid UTF-8, are automatically set to
be UTF-8, so that
$csv->parse ("\xC4\xA8\n");
results in
PV("\304\250"\0) [UTF8 "\x{128}"]
Sometimes it might not be a desired action. To prevent those upgrades,
set this attribute to false, and the result will be
PV("\304\250"\0)
auto_diag
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ auto_diag => 1 });
$csv->auto_diag (2);
my $l = $csv->auto_diag;
Set this attribute to a number between 1 and 9 causes "error_diag" to
be automatically called in void context upon errors.
In case of error "2012 - EOF", this call will be void.
If "auto_diag" is set to a numeric value greater than 1, it will "die"
on errors instead of "warn". If set to anything unrecognized, it will
be silently ignored.
Future extensions to this feature will include more reliable auto-
detection of "autodie" being active in the scope of which the error
occurred which will increment the value of "auto_diag" with 1 the
moment the error is detected.
diag_verbose
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ diag_verbose => 1 });
$csv->diag_verbose (2);
my $l = $csv->diag_verbose;
Set the verbosity of the output triggered by "auto_diag". Currently
only adds the current input-record-number (if known) to the
diagnostic output with an indication of the position of the error.
blank_is_undef
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ blank_is_undef => 1 });
$csv->blank_is_undef (0);
my $f = $csv->blank_is_undef;
Under normal circumstances, "CSV" data makes no distinction between
quoted- and unquoted empty fields. These both end up in an empty
string field once read, thus
1,"",," ",2
is read as
("1", "", "", " ", "2")
When writing "CSV" files with either "always_quote" or "quote_empty"
set, the unquoted empty field is the result of an undefined value.
To enable this distinction when reading "CSV" data, the
"blank_is_undef" attribute will cause unquoted empty fields to be set
to "undef", causing the above to be parsed as
("1", "", undef, " ", "2")
Note that this is specifically important when loading "CSV" fields
into a database that allows "NULL" values, as the perl equivalent for
"NULL" is "undef" in DBI land.
empty_is_undef
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ empty_is_undef => 1 });
$csv->empty_is_undef (0);
my $f = $csv->empty_is_undef;
Going one step further than "blank_is_undef", this attribute
converts all empty fields to "undef", so
1,"",," ",2
is read as
(1, undef, undef, " ", 2)
Note that this affects only fields that are originally empty, not
fields that are empty after stripping allowed whitespace. YMMV.
allow_whitespace
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ allow_whitespace => 1 });
$csv->allow_whitespace (0);
my $f = $csv->allow_whitespace;
When this option is set to true, the whitespace ("TAB"'s and
"SPACE"'s) surrounding the separation character is removed when
parsing. If either "TAB" or "SPACE" is one of the three characters
"sep_char", "quote_char", or "escape_char" it will not be considered
whitespace.
Now lines like:
1 , "foo" , bar , 3 , zapp
are parsed as valid "CSV", even though it violates the "CSV" specs.
Note that all whitespace is stripped from both start and end of
each field. That would make it more than a feature to enable parsing
bad "CSV" lines, as
1, 2.0, 3, ape , monkey
will now be parsed as
("1", "2.0", "3", "ape", "monkey")
even if the original line was perfectly acceptable "CSV".
allow_loose_quotes
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ allow_loose_quotes => 1 });
$csv->allow_loose_quotes (0);
my $f = $csv->allow_loose_quotes;
By default, parsing unquoted fields containing "quote_char" characters
like
1,foo "bar" baz,42
would result in parse error 2034. Though it is still bad practice to
allow this format, we cannot help the fact that some vendors
make their applications spit out lines styled this way.
If there is really bad "CSV" data, like
1,"foo "bar" baz",42
or
1,""foo bar baz"",42
there is a way to get this data-line parsed and leave the quotes inside
the quoted field as-is. This can be achieved by setting
"allow_loose_quotes" AND making sure that the "escape_char" is not
equal to "quote_char".
allow_loose_escapes
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ allow_loose_escapes => 1 });
$csv->allow_loose_escapes (0);
my $f = $csv->allow_loose_escapes;
Parsing fields that have "escape_char" characters that escape
characters that do not need to be escaped, like:
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ escape_char => "\\" });
$csv->parse (qq{1,"my bar\'s",baz,42});
would result in parse error 2025. Though it is bad practice to allow
this format, this attribute enables you to treat all escape character
sequences equal.
allow_unquoted_escape
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ allow_unquoted_escape => 1 });
$csv->allow_unquoted_escape (0);
my $f = $csv->allow_unquoted_escape;
A backward compatibility issue where "escape_char" differs from
"quote_char" prevents "escape_char" to be in the first position of a
field. If "quote_char" is equal to the default """ and "escape_char"
is set to "\", this would be illegal:
1,\0,2
Setting this attribute to 1 might help to overcome issues with
backward compatibility and allow this style.
always_quote
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ always_quote => 1 });
$csv->always_quote (0);
my $f = $csv->always_quote;
By default the generated fields are quoted only if they need to be.
For example, if they contain the separator character. If you set this
attribute to 1 then all defined fields will be quoted. ("undef" fields
are not quoted, see "blank_is_undef"). This makes it quite often easier
to handle exported data in external applications.
quote_space
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ quote_space => 1 });
$csv->quote_space (0);
my $f = $csv->quote_space;
By default, a space in a field would trigger quotation. As no rule
exists this to be forced in "CSV", nor any for the opposite, the
default is true for safety. You can exclude the space from this
trigger by setting this attribute to 0.
quote_empty
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ quote_empty => 1 });
$csv->quote_empty (0);
my $f = $csv->quote_empty;
By default the generated fields are quoted only if they need to be.
An empty (defined) field does not need quotation. If you set this
attribute to 1 then empty defined fields will be quoted. ("undef"
fields are not quoted, see "blank_is_undef"). See also "always_quote".
quote_binary
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ quote_binary => 1 });
$csv->quote_binary (0);
my $f = $csv->quote_binary;
By default, all "unsafe" bytes inside a string cause the combined
field to be quoted. By setting this attribute to 0, you can disable
that trigger for bytes >= 0x7F.
escape_null
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ escape_null => 1 });
$csv->escape_null (0);
my $f = $csv->escape_null;
By default, a "NULL" byte in a field would be escaped. This option
enables you to treat the "NULL" byte as a simple binary character in
binary mode (the "{ binary => 1 }" is set). The default is true. You
can prevent "NULL" escapes by setting this attribute to 0.
When the "escape_char" attribute is set to undefined, this attribute
will be set to false.
The default setting will encode "=\x00=" as
"="0="
With "escape_null" set, this will result in
"=\x00="
The default when using the "csv" function is "false".
For backward compatibility reasons, the deprecated old name
"quote_null" is still recognized.
keep_meta_info
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ keep_meta_info => 1 });
$csv->keep_meta_info (0);
my $f = $csv->keep_meta_info;
By default, the parsing of input records is as simple and fast as
possible. However, some parsing information - like quotation of the
original field - is lost in that process. Setting this flag to true
enables retrieving that information after parsing with the methods
"meta_info", "is_quoted", and "is_binary" described below. Default is
false for performance.
If you set this attribute to a value greater than 9, then you can
control output quotation style like it was used in the input of the the
last parsed record (unless quotation was added because of other
reasons).
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({
binary => 1,
keep_meta_info => 1,
quote_space => 0,
});
my $row = $csv->parse (q{1,,"", ," ",f,"g","h""h",help,"help"});
$csv->print (*STDOUT, \@row);
# 1,,, , ,f,g,"h""h",help,help
$csv->keep_meta_info (11);
$csv->print (*STDOUT, \@row);
# 1,,"", ," ",f,"g","h""h",help,"help"
undef_str
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ undef_str => "\\N" });
$csv->undef_str (undef);
my $s = $csv->undef_str;
This attribute optionally defines the output of undefined fields. The
value passed is not changed at all, so if it needs quotation, the
quotation needs to be included in the value of the attribute. Use with
caution, as passing a value like ",",,,,""" will for sure mess up
your output. The default for this attribute is "undef", meaning no
special treatment.
This attribute is useful when exporting CSV data to be imported in
custom loaders, like for MySQL, that recognize special sequences for
"NULL" data.
This attribute has no meaning when parsing CSV data.
comment_str
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ comment_str => "#" });
$csv->comment_str (undef);
my $s = $csv->comment_str;
This attribute optionally defines a string to be recognized as comment.
If this attribute is defined, all lines starting with this sequence
will not be parsed as CSV but skipped as comment.
This attribute has no meaning when generating CSV.
Comment strings that start with any of the special characters/sequences
are not supported (so it cannot start with any of "sep_char",
"quote_char", "escape_char", "sep", "quote", or "eol").
For convenience, "comment" is an alias for "comment_str".
verbatim
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ verbatim => 1 });
$csv->verbatim (0);
my $f = $csv->verbatim;
This is a quite controversial attribute to set, but makes some hard
things possible.
The rationale behind this attribute is to tell the parser that the
normally special characters newline ("NL") and Carriage Return ("CR")
will not be special when this flag is set, and be dealt with as being
ordinary binary characters. This will ease working with data with
embedded newlines.
When "verbatim" is used with "getline", "getline" auto-"chomp"'s
every line.
Imagine a file format like
M^^Hans^Janssen^Klas 2\n2A^Ja^11-06-2007#\r\n
where, the line ending is a very specific "#\r\n", and the sep_char is
a "^" (caret). None of the fields is quoted, but embedded binary
data is likely to be present. With the specific line ending, this
should not be too hard to detect.
By default, Text::CSV_PP' parse function is instructed to only know
about "\n" and "\r" to be legal line endings, and so has to deal with
the embedded newline as a real "end-of-line", so it can scan the next
line if binary is true, and the newline is inside a quoted field. With
this option, we tell "parse" to parse the line as if "\n" is just
nothing more than a binary character.
For "parse" this means that the parser has no more idea about line
ending and "getline" "chomp"s line endings on reading.
types
A set of column types; the attribute is immediately passed to the
"types" method.
callbacks
See the "Callbacks" section below.
accessors
To sum it up,
$csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ();
is equivalent to
$csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({
eol => undef, # \r, \n, or \r\n
sep_char => ',',
sep => undef,
quote_char => '"',
quote => undef,
escape_char => '"',
binary => 0,
decode_utf8 => 1,
auto_diag => 0,
diag_verbose => 0,
blank_is_undef => 0,
empty_is_undef => 0,
allow_whitespace => 0,
allow_loose_quotes => 0,
allow_loose_escapes => 0,
allow_unquoted_escape => 0,
always_quote => 0,
quote_empty => 0,
quote_space => 1,
escape_null => 1,
quote_binary => 1,
keep_meta_info => 0,
strict => 0,
skip_empty_rows => 0,
formula => 0,
verbatim => 0,
undef_str => undef,
comment_str => undef,
types => undef,
callbacks => undef,
});
For all of the above mentioned flags, an accessor method is available
where you can inquire the current value, or change the value
my $quote = $csv->quote_char;
$csv->binary (1);
It is not wise to change these settings halfway through writing "CSV"
data to a stream. If however you want to create a new stream using the
available "CSV" object, there is no harm in changing them.
If the "new" constructor call fails, it returns "undef", and makes
the fail reason available through the "error_diag" method.
$csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ ecs_char => 1 }) or
die "".Text::CSV_PP->error_diag ();
"error_diag" will return a string like
"INI - Unknown attribute 'ecs_char'"
known_attributes
@attr = Text::CSV_PP->known_attributes;
@attr = Text::CSV_PP::known_attributes;
@attr = $csv->known_attributes;
This method will return an ordered list of all the supported
attributes as described above. This can be useful for knowing what
attributes are valid in classes that use or extend Text::CSV_PP.
print
$status = $csv->print ($fh, $colref);
Similar to "combine" + "string" + "print", but much more efficient.
It expects an array ref as input (not an array!) and the resulting
string is not really created, but immediately written to the $fh
object, typically an IO handle or any other object that offers a
"print" method.
For performance reasons "print" does not create a result string, so
all "string", "status", "fields", and "error_input" methods will return
undefined information after executing this method.
If $colref is "undef" (explicit, not through a variable argument) and
"bind_columns" was used to specify fields to be printed, it is
possible to make performance improvements, as otherwise data would have
to be copied as arguments to the method call:
$csv->bind_columns (\($foo, $bar));
$status = $csv->print ($fh, undef);
A short benchmark
my @data = ("aa" .. "zz");
$csv->bind_columns (\(@data));
$csv->print ($fh, [ @data ]); # 11800 recs/sec
$csv->print ($fh, \@data ); # 57600 recs/sec
$csv->print ($fh, undef ); # 48500 recs/sec
say
$status = $csv->say ($fh, $colref);
Like "print", but "eol" defaults to "$\".
print_hr
$csv->print_hr ($fh, $ref);
Provides an easy way to print a $ref (as fetched with "getline_hr")
provided the column names are set with "column_names".
It is just a wrapper method with basic parameter checks over
$csv->print ($fh, [ map { $ref->{$_} } $csv->column_names ]);
combine
$status = $csv->combine (@fields);
This method constructs a "CSV" record from @fields, returning success
or failure. Failure can result from lack of arguments or an argument
that contains an invalid character. Upon success, "string" can be
called to retrieve the resultant "CSV" string. Upon failure, the
value returned by "string" is undefined and "error_input" could be
called to retrieve the invalid argument.
string
$line = $csv->string ();
This method returns the input to "parse" or the resultant "CSV"
string of "combine", whichever was called more recently.
getline
$colref = $csv->getline ($fh);
This is the counterpart to "print", as "parse" is the counterpart to
"combine": it parses a row from the $fh handle using the "getline"
method associated with $fh and parses this row into an array ref.
This array ref is returned by the function or "undef" for failure.
When $fh does not support "getline", you are likely to hit errors.
When fields are bound with "bind_columns" the return value is a
reference to an empty list.
The "string", "fields", and "status" methods are meaningless again.
getline_all
$arrayref = $csv->getline_all ($fh);
$arrayref = $csv->getline_all ($fh, $offset);
$arrayref = $csv->getline_all ($fh, $offset, $length);
This will return a reference to a list of getline ($fh) results. In
this call, "keep_meta_info" is disabled. If $offset is negative, as
with "splice", only the last "abs ($offset)" records of $fh are taken
into consideration.
Given a CSV file with 10 lines:
lines call
----- ---------------------------------------------------------
0..9 $csv->getline_all ($fh) # all
0..9 $csv->getline_all ($fh, 0) # all
8..9 $csv->getline_all ($fh, 8) # start at 8
- $csv->getline_all ($fh, 0, 0) # start at 0 first 0 rows
0..4 $csv->getline_all ($fh, 0, 5) # start at 0 first 5 rows
4..5 $csv->getline_all ($fh, 4, 2) # start at 4 first 2 rows
8..9 $csv->getline_all ($fh, -2) # last 2 rows
6..7 $csv->getline_all ($fh, -4, 2) # first 2 of last 4 rows
getline_hr
The "getline_hr" and "column_names" methods work together to allow you
to have rows returned as hashrefs. You must call "column_names" first
to declare your column names.
$csv->column_names (qw( code name price description ));
$hr = $csv->getline_hr ($fh);
print "Price for $hr->{name} is $hr->{price} EUR\n";
"getline_hr" will croak if called before "column_names".
Note that "getline_hr" creates a hashref for every row and will be
much slower than the combined use of "bind_columns" and "getline" but
still offering the same easy to use hashref inside the loop:
my @cols = @{$csv->getline ($fh)};
$csv->column_names (@cols);
while (my $row = $csv->getline_hr ($fh)) {
print $row->{price};
}
Could easily be rewritten to the much faster:
my @cols = @{$csv->getline ($fh)};
my $row = {};
$csv->bind_columns (\@{$row}{@cols});
while ($csv->getline ($fh)) {
print $row->{price};
}
Your mileage may vary for the size of the data and the number of rows.
With perl-5.14.2 the comparison for a 100_000 line file with 14
columns:
Rate hashrefs getlines
hashrefs 1.00/s -- -76%
getlines 4.15/s 313% --
getline_hr_all
$arrayref = $csv->getline_hr_all ($fh);
$arrayref = $csv->getline_hr_all ($fh, $offset);
$arrayref = $csv->getline_hr_all ($fh, $offset, $length);
This will return a reference to a list of getline_hr ($fh) results.
In this call, "keep_meta_info" is disabled.
parse
$status = $csv->parse ($line);
This method decomposes a "CSV" string into fields, returning success
or failure. Failure can result from a lack of argument or the given
"CSV" string is improperly formatted. Upon success, "fields" can be
called to retrieve the decomposed fields. Upon failure calling "fields"
will return undefined data and "error_input" can be called to
retrieve the invalid argument.
You may use the "types" method for setting column types. See "types"'
description below.
The $line argument is supposed to be a simple scalar. Everything else
is supposed to croak and set error 1500.
fragment
This function tries to implement RFC7111 (URI Fragment Identifiers for
the text/csv Media Type) - http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7111
my $AoA = $csv->fragment ($fh, $spec);
In specifications, "*" is used to specify the last item, a dash ("-")
to indicate a range. All indices are 1-based: the first row or
column has index 1. Selections can be combined with the semi-colon
(";").
When using this method in combination with "column_names", the
returned reference will point to a list of hashes instead of a list
of lists. A disjointed cell-based combined selection might return
rows with different number of columns making the use of hashes
unpredictable.
$csv->column_names ("Name", "Age");
my $AoH = $csv->fragment ($fh, "col=3;8");
If the "after_parse" callback is active, it is also called on every
line parsed and skipped before the fragment.
row
row=4
row=5-7
row=6-*
row=1-2;4;6-*
col
col=2
col=1-3
col=4-*
col=1-2;4;7-*
cell
In cell-based selection, the comma (",") is used to pair row and
column
cell=4,1
The range operator ("-") using "cell"s can be used to define top-left
and bottom-right "cell" location
cell=3,1-4,6
The "*" is only allowed in the second part of a pair
cell=3,2-*,2 # row 3 till end, only column 2
cell=3,2-3,* # column 2 till end, only row 3
cell=3,2-*,* # strip row 1 and 2, and column 1
Cells and cell ranges may be combined with ";", possibly resulting in
rows with different numbers of columns
cell=1,1-2,2;3,3-4,4;1,4;4,1
Disjointed selections will only return selected cells. The cells
that are not specified will not be included in the returned
set, not even as "undef". As an example given a "CSV" like
11,12,13,...19
21,22,...28,29
: :
91,...97,98,99
with "cell=1,1-2,2;3,3-4,4;1,4;4,1" will return:
11,12,14
21,22
33,34
41,43,44
Overlapping cell-specs will return those cells only once, So
"cell=1,1-3,3;2,2-4,4;2,3;4,2" will return:
11,12,13
21,22,23,24
31,32,33,34
42,43,44
RFC7111 <http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7111> does not allow different
types of specs to be combined (either "row" or "col" or "cell").
Passing an invalid fragment specification will croak and set error
2013.
column_names
Set the "keys" that will be used in the "getline_hr" calls. If no
keys (column names) are passed, it will return the current setting as a
list.
"column_names" accepts a list of scalars (the column names) or a
single array_ref, so you can pass the return value from "getline" too:
$csv->column_names ($csv->getline ($fh));
"column_names" does no checking on duplicates at all, which might lead
to unexpected results. Undefined entries will be replaced with the
string "\cAUNDEF\cA", so
$csv->column_names (undef, "", "name", "name");
$hr = $csv->getline_hr ($fh);
will set "$hr->{"\cAUNDEF\cA"}" to the 1st field, "$hr->{""}" to the
2nd field, and "$hr->{name}" to the 4th field, discarding the 3rd
field.
"column_names" croaks on invalid arguments.
header
This method does NOT work in perl-5.6.x
Parse the CSV header and set "sep", column_names and encoding.
my @hdr = $csv->header ($fh);
$csv->header ($fh, { sep_set => [ ";", ",", "|", "\t" ] });
$csv->header ($fh, { detect_bom => 1, munge_column_names => "lc" });
The first argument should be a file handle.
This method resets some object properties, as it is supposed to be
invoked only once per file or stream. It will leave attributes
"column_names" and "bound_columns" alone if setting column names is
disabled. Reading headers on previously process objects might fail on
perl-5.8.0 and older.
Assuming that the file opened for parsing has a header, and the header
does not contain problematic characters like embedded newlines, read
the first line from the open handle then auto-detect whether the header
separates the column names with a character from the allowed separator
list.
If any of the allowed separators matches, and none of the other
allowed separators match, set "sep" to that separator for the
current CSV_PP instance and use it to parse the first line, map those
to lowercase, and use that to set the instance "column_names":
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ binary => 1, auto_diag => 1 });
open my $fh, "<", "file.csv";
binmode $fh; # for Windows
$csv->header ($fh);
while (my $row = $csv->getline_hr ($fh)) {
...
}
If the header is empty, contains more than one unique separator out of
the allowed set, contains empty fields, or contains identical fields
(after folding), it will croak with error 1010, 1011, 1012, or 1013
respectively.
If the header contains embedded newlines or is not valid CSV in any
other way, this method will croak and leave the parse error untouched.
A successful call to "header" will always set the "sep" of the $csv
object. This behavior can not be disabled.
return value
On error this method will croak.
In list context, the headers will be returned whether they are used to
set "column_names" or not.
In scalar context, the instance itself is returned. Note: the values
as found in the header will effectively be lost if "set_column_names"
is false.
Options
sep_set
$csv->header ($fh, { sep_set => [ ";", ",", "|", "\t" ] });
The list of legal separators defaults to "[ ";", "," ]" and can be
changed by this option. As this is probably the most often used
option, it can be passed on its own as an unnamed argument:
$csv->header ($fh, [ ";", ",", "|", "\t", "::", "\x{2063}" ]);
Multi-byte sequences are allowed, both multi-character and
Unicode. See "sep".
detect_bom
$csv->header ($fh, { detect_bom => 1 });
The default behavior is to detect if the header line starts with a
BOM. If the header has a BOM, use that to set the encoding of $fh.
This default behavior can be disabled by passing a false value to
"detect_bom".
Supported encodings from BOM are: UTF-8, UTF-16BE, UTF-16LE,
UTF-32BE, and UTF-32LE. BOM also supports UTF-1, UTF-EBCDIC, SCSU,
BOCU-1, and GB-18030 but Encode does not (yet). UTF-7 is not
supported.
If a supported BOM was detected as start of the stream, it is stored
in the object attribute "ENCODING".
my $enc = $csv->{ENCODING};
The encoding is used with "binmode" on $fh.
If the handle was opened in a (correct) encoding, this method will
not alter the encoding, as it checks the leading bytes of the first
line. In case the stream starts with a decoded BOM ("U+FEFF"),
"{ENCODING}" will be "" (empty) instead of the default "undef".
munge_column_names
This option offers the means to modify the column names into
something that is most useful to the application. The default is to
map all column names to lower case.
$csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => "lc" });
The following values are available:
lc - lower case
uc - upper case
db - valid DB field names
none - do not change
\%hash - supply a mapping
\&cb - supply a callback
Lower case
$csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => "lc" });
The header is changed to all lower-case
$_ = lc;
Upper case
$csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => "uc" });
The header is changed to all upper-case
$_ = uc;
Literal
$csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => "none" });
Hash
$csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => { foo => "sombrero" });
if a value does not exist, the original value is used unchanged
Database
$csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => "db" });
- lower-case
- all sequences of non-word characters are replaced with an
underscore
- all leading underscores are removed
$_ = lc (s/\W+/_/gr =~ s/^_+//r);
Callback
$csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => sub { fc } });
$csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => sub { "column_".$col++ } });
$csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => sub { lc (s/\W+/_/gr) } });
As this callback is called in a "map", you can use $_ directly.
set_column_names
$csv->header ($fh, { set_column_names => 1 });
The default is to set the instances column names using
"column_names" if the method is successful, so subsequent calls to
"getline_hr" can return a hash. Disable setting the header can be
forced by using a false value for this option.
As described in "return value" above, content is lost in scalar
context.
Validation
When receiving CSV files from external sources, this method can be
used to protect against changes in the layout by restricting to known
headers (and typos in the header fields).
my %known = (
"record key" => "c_rec",
"rec id" => "c_rec",
"id_rec" => "c_rec",
"kode" => "code",
"code" => "code",
"vaule" => "value",
"value" => "value",
);
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ binary => 1, auto_diag => 1 });
open my $fh, "<", $source or die "$source: $!";
$csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => sub {
s/\s+$//;
s/^\s+//;
$known{lc $_} or die "Unknown column '$_' in $source";
}});
while (my $row = $csv->getline_hr ($fh)) {
say join "\t", $row->{c_rec}, $row->{code}, $row->{value};
}
bind_columns
Takes a list of scalar references to be used for output with "print"
or to store in the fields fetched by "getline". When you do not pass
enough references to store the fetched fields in, "getline" will fail
with error 3006. If you pass more than there are fields to return,
the content of the remaining references is left untouched.
$csv->bind_columns (\$code, \$name, \$price, \$description);
while ($csv->getline ($fh)) {
print "The price of a $name is \x{20ac} $price\n";
}
To reset or clear all column binding, call "bind_columns" with the
single argument "undef". This will also clear column names.
$csv->bind_columns (undef);
If no arguments are passed at all, "bind_columns" will return the list
of current bindings or "undef" if no binds are active.
Note that in parsing with "bind_columns", the fields are set on the
fly. That implies that if the third field of a row causes an error
(or this row has just two fields where the previous row had more), the
first two fields already have been assigned the values of the current
row, while the rest of the fields will still hold the values of the
previous row. If you want the parser to fail in these cases, use the
"strict" attribute.
eof
$eof = $csv->eof ();
If "parse" or "getline" was used with an IO stream, this method will
return true (1) if the last call hit end of file, otherwise it will
return false (''). This is useful to see the difference between a
failure and end of file.
Note that if the parsing of the last line caused an error, "eof" is
still true. That means that if you are not using "auto_diag", an idiom
like
while (my $row = $csv->getline ($fh)) {
# ...
}
$csv->eof or $csv->error_diag;
will not report the error. You would have to change that to
while (my $row = $csv->getline ($fh)) {
# ...
}
+$csv->error_diag and $csv->error_diag;
types
$csv->types (\@tref);
This method is used to force that (all) columns are of a given type.
For example, if you have an integer column, two columns with
doubles and a string column, then you might do a
$csv->types ([Text::CSV_PP::IV (),
Text::CSV_PP::NV (),
Text::CSV_PP::NV (),
Text::CSV_PP::PV ()]);
Column types are used only for decoding columns while parsing, in
other words by the "parse" and "getline" methods.
You can unset column types by doing a
$csv->types (undef);
or fetch the current type settings with
$types = $csv->types ();
IV Set field type to integer.
NV Set field type to numeric/float.
PV Set field type to string.
fields
@columns = $csv->fields ();
This method returns the input to "combine" or the resultant
decomposed fields of a successful "parse", whichever was called more
recently.
Note that the return value is undefined after using "getline", which
does not fill the data structures returned by "parse".
meta_info
@flags = $csv->meta_info ();
This method returns the "flags" of the input to "combine" or the flags
of the resultant decomposed fields of "parse", whichever was called
more recently.
For each field, a meta_info field will hold flags that inform
something about the field returned by the "fields" method or
passed to the "combine" method. The flags are bit-wise-"or"'d like:
" "0x0001
The field was quoted.
" "0x0002
The field was binary.
See the "is_***" methods below.
is_quoted
my $quoted = $csv->is_quoted ($column_idx);
where $column_idx is the (zero-based) index of the column in the
last result of "parse".
This returns a true value if the data in the indicated column was
enclosed in "quote_char" quotes. This might be important for fields
where content ",20070108," is to be treated as a numeric value, and
where ","20070108"," is explicitly marked as character string data.
This method is only valid when "keep_meta_info" is set to a true value.
is_binary
my $binary = $csv->is_binary ($column_idx);
where $column_idx is the (zero-based) index of the column in the
last result of "parse".
This returns a true value if the data in the indicated column contained
any byte in the range "[\x00-\x08,\x10-\x1F,\x7F-\xFF]".
This method is only valid when "keep_meta_info" is set to a true value.
is_missing
my $missing = $csv->is_missing ($column_idx);
where $column_idx is the (zero-based) index of the column in the
last result of "getline_hr".
$csv->keep_meta_info (1);
while (my $hr = $csv->getline_hr ($fh)) {
$csv->is_missing (0) and next; # This was an empty line
}
When using "getline_hr", it is impossible to tell if the parsed
fields are "undef" because they where not filled in the "CSV" stream
or because they were not read at all, as all the fields defined by
"column_names" are set in the hash-ref. If you still need to know if
all fields in each row are provided, you should enable "keep_meta_info"
so you can check the flags.
If "keep_meta_info" is "false", "is_missing" will always return
"undef", regardless of $column_idx being valid or not. If this
attribute is "true" it will return either 0 (the field is present) or 1
(the field is missing).
A special case is the empty line. If the line is completely empty -
after dealing with the flags - this is still a valid CSV line: it is a
record of just one single empty field. However, if "keep_meta_info" is
set, invoking "is_missing" with index 0 will now return true.
status
$status = $csv->status ();
This method returns the status of the last invoked "combine" or "parse"
call. Status is success (true: 1) or failure (false: "undef" or 0).
Note that as this only keeps track of the status of above mentioned
methods, you are probably looking for "error_diag" instead.
error_input
$bad_argument = $csv->error_input ();
This method returns the erroneous argument (if it exists) of "combine"
or "parse", whichever was called more recently. If the last
invocation was successful, "error_input" will return "undef".
Depending on the type of error, it might also hold the data for the
last error-input of "getline".
error_diag
Text::CSV_PP->error_diag ();
$csv->error_diag ();
$error_code = 0 + $csv->error_diag ();
$error_str = "" . $csv->error_diag ();
($cde, $str, $pos, $rec, $fld) = $csv->error_diag ();
If (and only if) an error occurred, this function returns the
diagnostics of that error.
If called in void context, this will print the internal error code and
the associated error message to STDERR.
If called in list context, this will return the error code and the
error message in that order. If the last error was from parsing, the
rest of the values returned are a best guess at the location within
the line that was being parsed. Their values are 1-based. The
position currently is index of the byte at which the parsing failed in
the current record. It might change to be the index of the current
character in a later release. The records is the index of the record
parsed by the csv instance. The field number is the index of the field
the parser thinks it is currently trying to parse. See
examples/csv-check for how this can be used.
If called in scalar context, it will return the diagnostics in a
single scalar, a-la $!. It will contain the error code in numeric
context, and the diagnostics message in string context.
When called as a class method or a direct function call, the
diagnostics are that of the last "new" call.
record_number
$recno = $csv->record_number ();
Returns the records parsed by this csv instance. This value should be
more accurate than $. when embedded newlines come in play. Records
written by this instance are not counted.
SetDiag
$csv->SetDiag (0);
Use to reset the diagnostics if you are dealing with errors.
FUNCTIONS
This section is also taken from Text::CSV_XS.
csv
This function is not exported by default and should be explicitly
requested:
use Text::CSV_PP qw( csv );
This is a high-level function that aims at simple (user) interfaces.
This can be used to read/parse a "CSV" file or stream (the default
behavior) or to produce a file or write to a stream (define the "out"
attribute). It returns an array- or hash-reference on parsing (or
"undef" on fail) or the numeric value of "error_diag" on writing.
When this function fails you can get to the error using the class call
to "error_diag"
my $aoa = csv (in => "test.csv") or
die Text::CSV_PP->error_diag;
This function takes the arguments as key-value pairs. This can be
passed as a list or as an anonymous hash:
my $aoa = csv ( in => "test.csv", sep_char => ";");
my $aoh = csv ({ in => $fh, headers => "auto" });
The arguments passed consist of two parts: the arguments to "csv"
itself and the optional attributes to the "CSV" object used inside
the function as enumerated and explained in "new".
If not overridden, the default option used for CSV is
auto_diag => 1
escape_null => 0
The option that is always set and cannot be altered is
binary => 1
As this function will likely be used in one-liners, it allows "quote"
to be abbreviated as "quo", and "escape_char" to be abbreviated as
"esc" or "escape".
Alternative invocations:
my $aoa = Text::CSV_PP::csv (in => "file.csv");
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ();
my $aoa = $csv->csv (in => "file.csv");
In the latter case, the object attributes are used from the existing
object and the attribute arguments in the function call are ignored:
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ sep_char => ";" });
my $aoh = $csv->csv (in => "file.csv", bom => 1);
will parse using ";" as "sep_char", not ",".
in
Used to specify the source. "in" can be a file name (e.g. "file.csv"),
which will be opened for reading and closed when finished, a file
handle (e.g. $fh or "FH"), a reference to a glob (e.g. "\*ARGV"),
the glob itself (e.g. *STDIN), or a reference to a scalar (e.g.
"\q{1,2,"csv"}").
When used with "out", "in" should be a reference to a CSV structure
(AoA or AoH) or a CODE-ref that returns an array-reference or a hash-
reference. The code-ref will be invoked with no arguments.
my $aoa = csv (in => "file.csv");
open my $fh, "<", "file.csv";
my $aoa = csv (in => $fh);
my $csv = [ [qw( Foo Bar )], [ 1, 2 ], [ 2, 3 ]];
my $err = csv (in => $csv, out => "file.csv");
If called in void context without the "out" attribute, the resulting
ref will be used as input to a subsequent call to csv:
csv (in => "file.csv", filter => { 2 => sub { length > 2 }})
will be a shortcut to
csv (in => csv (in => "file.csv", filter => { 2 => sub { length > 2 }}))
where, in the absence of the "out" attribute, this is a shortcut to
csv (in => csv (in => "file.csv", filter => { 2 => sub { length > 2 }}),
out => *STDOUT)
out
csv (in => $aoa, out => "file.csv");
csv (in => $aoa, out => $fh);
csv (in => $aoa, out => STDOUT);
csv (in => $aoa, out => *STDOUT);
csv (in => $aoa, out => \*STDOUT);
csv (in => $aoa, out => \my $data);
csv (in => $aoa, out => undef);
csv (in => $aoa, out => \"skip");
csv (in => $fh, out => \@aoa);
csv (in => $fh, out => \@aoh, bom => 1);
csv (in => $fh, out => \%hsh, key => "key");
In output mode, the default CSV options when producing CSV are
eol => "\r\n"
The "fragment" attribute is ignored in output mode.
"out" can be a file name (e.g. "file.csv"), which will be opened for
writing and closed when finished, a file handle (e.g. $fh or "FH"), a
reference to a glob (e.g. "\*STDOUT"), the glob itself (e.g. *STDOUT),
or a reference to a scalar (e.g. "\my $data").
csv (in => sub { $sth->fetch }, out => "dump.csv");
csv (in => sub { $sth->fetchrow_hashref }, out => "dump.csv",
headers => $sth->{NAME_lc});
When a code-ref is used for "in", the output is generated per
invocation, so no buffering is involved. This implies that there is no
size restriction on the number of records. The "csv" function ends when
the coderef returns a false value.
If "out" is set to a reference of the literal string "skip", the output
will be suppressed completely, which might be useful in combination
with a filter for side effects only.
my %cache;
csv (in => "dump.csv",
out => \"skip",
on_in => sub { $cache{$_[1][1]}++ });
Currently, setting "out" to any false value ("undef", "", 0) will be
equivalent to "\"skip"".
If the "in" argument point to something to parse, and the "out" is set
to a reference to an "ARRAY" or a "HASH", the output is appended to the
data in the existing reference. The result of the parse should match
what exists in the reference passed. This might come handy when you
have to parse a set of files with similar content (like data stored per
period) and you want to collect that into a single data structure:
my %hash;
csv (in => $_, out => \%hash, key => "id") for sort glob "foo-[0-9]*.csv";
my @list; # List of arrays
csv (in => $_, out => \@list) for sort glob "foo-[0-9]*.csv";
my @list; # List of hashes
csv (in => $_, out => \@list, bom => 1) for sort glob "foo-[0-9]*.csv";
encoding
If passed, it should be an encoding accepted by the ":encoding()"
option to "open". There is no default value. This attribute does not
work in perl 5.6.x. "encoding" can be abbreviated to "enc" for ease of
use in command line invocations.
If "encoding" is set to the literal value "auto", the method "header"
will be invoked on the opened stream to check if there is a BOM and set
the encoding accordingly. This is equal to passing a true value in
the option "detect_bom".
Encodings can be stacked, as supported by "binmode":
# Using PerlIO::via::gzip
csv (in => \@csv,
out => "test.csv:via.gz",
encoding => ":via(gzip):encoding(utf-8)",
);
$aoa = csv (in => "test.csv:via.gz", encoding => ":via(gzip)");
# Using PerlIO::gzip
csv (in => \@csv,
out => "test.csv:via.gz",
encoding => ":gzip:encoding(utf-8)",
);
$aoa = csv (in => "test.csv:gzip.gz", encoding => ":gzip");
detect_bom
If "detect_bom" is given, the method "header" will be invoked on
the opened stream to check if there is a BOM and set the encoding
accordingly.
"detect_bom" can be abbreviated to "bom".
This is the same as setting "encoding" to "auto".
Note that as the method "header" is invoked, its default is to also
set the headers.
headers
If this attribute is not given, the default behavior is to produce an
array of arrays.
If "headers" is supplied, it should be an anonymous list of column
names, an anonymous hashref, a coderef, or a literal flag: "auto",
"lc", "uc", or "skip".
skip
When "skip" is used, the header will not be included in the output.
my $aoa = csv (in => $fh, headers => "skip");
auto
If "auto" is used, the first line of the "CSV" source will be read as
the list of field headers and used to produce an array of hashes.
my $aoh = csv (in => $fh, headers => "auto");
lc
If "lc" is used, the first line of the "CSV" source will be read as
the list of field headers mapped to lower case and used to produce
an array of hashes. This is a variation of "auto".
my $aoh = csv (in => $fh, headers => "lc");
uc
If "uc" is used, the first line of the "CSV" source will be read as
the list of field headers mapped to upper case and used to produce
an array of hashes. This is a variation of "auto".
my $aoh = csv (in => $fh, headers => "uc");
CODE
If a coderef is used, the first line of the "CSV" source will be
read as the list of mangled field headers in which each field is
passed as the only argument to the coderef. This list is used to
produce an array of hashes.
my $aoh = csv (in => $fh,
headers => sub { lc ($_[0]) =~ s/kode/code/gr });
this example is a variation of using "lc" where all occurrences of
"kode" are replaced with "code".
ARRAY
If "headers" is an anonymous list, the entries in the list will be
used as field names. The first line is considered data instead of
headers.
my $aoh = csv (in => $fh, headers => [qw( Foo Bar )]);
csv (in => $aoa, out => $fh, headers => [qw( code description price )]);
HASH
If "headers" is a hash reference, this implies "auto", but header
fields that exist as key in the hashref will be replaced by the value
for that key. Given a CSV file like
post-kode,city,name,id number,fubble
1234AA,Duckstad,Donald,13,"X313DF"
using
csv (headers => { "post-kode" => "pc", "id number" => "ID" }, ...
will return an entry like
{ pc => "1234AA",
city => "Duckstad",
name => "Donald",
ID => "13",
fubble => "X313DF",
}
See also "munge_column_names" and "set_column_names".
munge_column_names
If "munge_column_names" is set, the method "header" is invoked on
the opened stream with all matching arguments to detect and set the
headers.
"munge_column_names" can be abbreviated to "munge".
key
If passed, will default "headers" to "auto" and return a hashref
instead of an array of hashes. Allowed values are simple scalars or
array-references where the first element is the joiner and the rest are
the fields to join to combine the key.
my $ref = csv (in => "test.csv", key => "code");
my $ref = csv (in => "test.csv", key => [ ":" => "code", "color" ]);
with test.csv like
code,product,price,color
1,pc,850,gray
2,keyboard,12,white
3,mouse,5,black
the first example will return
{ 1 => {
code => 1,
color => 'gray',
price => 850,
product => 'pc'
},
2 => {
code => 2,
color => 'white',
price => 12,
product => 'keyboard'
},
3 => {
code => 3,
color => 'black',
price => 5,
product => 'mouse'
}
}
the second example will return
{ "1:gray" => {
code => 1,
color => 'gray',
price => 850,
product => 'pc'
},
"2:white" => {
code => 2,
color => 'white',
price => 12,
product => 'keyboard'
},
"3:black" => {
code => 3,
color => 'black',
price => 5,
product => 'mouse'
}
}
The "key" attribute can be combined with "headers" for "CSV" date that
has no header line, like
my $ref = csv (
in => "foo.csv",
headers => [qw( c_foo foo bar description stock )],
key => "c_foo",
);
value
Used to create key-value hashes.
Only allowed when "key" is valid. A "value" can be either a single
column label or an anonymous list of column labels. In the first case,
the value will be a simple scalar value, in the latter case, it will be
a hashref.
my $ref = csv (in => "test.csv", key => "code",
value => "price");
my $ref = csv (in => "test.csv", key => "code",
value => [ "product", "price" ]);
my $ref = csv (in => "test.csv", key => [ ":" => "code", "color" ],
value => "price");
my $ref = csv (in => "test.csv", key => [ ":" => "code", "color" ],
value => [ "product", "price" ]);
with test.csv like
code,product,price,color
1,pc,850,gray
2,keyboard,12,white
3,mouse,5,black
the first example will return
{ 1 => 850,
2 => 12,
3 => 5,
}
the second example will return
{ 1 => {
price => 850,
product => 'pc'
},
2 => {
price => 12,
product => 'keyboard'
},
3 => {
price => 5,
product => 'mouse'
}
}
the third example will return
{ "1:gray" => 850,
"2:white" => 12,
"3:black" => 5,
}
the fourth example will return
{ "1:gray" => {
price => 850,
product => 'pc'
},
"2:white" => {
price => 12,
product => 'keyboard'
},
"3:black" => {
price => 5,
product => 'mouse'
}
}
keep_headers
When using hashes, keep the column names into the arrayref passed, so
all headers are available after the call in the original order.
my $aoh = csv (in => "file.csv", keep_headers => \my @hdr);
This attribute can be abbreviated to "kh" or passed as
"keep_column_names".
This attribute implies a default of "auto" for the "headers" attribute.
fragment
Only output the fragment as defined in the "fragment" method. This
option is ignored when generating "CSV". See "out".
Combining all of them could give something like
use Text::CSV_PP qw( csv );
my $aoh = csv (
in => "test.txt",
encoding => "utf-8",
headers => "auto",
sep_char => "|",
fragment => "row=3;6-9;15-*",
);
say $aoh->[15]{Foo};
sep_set
If "sep_set" is set, the method "header" is invoked on the opened
stream to detect and set "sep_char" with the given set.
"sep_set" can be abbreviated to "seps".
Note that as the "header" method is invoked, its default is to also
set the headers.
set_column_names
If "set_column_names" is passed, the method "header" is invoked on
the opened stream with all arguments meant for "header".
If "set_column_names" is passed as a false value, the content of the
first row is only preserved if the output is AoA:
With an input-file like
bAr,foo
1,2
3,4,5
This call
my $aoa = csv (in => $file, set_column_names => 0);
will result in
[[ "bar", "foo" ],
[ "1", "2" ],
[ "3", "4", "5" ]]
and
my $aoa = csv (in => $file, set_column_names => 0, munge => "none");
will result in
[[ "bAr", "foo" ],
[ "1", "2" ],
[ "3", "4", "5" ]]
Callbacks
Callbacks enable actions triggered from the inside of Text::CSV_PP.
While most of what this enables can easily be done in an unrolled
loop as described in the "SYNOPSIS" callbacks can be used to meet
special demands or enhance the "csv" function.
error
$csv->callbacks (error => sub { $csv->SetDiag (0) });
the "error" callback is invoked when an error occurs, but only
when "auto_diag" is set to a true value. A callback is invoked with
the values returned by "error_diag":
my ($c, $s);
sub ignore3006 {
my ($err, $msg, $pos, $recno, $fldno) = @_;
if ($err == 3006) {
# ignore this error
($c, $s) = (undef, undef);
Text::CSV_PP->SetDiag (0);
}
# Any other error
return;
} # ignore3006
$csv->callbacks (error => \&ignore3006);
$csv->bind_columns (\$c, \$s);
while ($csv->getline ($fh)) {
# Error 3006 will not stop the loop
}
after_parse
$csv->callbacks (after_parse => sub { push @{$_[1]}, "NEW" });
while (my $row = $csv->getline ($fh)) {
$row->[-1] eq "NEW";
}
This callback is invoked after parsing with "getline" only if no
error occurred. The callback is invoked with two arguments: the
current "CSV" parser object and an array reference to the fields
parsed.
The return code of the callback is ignored unless it is a reference
to the string "skip", in which case the record will be skipped in
"getline_all".
sub add_from_db {
my ($csv, $row) = @_;
$sth->execute ($row->[4]);
push @$row, $sth->fetchrow_array;
} # add_from_db
my $aoa = csv (in => "file.csv", callbacks => {
after_parse => \&add_from_db });
This hook can be used for validation:
FAIL
Die if any of the records does not validate a rule:
after_parse => sub {
$_[1][4] =~ m/^[0-9]{4}\s?[A-Z]{2}$/ or
die "5th field does not have a valid Dutch zipcode";
}
DEFAULT
Replace invalid fields with a default value:
after_parse => sub { $_[1][2] =~ m/^\d+$/ or $_[1][2] = 0 }
SKIP
Skip records that have invalid fields (only applies to
"getline_all"):
after_parse => sub { $_[1][0] =~ m/^\d+$/ or return \"skip"; }
before_print
my $idx = 1;
$csv->callbacks (before_print => sub { $_[1][0] = $idx++ });
$csv->print (*STDOUT, [ 0, $_ ]) for @members;
This callback is invoked before printing with "print" only if no
error occurred. The callback is invoked with two arguments: the
current "CSV" parser object and an array reference to the fields
passed.
The return code of the callback is ignored.
sub max_4_fields {
my ($csv, $row) = @_;
@$row > 4 and splice @$row, 4;
} # max_4_fields
csv (in => csv (in => "file.csv"), out => *STDOUT,
callbacks => { before_print => \&max_4_fields });
This callback is not active for "combine".
Callbacks for csv ()
The "csv" allows for some callbacks that do not integrate in XS
internals but only feature the "csv" function.
csv (in => "file.csv",
callbacks => {
filter => { 6 => sub { $_ > 15 } }, # first
after_parse => sub { say "AFTER PARSE"; }, # first
after_in => sub { say "AFTER IN"; }, # second
on_in => sub { say "ON IN"; }, # third
},
);
csv (in => $aoh,
out => "file.csv",
callbacks => {
on_in => sub { say "ON IN"; }, # first
before_out => sub { say "BEFORE OUT"; }, # second
before_print => sub { say "BEFORE PRINT"; }, # third
},
);
filter
This callback can be used to filter records. It is called just after
a new record has been scanned. The callback accepts a:
hashref
The keys are the index to the row (the field name or field number,
1-based) and the values are subs to return a true or false value.
csv (in => "file.csv", filter => {
3 => sub { m/a/ }, # third field should contain an "a"
5 => sub { length > 4 }, # length of the 5th field minimal 5
});
csv (in => "file.csv", filter => { foo => sub { $_ > 4 }});
If the keys to the filter hash contain any character that is not a
digit it will also implicitly set "headers" to "auto" unless
"headers" was already passed as argument. When headers are
active, returning an array of hashes, the filter is not applicable
to the header itself.
All sub results should match, as in AND.
The context of the callback sets $_ localized to the field
indicated by the filter. The two arguments are as with all other
callbacks, so the other fields in the current row can be seen:
filter => { 3 => sub { $_ > 100 ? $_[1][1] =~ m/A/ : $_[1][6] =~ m/B/ }}
If the context is set to return a list of hashes ("headers" is
defined), the current record will also be available in the
localized %_:
filter => { 3 => sub { $_ > 100 && $_{foo} =~ m/A/ && $_{bar} < 1000 }}
If the filter is used to alter the content by changing $_, make
sure that the sub returns true in order not to have that record
skipped:
filter => { 2 => sub { $_ = uc }}
will upper-case the second field, and then skip it if the resulting
content evaluates to false. To always accept, end with truth:
filter => { 2 => sub { $_ = uc; 1 }}
coderef
csv (in => "file.csv", filter => sub { $n++; 0; });
If the argument to "filter" is a coderef, it is an alias or
shortcut to a filter on column 0:
csv (filter => sub { $n++; 0 });
is equal to
csv (filter => { 0 => sub { $n++; 0 });
filter-name
csv (in => "file.csv", filter => "not_blank");
csv (in => "file.csv", filter => "not_empty");
csv (in => "file.csv", filter => "filled");
These are predefined filters
Given a file like (line numbers prefixed for doc purpose only):
1:1,2,3
2:
3:,
4:""
5:,,
6:, ,
7:"",
8:" "
9:4,5,6
not_blank
Filter out the blank lines
This filter is a shortcut for
filter => { 0 => sub { @{$_[1]} > 1 or
defined $_[1][0] && $_[1][0] ne "" } }
Due to the implementation, it is currently impossible to also
filter lines that consists only of a quoted empty field. These
lines are also considered blank lines.
With the given example, lines 2 and 4 will be skipped.
not_empty
Filter out lines where all the fields are empty.
This filter is a shortcut for
filter => { 0 => sub { grep { defined && $_ ne "" } @{$_[1]} } }
A space is not regarded being empty, so given the example data,
lines 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 are skipped.
filled
Filter out lines that have no visible data
This filter is a shortcut for
filter => { 0 => sub { grep { defined && m/\S/ } @{$_[1]} } }
This filter rejects all lines that not have at least one field
that does not evaluate to the empty string.
With the given example data, this filter would skip lines 2
through 8.
One could also use modules like Types::Standard:
use Types::Standard -types;
my $type = Tuple[Str, Str, Int, Bool, Optional[Num]];
my $check = $type->compiled_check;
# filter with compiled check and warnings
my $aoa = csv (
in => \$data,
filter => {
0 => sub {
my $ok = $check->($_[1]) or
warn $type->get_message ($_[1]), "\n";
return $ok;
},
},
);
after_in
This callback is invoked for each record after all records have been
parsed but before returning the reference to the caller. The hook is
invoked with two arguments: the current "CSV" parser object and a
reference to the record. The reference can be a reference to a
HASH or a reference to an ARRAY as determined by the arguments.
This callback can also be passed as an attribute without the
"callbacks" wrapper.
before_out
This callback is invoked for each record before the record is
printed. The hook is invoked with two arguments: the current "CSV"
parser object and a reference to the record. The reference can be a
reference to a HASH or a reference to an ARRAY as determined by the
arguments.
This callback can also be passed as an attribute without the
"callbacks" wrapper.
This callback makes the row available in %_ if the row is a hashref.
In this case %_ is writable and will change the original row.
on_in
This callback acts exactly as the "after_in" or the "before_out"
hooks.
This callback can also be passed as an attribute without the
"callbacks" wrapper.
This callback makes the row available in %_ if the row is a hashref.
In this case %_ is writable and will change the original row. So e.g.
with
my $aoh = csv (
in => \"foo\n1\n2\n",
headers => "auto",
on_in => sub { $_{bar} = 2; },
);
$aoh will be:
[ { foo => 1,
bar => 2,
}
{ foo => 2,
bar => 2,
}
]
csv
The function "csv" can also be called as a method or with an
existing Text::CSV_PP object. This could help if the function is to
be invoked a lot of times and the overhead of creating the object
internally over and over again would be prevented by passing an
existing instance.
my $csv = Text::CSV_PP->new ({ binary => 1, auto_diag => 1 });
my $aoa = $csv->csv (in => $fh);
my $aoa = csv (in => $fh, csv => $csv);
both act the same. Running this 20000 times on a 20 lines CSV file,
showed a 53% speedup.
DIAGNOSTICS
This section is also taken from Text::CSV_XS.
Still under construction ...
If an error occurs, "$csv->error_diag" can be used to get information
on the cause of the failure. Note that for speed reasons the internal
value is never cleared on success, so using the value returned by
"error_diag" in normal cases - when no error occurred - may cause
unexpected results.
If the constructor failed, the cause can be found using "error_diag" as
a class method, like "Text::CSV_PP->error_diag".
The "$csv->error_diag" method is automatically invoked upon error when
the contractor was called with "auto_diag" set to 1 or 2, or when
autodie is in effect. When set to 1, this will cause a "warn" with the
error message, when set to 2, it will "die". "2012 - EOF" is excluded
from "auto_diag" reports.
Errors can be (individually) caught using the "error" callback.
The errors as described below are available. I have tried to make the
error itself explanatory enough, but more descriptions will be added.
For most of these errors, the first three capitals describe the error
category:
• INI
Initialization error or option conflict.
• ECR
Carriage-Return related parse error.
• EOF
End-Of-File related parse error.
• EIQ
Parse error inside quotation.
• EIF
Parse error inside field.
• ECB
Combine error.
• EHR
HashRef parse related error.
And below should be the complete list of error codes that can be
returned:
• 1001 "INI - sep_char is equal to quote_char or escape_char"
The separation character cannot be equal to the quotation
character or to the escape character, as this would invalidate all
parsing rules.
• 1002 "INI - allow_whitespace with escape_char or quote_char SP or
TAB"
Using the "allow_whitespace" attribute when either "quote_char" or
"escape_char" is equal to "SPACE" or "TAB" is too ambiguous to
allow.
• 1003 "INI - \r or \n in main attr not allowed"
Using default "eol" characters in either "sep_char", "quote_char",
or "escape_char" is not allowed.
• 1004 "INI - callbacks should be undef or a hashref"
The "callbacks" attribute only allows one to be "undef" or a hash
reference.
• 1005 "INI - EOL too long"
The value passed for EOL is exceeding its maximum length (16).
• 1006 "INI - SEP too long"
The value passed for SEP is exceeding its maximum length (16).
• 1007 "INI - QUOTE too long"
The value passed for QUOTE is exceeding its maximum length (16).
• 1008 "INI - SEP undefined"
The value passed for SEP should be defined and not empty.
• 1010 "INI - the header is empty"
The header line parsed in the "header" is empty.
• 1011 "INI - the header contains more than one valid separator"
The header line parsed in the "header" contains more than one
(unique) separator character out of the allowed set of separators.
• 1012 "INI - the header contains an empty field"
The header line parsed in the "header" contains an empty field.
• 1013 "INI - the header contains nun-unique fields"
The header line parsed in the "header" contains at least two
identical fields.
• 1014 "INI - header called on undefined stream"
The header line cannot be parsed from an undefined source.
• 1500 "PRM - Invalid/unsupported argument(s)"
Function or method called with invalid argument(s) or parameter(s).
• 1501 "PRM - The key attribute is passed as an unsupported type"
The "key" attribute is of an unsupported type.
• 1502 "PRM - The value attribute is passed without the key attribute"
The "value" attribute is only allowed when a valid key is given.
• 1503 "PRM - The value attribute is passed as an unsupported type"
The "value" attribute is of an unsupported type.
• 2010 "ECR - QUO char inside quotes followed by CR not part of EOL"
When "eol" has been set to anything but the default, like
"\r\t\n", and the "\r" is following the second (closing)
"quote_char", where the characters following the "\r" do not make up
the "eol" sequence, this is an error.
• 2011 "ECR - Characters after end of quoted field"
Sequences like "1,foo,"bar"baz,22,1" are not allowed. "bar" is a
quoted field and after the closing double-quote, there should be
either a new-line sequence or a separation character.
• 2012 "EOF - End of data in parsing input stream"
Self-explaining. End-of-file while inside parsing a stream. Can
happen only when reading from streams with "getline", as using
"parse" is done on strings that are not required to have a trailing
"eol".
• 2013 "INI - Specification error for fragments RFC7111"
Invalid specification for URI "fragment" specification.
• 2014 "ENF - Inconsistent number of fields"
Inconsistent number of fields under strict parsing.
• 2021 "EIQ - NL char inside quotes, binary off"
Sequences like "1,"foo\nbar",22,1" are allowed only when the binary
option has been selected with the constructor.
• 2022 "EIQ - CR char inside quotes, binary off"
Sequences like "1,"foo\rbar",22,1" are allowed only when the binary
option has been selected with the constructor.
• 2023 "EIQ - QUO character not allowed"
Sequences like ""foo "bar" baz",qu" and "2023,",2008-04-05,"Foo,
Bar",\n" will cause this error.
• 2024 "EIQ - EOF cannot be escaped, not even inside quotes"
The escape character is not allowed as last character in an input
stream.
• 2025 "EIQ - Loose unescaped escape"
An escape character should escape only characters that need escaping.
Allowing the escape for other characters is possible with the
attribute "allow_loose_escapes".
• 2026 "EIQ - Binary character inside quoted field, binary off"
Binary characters are not allowed by default. Exceptions are
fields that contain valid UTF-8, that will automatically be upgraded
if the content is valid UTF-8. Set "binary" to 1 to accept binary
data.
• 2027 "EIQ - Quoted field not terminated"
When parsing a field that started with a quotation character, the
field is expected to be closed with a quotation character. When the
parsed line is exhausted before the quote is found, that field is not
terminated.
• 2030 "EIF - NL char inside unquoted verbatim, binary off"
• 2031 "EIF - CR char is first char of field, not part of EOL"
• 2032 "EIF - CR char inside unquoted, not part of EOL"
• 2034 "EIF - Loose unescaped quote"
• 2035 "EIF - Escaped EOF in unquoted field"
• 2036 "EIF - ESC error"
• 2037 "EIF - Binary character in unquoted field, binary off"
• 2110 "ECB - Binary character in Combine, binary off"
• 2200 "EIO - print to IO failed. See errno"
• 3001 "EHR - Unsupported syntax for column_names ()"
• 3002 "EHR - getline_hr () called before column_names ()"
• 3003 "EHR - bind_columns () and column_names () fields count
mismatch"
• 3004 "EHR - bind_columns () only accepts refs to scalars"
• 3006 "EHR - bind_columns () did not pass enough refs for parsed
fields"
• 3007 "EHR - bind_columns needs refs to writable scalars"
• 3008 "EHR - unexpected error in bound fields"
• 3009 "EHR - print_hr () called before column_names ()"
• 3010 "EHR - print_hr () called with invalid arguments"
SEE ALSO
Text::CSV_XS, Text::CSV
Older versions took many regexp from
<http://www.din.or.jp/~ohzaki/perl.htm>
AUTHOR
Kenichi Ishigaki, <ishigaki[at]cpan.org> Makamaka Hannyaharamitu,
<makamaka[at]cpan.org>
Text::CSV_XS was written by <joe[at]ispsoft.de> and maintained by
<h.m.brand[at]xs4all.nl>.
Text::CSV was written by <alan[at]mfgrtl.com>.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2017- by Kenichi Ishigaki, <ishigaki[at]cpan.org> Copyright
2005-2015 by Makamaka Hannyaharamitu, <makamaka[at]cpan.org>
Most of the code and doc is directly taken from the pure perl part of
Text::CSV_XS.
Copyright (C) 2007-2016 H.Merijn Brand. All rights reserved.
Copyright (C) 1998-2001 Jochen Wiedmann. All rights reserved.
Copyright (C) 1997 Alan Citterman. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.32.1 2021-08-23 Text::CSV_PP(3pm)
Generated by dwww version 1.14 on Sat Jun 13 12:10:13 CEST 2026.