ruby--ruby/doc/csv/recipes/generating.rdoc

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== Recipes for Generating \CSV
For other recipes, see {Recipes for CSV}[./recipes_rdoc.html].
All code snippets on this page assume that the following has been executed:
require 'csv'
=== Contents
- {Output Formats}[#label-Output+Formats]
- {Generating to a String}[#label-Generating+to+a+String]
- {Recipe: Generate to String with Headers}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+to+String+with+Headers]
- {Recipe: Generate to String Without Headers}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+to+String+Without+Headers]
- {Generating to a File}[#label-Generating+to+a+File]
- {Recipe: Generate to File with Headers}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+to+File+with+Headers]
- {Recipe: Generate to File Without Headers}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+to+File+Without+Headers]
- {Generating to IO an Stream}[#label-Generating+to+an+IO+Stream]
- {Recipe: Generate to IO Stream with Headers}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+to+IO+Stream+with+Headers]
- {Recipe: Generate to IO Stream Without Headers}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+to+IO+Stream+Without+Headers]
- {Converting Fields}[#label-Converting+Fields]
- {Recipe: Filter Generated Field Strings}[#label-Recipe-3A+Filter+Generated+Field+Strings]
- {Recipe: Specify Multiple Write Converters}[#label-Recipe-3A+Specify+Multiple+Write+Converters]
- {RFC 4180 Compliance}[#label-RFC+4180+Compliance]
- {Row Separator}[#label-Row+Separator]
- {Recipe: Generate Compliant Row Separator}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+Compliant+Row+Separator]
- {Recipe: Generate Non-Compliant Row Separator}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+Non-Compliant+Row+Separator]
- {Column Separator}[#label-Column+Separator]
- {Recipe: Generate Compliant Column Separator}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+Compliant+Column+Separator]
- {Recipe: Generate Non-Compliant Column Separator}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+Non-Compliant+Column+Separator]
- {Quote Character}[#label-Quote+Character]
- {Recipe: Generate Compliant Quote Character}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+Compliant+Quote+Character]
- {Recipe: Generate Non-Compliant Quote Character}[#label-Recipe-3A+Generate+Non-Compliant+Quote+Character]
=== Output Formats
You can generate \CSV output to a \String, to a \File (via its path), or to an \IO stream.
==== Generating to a \String
You can generate \CSV output to a \String, with or without headers.
===== Recipe: Generate to \String with Headers
Use class method CSV.generate with option +headers+ to generate to a \String.
This example uses method CSV#<< to append the rows
that are to be generated:
output_string = CSV.generate('', headers: ['Name', 'Value'], write_headers: true) do |csv|
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
output_string # => "Name,Value\nFoo,0\nBar,1\nBaz,2\n"
===== Recipe: Generate to \String Without Headers
Use class method CSV.generate without option +headers+ to generate to a \String.
This example uses method CSV#<< to append the rows
that are to be generated:
output_string = CSV.generate do |csv|
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
output_string # => "Foo,0\nBar,1\nBaz,2\n"
==== Generating to a \File
You can generate /CSV data to a \File, with or without headers.
===== Recipe: Generate to \File with Headers
Use class method CSV.open with option +headers+ generate to a \File.
This example uses method CSV#<< to append the rows
that are to be generated:
path = 't.csv'
CSV.open(path, 'w', headers: ['Name', 'Value'], write_headers: true) do |csv|
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
p File.read(path) # => "Name,Value\nFoo,0\nBar,1\nBaz,2\n"
===== Recipe: Generate to \File Without Headers
Use class method CSV.open without option +headers+ to generate to a \File.
This example uses method CSV#<< to append the rows
that are to be generated:
path = 't.csv'
CSV.open(path, 'w') do |csv|
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
p File.read(path) # => "Foo,0\nBar,1\nBaz,2\n"
==== Generating to an \IO Stream
You can generate \CSV data to an \IO stream, with or without headers.
==== Recipe: Generate to \IO Stream with Headers
Use class method CSV.new with option +headers+ to generate \CSV data to an \IO stream:
path = 't.csv'
File.open(path, 'w') do |file|
csv = CSV.new(file, headers: ['Name', 'Value'], write_headers: true)
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
p File.read(path) # => "Name,Value\nFoo,0\nBar,1\nBaz,2\n"
===== Recipe: Generate to \IO Stream Without Headers
Use class method CSV.new without option +headers+ to generate \CSV data to an \IO stream:
path = 't.csv'
File.open(path, 'w') do |file|
csv = CSV.new(file)
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
p File.read(path) # => "Foo,0\nBar,1\nBaz,2\n"
=== Converting Fields
You can use _write_ _converters_ to convert fields when generating \CSV.
==== Recipe: Filter Generated Field Strings
Use option <tt>:write_converters</tt> and a custom converter to convert field values when generating \CSV.
This example defines and uses a custom write converter to strip whitespace from generated fields:
strip_converter = proc {|field| field.respond_to?(:strip) ? field.strip : field }
output_string = CSV.generate(write_converters: strip_converter) do |csv|
csv << [' foo ', 0]
csv << [' bar ', 1]
csv << [' baz ', 2]
end
output_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
==== Recipe: Specify Multiple Write Converters
Use option <tt>:write_converters</tt> and multiple custom coverters
to convert field values when generating \CSV.
This example defines and uses two custom write converters to strip and upcase generated fields:
strip_converter = proc {|field| field.respond_to?(:strip) ? field.strip : field }
upcase_converter = proc {|field| field.respond_to?(:upcase) ? field.upcase : field }
converters = [strip_converter, upcase_converter]
output_string = CSV.generate(write_converters: converters) do |csv|
csv << [' foo ', 0]
csv << [' bar ', 1]
csv << [' baz ', 2]
end
output_string # => "FOO,0\nBAR,1\nBAZ,2\n"
=== RFC 4180 Compliance
By default, \CSV generates data that is compliant with
{RFC 4180}[https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4180]
with respect to:
- Column separator.
- Quote character.
==== Row Separator
RFC 4180 specifies the row separator CRLF (Ruby <tt>"\r\n"</tt>).
===== Recipe: Generate Compliant Row Separator
For strict compliance, use option +:row_sep+ to specify row separator <tt>"\r\n"</tt>:
output_string = CSV.generate('', row_sep: "\r\n") do |csv|
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
output_string # => "Foo,0\r\nBar,1\r\nBaz,2\r\n"
===== Recipe: Generate Non-Compliant Row Separator
For data with non-compliant row separators, use option +:row_sep+ with a different value:
This example source uses semicolon (<tt>";'</tt>) as its row separator:
output_string = CSV.generate('', row_sep: ";") do |csv|
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
output_string # => "Foo,0;Bar,1;Baz,2;"
==== Column Separator
RFC 4180 specifies column separator COMMA (Ruby <tt>","</tt>).
===== Recipe: Generate Compliant Column Separator
Because the \CSV default comma separator is <tt>","</tt>,
you need not specify option +:col_sep+ for compliant data:
output_string = CSV.generate('') do |csv|
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
output_string # => "Foo,0\nBar,1\nBaz,2\n"
===== Recipe: Generate Non-Compliant Column Separator
For data with non-compliant column separators, use option +:col_sep+.
This example source uses TAB (<tt>"\t"</tt>) as its column separator:
output_string = CSV.generate('', col_sep: "\t") do |csv|
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
output_string # => "Foo\t0\nBar\t1\nBaz\t2\n"
==== Quote Character
RFC 4180 specifies quote character DQUOTE (Ruby <tt>"\""</tt>).
===== Recipe: Generate Compliant Quote Character
Because the \CSV default quote character is <tt>"\""</tt>,
you need not specify option +:quote_char+ for compliant data:
output_string = CSV.generate('', force_quotes: true) do |csv|
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
output_string # => "\"Foo\",\"0\"\n\"Bar\",\"1\"\n\"Baz\",\"2\"\n"
===== Recipe: Generate Non-Compliant Quote Character
For data with non-compliant quote characters, use option +:quote_char+.
This example source uses SQUOTE (<tt>"'"</tt>) as its quote character:
output_string = CSV.generate('', quote_char: "'", force_quotes: true) do |csv|
csv << ['Foo', 0]
csv << ['Bar', 1]
csv << ['Baz', 2]
end
output_string # => "'Foo','0'\n'Bar','1'\n'Baz','2'\n"