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After having the unpleasant surprise that Comma Seperated Value (CSV) files are not necessarily comma-separated, I'm trying to find out if there is any way to detect what the regional settings list separator value is on the client machine from http request.

Scenario is as follows: A user can download some data in CSV format from web site (RoR, if it matters). That CSV file is generated on the fly, sent to the user, and most of the time double-clicked and opened in MS Excel on Windows machine at the destination. Now, if the user has ',' set as the list separator, the data is properly arranged in columns, but if any other separator (';' is widely used here) is set, it all just gets thrown into a single column. So, is there any way to detect what separator is used on the client machine, and generate the file accordingly?

I have a sinking feeling that it is not, but I'd like to be sure before I pass the 'can't be done, sorry' line to the customer :)

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3 Answers

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Toms, as far as I'm aware there is no way of achieving what you're after. The most you can do is try and detect the user locale and map it against a database of locales/list separators, altering the list separator in the .CSV file as a result.

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I think everyone should use Calc from OpenOffice - it asks when you open a file about encoding, column separators and other. I don't know answer for your question, but maybe you can try to send data in html tables or in xml - excel should read both of them correctly. From my experience it isn't easy to export data to excel. Few weeks ago I have problem with it and after few hours of work I asked a person, who couldn't open my csv file in excel, about version. It was Excel 98...

Take a look on html example and xml.

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Could you just have the users with non comma separators set a profile kind of option and then generate CSVs based on user settings with the default being commas?

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