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I'm using gawk and its FPAT = "([^,]*)|(\"[^\"]+\")" feature, to parse CSV files, which may or may not have individual values wrapped within quotes. (I don't think any values themselves have quotes within, but they do frequently have commas.)

The resulting output will be SQL (for sqlite3), so, I need to ensure that all text values are quoted. However, if I simply quote all values from the input when printing into output, then those values that were also quoted within the original CSV file end up having double double-quotes, and things don't work.

How do I remove the double quotes with awk from the individual fields (only to unconditionally add them later on when printing the output)? Or only print the quotes conditionally in the first place?

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1 Answer 1

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I think you have to check each field. Like:

BEGIN { FPAT="([^,]*)|(\"[^\"]+\")"}
{
    for (i=1; i<=NF;i++) {
        if (substr($i,1,1)!="\"")
            $i="\""$i"\""
        print $i
    }

}

For example input:

adf," asdfas, d",adsf
4,5," dafs"

The output is:

"adf"
" asdfas, d"
"adsf"
"4"
"5"
" dafs"

Update

To only print a set of columns:

BEGIN { 
    FPAT="([^,]*)|(\"[^\"]+\")"
    a="1 3"
    n=split(a,b," ")
}
{
    for (i=1; i<=n; i++) {
        r=$(b[i])
        if (substr(r,1,1)!="\"")
            r="\""r"\""
        print r
    }
}
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  • BTW, there are about a hundred columns, but I'm interested in less than a dozen. Is there a way to make this conversion specifically only for those fields of interest? I.e. do an if loop only for a set of numbers?
    – cnst
    Jan 16, 2014 at 19:00
  • @cnst Yes, just list the columns you are interested in an array for instance. Let's say a contains the column numbers: then for (i in a) will loop over only those columns.. Jan 16, 2014 at 19:03
  • @cnst I have updated my answer with a suggestion.. Just list the columns in the string a in the BEGIN block.. Jan 16, 2014 at 19:09
  • Thanks! But why did you use a regular for loop, instead of the one you suggested in the comment?
    – cnst
    Jan 16, 2014 at 19:10
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    split("1 3 ... 80",a,/ /) would do that. That's exactly what you have with b[] in your script right now. I think the real answer is that for (i in b) would re-order the fields in some "random" fashion.
    – Ed Morton
    Jan 16, 2014 at 21:21

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