10

Anyone know how I can import/export csv, txt files in a way similar to NET FileHelpers, but using Delphi, taking spaces and quotes into account and handling traditional CSV escaping rules in a manner similar to the way CSV escaping works in Excel?

ref. link http://www.filehelpers.com/

If your answer tends to be: "why this lazy guy dont write a simple CSV parser", consider this 5 minutes reading and then you will know why CSV parsing is not trivial:

http://secretgeek.net/csv_trouble.asp

11
  • 3
    Actually the task is split into two: first write a tokenizer that will count for quotes and spaces (throw away regexes, most of the time you can live easier without them), then use the tokenizer to parse the CSV line by line. Writing a correct and complete tokenizer took me an hour or so. Jan 31, 2011 at 18:11
  • and exporting is even easier. I wrote my own exporter recently with a goal of high performance. Jan 31, 2011 at 18:36
  • why you linked page ranting about those obvious things? actually looking into the problem takes less time than seeking random advice in teh internets. Feb 1, 2011 at 2:38
  • 1
    exporting is definitely easier than parsing. To anybody who thinks CSV parsing is trivial; Send me your CSV parser, and I'll show you ten real-world CSV input files that will break your parser.
    – Warren P
    Feb 13, 2011 at 3:55
  • 2
    @WarrenP we like to keep Stack Overflow clean and free of spam. Recommendation questions attract spam. Aug 21, 2014 at 18:06

7 Answers 7

17

I wrote a Dataset (TTable-like object) for Jedi project called TJvCsvDataSet that follows all CSV parsing rules in a way similar to the CSV parsing rules used by Excel and various database and report tools that import and export CSVs.

You can install JVCL, drop a TJvCsvDataSet on your form.

It also contains a stream class that will very quickly load a file on disk, and parse it line by line, using the correct escape rules required for CSV files, even files that include carriage-return/line-feed codes encoded within a field.

You just drop it on your form, and set the FieldDefs property like this:

CsvFieldDef=ABC:%,DEF:#,GHI:$,....

There are special codes for integer, floating point, iso date-time, and other fields. It even allows you to map a wide-string field to a utf8 field in a CSV file.

There is a designtime property editor to save you from having to declare the CSV Field Defs using the syntax above, instead you can just pick visually what the column types are.

If you don't set up a CSV Field Def, it merely maps whatever exists in the file to string-type fields.

Jedi JVCL: http://jvcl.delphi-jedi.org/

JvCsvDataSet Docs:

http://help.delphi-jedi.org/unit.php?Id=3107

http://help.delphi-jedi.org/item.php?Id=174896

enter image description here

11
  • P, is it capable or easy to implement a "N lines" layout. i mean first line has one layout, second another, like a master detail? Feb 3, 2011 at 20:19
  • The component is tolerant of missing fields and values. That is as far as it goes. You can have a CSV database, and you can keep adding fields to it, and it will load a file that was created before that field was added. It doesn't even care if you reorder the fields. It is pretty darn smart. But it's not magic, and it won't have completely different sets of data on each line, no.
    – Warren P
    Feb 13, 2011 at 3:51
  • If you wanted to implement a different layout on each line, you would not want a TTable component. But perhaps you might find it easy to start by grabbing my stream class, and my CSV-splitter class, and then wrap those into whatever it is that you wanted to do, that isn't csv exactly, but is delimited text.
    – Warren P
    Feb 13, 2011 at 3:56
  • Nice component Warren. Certainly very fast and reliable. Just curious - how to optimize the memory usage? Just by defining the fields? Or is there an optimum value (way to calculate) for TextStreamBuffer? (D7)
    – Simon
    Mar 23, 2011 at 0:26
  • @WarrenP I tried to use this component but it choked on fields containing double quotes (reported it with a test case). In any case, it looks quite nice. Jan 12, 2013 at 20:44
11

It's pretty basic, but TStringList has Delimiter, DelimitedText, and QuoteChar properties, which address some of these issues.

Updated to add, per comments: Don't be tempted by the CommaText property, which has some surprising limitations for backwards compatibility with archaic versions of Delphi.

11
  • 2
    @Craig I'm reading the help file which states: "When assigning DelimitedText, the value is parsed as SDF formatted text. For SDF format, strings are separated by Delimiter characters or spaces", my emphasis. But later on it states "If StrictDelimiter is set to false, the space character is also interpreted as a delimiter, regardless of the value of Delimiter. This is not true when the space character occurs between quotation marks." This StrictDelimiter property has not always been present which may explain my misunderstanding and consequent erroneous comments. Jan 31, 2011 at 19:06
  • 2
    @Craig I fixed a typo in your answer and thus also gave me an opportunity to remove my down-vote. Jan 31, 2011 at 19:07
  • 2
    @Craig Actually I'm not sure that StrictDelimiter is relevant at all. I think I've just been seduced by CommaText in the past and my disappointment with it has coloured my opinions of TStringList's ability to do this. Please accept my apologies. Downvote converted to upvote! Jan 31, 2011 at 19:15
  • 2
    @David it is certainly true that CommaText and DelimitedText have (surprisingly) different rules and I should probably note that in my answer. Jan 31, 2011 at 19:23
  • 2
    Trying to use TStringList to parse non-trivial real-world CSV files will end up an exercise in frustration. Use a dedicated class like the one Misha posts about below, or the one I wrote (JVCL JvCsvDataSet). TStringList can not handle embedded cr-lf esaped within a csv file, and so it's not safe to recommend for real world use.
    – Warren P
    Feb 1, 2011 at 0:41
3

My framework has code for this in the CsiTextStreamsUnt.pas file (see http://www.csinnovations.com/framework_delphi.htm)

6
  • Does it handle carriage-return linefeeds embedded inside a csv row?
    – Warren P
    Feb 1, 2011 at 0:40
  • I intentionally removed this functionality about a year ago because there is no standard way to handle records across multiple lines for both file reading and writing. Instead I introduced an overridable method:
    – Misha
    Feb 1, 2011 at 1:28
  • 2
    Trying again: I intentionally removed this functionality about a year ago because there is no standard way to handle records spanning multiple lines for both reading and writing (and really there is no point tryng). Instead I introduced two overrideable methods, one for reading, one for writing, that enable a developer to add any type of multi-line record handling that they require.
    – Misha
    Feb 1, 2011 at 1:39
  • Agree, Misha, there's no one standard way, but there is one most common way that it is seen. That is what I call the "defacto" rule. Whatever Excel does. So, maybe you could enable 'excel flag'.
    – Warren P
    Feb 13, 2011 at 3:53
  • Good point, although given that I have never had to use this in any real-world scenarios I put it under the YAGNI principle, and if I do need it, I will override my methods. I have at least 20,000 LOC in just implementing utility routines and classes that I have actually used in live applications over the last 10 years - it would be way too much effort to add things that I might not need ;-)
    – Misha
    Feb 13, 2011 at 9:41
3

Here some code I wrote that reads CSV files, it handles carriage returns inside quotes as well.

unit CSV;

interface
uses
  SysUtils, Generics.Collections, IOUtils;

type
  TParseState = (psRowStart, psFieldStart, psUnquotedFieldData,
    psQuotedFieldData, psQFBranch, psEndOfQuotedField, psQFEndSearch,
    psEndOfLine, psEndOfFile);

  TCSVField = class
  strict private
    FText: String;
  public
    constructor Create;
    destructor Destroy; override;
    property Text: string read FText write FText;
    procedure Clear;
  end;

  TCSVFieldList = class(TObjectList<TCSVField>)
  public
    function AddField(const AText: string): TCSVField;
    procedure ClearFields;
  end;

  TCSVRow = class
  strict private
    FFields: TCSVFieldList;
  public
    constructor Create;
    destructor Destroy; override;
    property Fields: TCSVFieldList read FFields;
  end;

  TCSVParser = class
  strict private
    FRow: TCSVRow;
    FContent: String;
    FCIdx: Integer;
    FParseState: TParseState;
    FEOF: Boolean;
    procedure ParseRow;
  public
    function First: Boolean;
    function EOF: Boolean;
    function Next: Boolean;
    procedure OpenFile(AFileName: String);
    procedure OpenText(const AText: string);
    property Row: TCSVRow read FRow;
    constructor Create;
    destructor Destroy; override;
  end;

implementation



{implementation of TCSVField}

procedure TCSVField.Clear;
begin
  FText:= '';
end;

constructor TCSVField.Create;
begin
  inherited Create;
end;

destructor TCSVField.Destroy;
begin
  inherited Destroy;
end;

{implementation of TCSVRow}

constructor TCSVRow.Create;
begin
  inherited Create;
  FFields:= TCSVFieldList.Create;
end;

destructor TCSVRow.Destroy;
begin
  FreeAndNil(FFields);
  inherited Destroy;
end;

{implementation of TCSVParser}

constructor TCSVParser.Create;
begin
  inherited Create;
  FRow:= TCSVRow.Create;
  FCIdx:= 1;
  FParseState:= psEndOfFile;
end;

destructor TCSVParser.Destroy;
begin
  FreeAndNil(FRow);
  inherited Destroy;
end;



function TCSVParser.EOF: Boolean;
begin
  Result:= FEOF;
end;

function TCSVParser.First: Boolean;
begin
  FEOF:= False;
  FCIdx:= 1;
  FParseState:= psRowStart;
  Result:= Next;
end;

function TCSVParser.Next: Boolean;
begin
  if not EOF then
    ParseRow;
  Result:= not EOF;
end;

procedure TCSVParser.OpenFile(AFileName: String);
begin
  OpenText(TFile.ReadAllText(AFileName));
end;

procedure TCSVParser.OpenText(const AText: string);
begin
  FContent:= AText;
  FRow.Fields.Clear;
  First;
end;

procedure TCSVParser.ParseRow;
var
  FieldIdx: Integer;

  procedure AddField(const AText: string);
  begin
    if FieldIdx > FRow.Fields.Count-1 then
      FRow.Fields.AddField(AText)
    else
      FRow.Fields[FieldIdx].Text:= AText;

    Inc(FieldIdx);
  end;

var
  FieldText: string;
  Curr: Char;
  LastIdx: Integer;
begin
  if FParseState = psEndOfFile then
  begin
    FEOF:= True;
    FRow.Fields.ClearFields;
    Exit;
  end;

  if not (FParseState in [psRowStart]) then
    raise Exception.Create('ParseRow requires ParseState = psRowState');

  FieldIdx:= 0;
  FRow.Fields.ClearFields;
  LastIdx:= Length(FContent);
  while True do
  begin
    case FParseState of
      psRowStart:
        begin
          if FCIdx > LastIdx then
          begin
            FEOF:= True;
            FParseState:= psEndOfFile;
          end
          else
          begin
            FParseState:= psFieldStart;
          end;
          Dec(FCIdx); // do not consume
        end;
      psFieldStart:
        begin
          FieldText:= '';
          if FContent[FCIdx] = '"' then
            FParseState:= psQuotedFieldData
          else
          begin
            FParseState:= psUnquotedFieldData;
            Dec(FCIdx); // do not consume
          end;
        end;
      psUnquotedFieldData:
        begin
          if FCIdx > LastIdx then
          begin
            AddField(FieldText);
            FParseState:= psEndOfFile;
          end
          else
          begin
            Curr:= FContent[FCIdx];
            case Curr of
              #13, #10:
                begin
                  AddField(FieldText);
                  FParseState:= psEndOfLine;
                end;
              ',':
                begin
                  AddField(FieldText);
                  FParseState:= psFieldStart;
                end;
            else
              FieldText:= FieldText + Curr;
            end;
          end;
        end;
      psQuotedFieldData:
        begin
          if FCIdx > LastIdx then
            raise Exception.Create('EOF in quoted Field.');

          Curr:= FContent[FCIdx];
          if Curr = '"' then
            FParseState:= psQFBranch
          else
            FieldText:= FieldText + Curr;
        end;
      psQFBranch:
        begin
          Curr:= FContent[FCIdx];
          if Curr = '"' then
          begin
            FieldText:= FieldText + Curr;
            FParseState:= psQuotedFieldData;
          end
          else
          begin
            AddField(FieldText);
            FParseState:= psEndOfQuotedField;
            Dec(FCIdx); // do not consume
          end;
        end;
      psEndOfQuotedField:
        begin
          if FCIdx > LastIdx then
            FParseState:= psEndOfFile
          else
          begin
            Curr:= FContent[FCIdx];
            if CharInSet(Curr, [#13, #10]) then
              FParseState:= psEndOfLine
            else
            begin
              FParseState:= psQFEndSearch;
              Dec(FCIdx); // do not consume
            end;
          end;
        end;
      psQFEndSearch:
        begin
          if FCIdx > LastIdx then
            FParseState:= psEndOfFile
          else
          begin
            Curr:= FContent[FCIdx];
            if CharInSet(Curr, [#13, #10]) then
              FParseState:= psEndOfLine
            else if Curr = ',' then
              FParseState:= psFieldStart;

            // skips white space or other until end
          end;
        end;
      psEndOfLine:
        begin
          if FCIdx > LastIdx then
            FParseState:= psEndOfFile
          else
          begin
            Curr:= FContent[FCIdx];
            if not CharInSet(Curr, [#13, #10]) then
            begin
              FParseState:= psRowStart;
              Break; // exit loop, we are done with this row
            end;
          end;
        end;
      psEndOfFile:
        begin
          Break;
        end;
    end;
    Inc(FCIdx);
  end;
end;


{ TCSVFieldList }

function TCSVFieldList.AddField(const AText: string): TCSVField;
begin
  Result:= TCSVField.Create;
  Add(Result);
  Result.Text:= AText;
end;

procedure TCSVFieldList.ClearFields;
var
  F: TCSVField;
begin
  for F in Self do
    F.Clear;
end;

end.
1

Following the VCL TXMLTransform logic, I wrote a TCsvTransform class helper that translates a .csv format structure to /from a TClientDataSet.
For more details about TCsvTransform, cf http://didier.cabale.free.fr/delphi.htm#uCsvTransform.
NB: I set the same field type symbols as Warren's TJvCsvDataSet

0

My functions

function ParseCSVString(s: string; const delimiter: Char = ','; const enclosure: Char = '"'): TStrings;
var
    i,len: Integer;
    f: string;
    inQuoted: Boolean;
begin
    Result := TStringList.Create;
    len := Length(s);
    if len = 0 then Exit;
    //Test,Test;"Test;Test";"Test""Test";;
    f := '';
    inQuoted := False;
    i:=0;
    while i < len do
    begin
        Inc(i);
        if s[i] = enclosure then
        begin
            if inQuoted and (i<len) and (s[i+1] = enclosure) then
            begin
                f := f + '"';
                i:=i+1;
            end
            else
                inQuoted := not inQuoted;
        end
        else if s[i] = delimiter then
        begin
            if inQuoted then
                f := f+s[i]
            else
            begin
                Result.Add(f);
                inQuoted := false;
                f := '';
            end;
        end
        else
            f := f + s[i];
    end;
    Result.Add(f);
end;

function EscapeCSVString(s: string; const delimiter: Char = ','; const enclosure: Char = '"'): string;
var
    i: Integer;
begin
    Result := StringReplace(s,enclosure,enclosure+enclosure,[rfReplaceAll]);
    if (Pos(delimiter,s) > 0) OR (Pos(enclosure,s) > 0) then
        Result := enclosure+Result+enclosure;
end;
0

Came across this Delphi CSV File and String Reader Classes for Delphi 2009 and later today on CodeProject, I've not tried it, but from the example code it's kinda cool. Written by Vladimir Nikitenko, the main class is TnvvCSVReader.

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