1

So I have a CSV file which I need to manipulate a bit, select the data I need and export to another CSV file.

The code I have is:

$rawCSV = "C:\Files\raw.csv"
$outputCSV = "C:\Files\output.csv"

Import-Csv -Header @("a","b","c","d") -Path $rawCSV  |
select -Skip 7 |
Where-Object { $_.b.length -gt 1 } |
ft b,a,c,d |
Out-File $outputCSV

So this code uses the Import-Csv command to allow me to select just the columns I need, add some headers in the order I want and then I am simply putting the output in to a CSV file called $outputCSV. The contents of this output file look something like this:

b         a         c         d
-         -         -         -
john      smith     29        England
mary      poopins   79        Walton

I am not sure what the delimiter is in this output and rather than these columns being treated as individuals, they are treated as just one column. I have gone on further to replace all the spaces with a comma using the code:

$b = foreach ($line in $a)
{
    $fields = $line -split '`n'
    foreach ($field in $fields)
    {
        $field -replace " +",","
    }
}

Which produces a file that looks like this:

b,a,c,d
john,smith,29,England
mary,poppins,79,Walton

But these are all still treated as one column instead of four separate columns as I need.

* UPDATE *

Using the answer given by @, I now get a file looking like this:

enter image description here

8
  • the output looks like csv format, what program are you viewing the output in that says it is one column ?
    – Ian Kenney
    Apr 27, 2015 at 9:36
  • If I view the output in Excel or in an SQL table it displays as one column.
    – Johnathan
    Apr 27, 2015 at 9:43
  • if i save your sample output and open it in excel I see 4 columns as expected
    – Ian Kenney
    Apr 27, 2015 at 9:50
  • I know. If I open the file in Wordpad for example, copy all the data and paste into excel, I see four columns as expected. But directly opening the file in Excel, I see one column... I think it has to be to do with the Import-Csv command treating the data unexpectedly along the way...
    – Johnathan
    Apr 27, 2015 at 9:56
  • you could look to see if there are any non-printing characters in the file that may be confusing things -windowsitpro.com/powershell/get-hex-dumps-files-powershell
    – Ian Kenney
    Apr 27, 2015 at 9:59

2 Answers 2

4

Don't use ft to reorder your columns - it's intended to format output for the screen, not really suitable for CSV.

"Manual" solution:

$rawCSV = "C:\Files\raw.csv"
$outputCSV = "C:\Files\output.csv"

# Import and filter your raw data
$RawData = Import-Csv -Header @("a","b","c","d") -Path $rawCSV  
$Data    = $RawData | Select -Skip 7 | Where-Object { $_.b.length -gt 1 }

# Write your headers to the output file
"b","a","c","d" -join ',' | Out-File $outputCSV -Force

$ReorderedData = foreach($Row in $Data){
    # Reorder the columns in each row 
    '{0},{1},{2},{3}' -f $Row.b , $Row.a , $Row.c, $Row.d
}

# Write the reordered rows to the output file
$ReorderedData | Out-File $outputCSV -Append

Using Export-Csv:

As of PowerShell 3.0, you could also push the rows into a [pscustomobject] and pipe that to Export-Csv (pscustomobject preserves the order in which you supply the properties):

$rawCSV = "C:\Files\raw.csv"
$outputCSV = "C:\Files\output.csv"

# Import and filter your raw data
$RawData = Import-Csv -Header @("a","b","c","d") -Path $rawCSV  
$Data    = $RawData | Select -Skip 7 | Where-Object { $_.b.length -gt 1 }

# Take the columns you're interested in, put them into new custom objects and export to CSV
$Data | ForEach-Object { 
    [pscustomobject]@{ "b" = $_.b; "a" = $_.a; "c" = $_.c; "d" = $_.d } 
} | Export-Csv -NoTypeInformation $outputCSV

Export-Csv will take care of enclosing strings in quotes to escape ',' properly (one thing less for you to worry about)

6
  • Thanks for your answer. I have uploaded an image of the output given from your code in my UPDATE above.
    – Johnathan
    Apr 27, 2015 at 10:50
  • @Johnathan Yes, sorry about that, forgot to write the headers as a single string. Please see the update. I've also included a safer alternative using Export-Csv Apr 27, 2015 at 10:52
  • @Johnathan Note that for Excel to open the CSV correctly you need to export the CSV with the delimiter set to list separator character defined in the system's region settings. Apr 27, 2015 at 11:06
  • @Johnathan ++ What Ansger said, otherwise you'll need to configure import settings with the Data Import wizard in Excel Apr 27, 2015 at 11:11
  • @Mathias The "Manual Solution" you suggested still treats the columns as one column instead of four and I am unsure why that is. However, the "Export-Csv" solution works great for me so thank you. Ansgar, Thanks I will make sure to do that :)
    – Johnathan
    Apr 27, 2015 at 11:11
1

First of all, what your raw CSV file looks like? If it's already like this

john,smith,29,England
mary,poppins,79,Walton

then import-csv will give you an array of objects which you can easily manipulate (and objects are the main reason to use PowerShell ;). For example, to check what you have after import:

$r = Import-Csv -Path $rawCSV -Header @("b","a","c","d") 
$r.GetType()

IsPublic IsSerial Name                                     BaseType                                                                                                              
-------- -------- ----                                     --------                                                                                                              
True     True     Object[]                                 System.Array

$r[0] | get-member

TypeName: System.Management.Automation.PSCustomObject

Name        MemberType   Definition                    
----        ----------   ----------                    
Equals      Method       bool Equals(System.Object obj)
GetHashCode Method       int GetHashCode()             
GetType     Method       type GetType()                
ToString    Method       string ToString()             
a           NoteProperty System.String a=smith         
b           NoteProperty System.String b=john          
c           NoteProperty System.String c=29            
d           NoteProperty System.String d=England

For now you have array of objects with properties named "a","b","c","d". To manipulate objects you have select-object cmdlet:

$r | Select-Object a,b,c,d

a         b        c        d                                          
-         -        -        -                                          
smith   john       29    England                                    
poppins mary       79    Walton  

And after all use export-csv to set the output file:

$r | where { $_.b.length -gt 1 } | 
 select a,b,c,d | 
 Export-Csv -NoTypeInformation -Encoding utf8 -path $outputCSV

I could think of two possible reasons why your data teated as one column:

  1. consuming application expect different encoding and can't find delimiters
  2. delimiters are not commas but something else

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.