Where could I find some JavaScript code to parse CSV data?
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Here's a JavaScript function that parses CSV data, accounting for commas found inside quotes– curranApr 3, 2014 at 23:25
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7Papa Parse is another option with a lot of features (multi-threaded, header row support, auto-detect delimiter, and more)– HinrichAug 24, 2015 at 19:13
14 Answers
You can use the CSVToArray() function mentioned in this blog entry.
console.log(CSVToArray(`"foo, the column",bar
2,3
"4, the value",5`));
// ref: http://stackoverflow.com/a/1293163/2343
// This will parse a delimited string into an array of
// arrays. The default delimiter is the comma, but this
// can be overriden in the second argument.
function CSVToArray( strData, strDelimiter ){
// Check to see if the delimiter is defined. If not,
// then default to comma.
strDelimiter = (strDelimiter || ",");
// Create a regular expression to parse the CSV values.
var objPattern = new RegExp(
(
// Delimiters.
"(\\" + strDelimiter + "|\\r?\\n|\\r|^)" +
// Quoted fields.
"(?:\"([^\"]*(?:\"\"[^\"]*)*)\"|" +
// Standard fields.
"([^\"\\" + strDelimiter + "\\r\\n]*))"
),
"gi"
);
// Create an array to hold our data. Give the array
// a default empty first row.
var arrData = [[]];
// Create an array to hold our individual pattern
// matching groups.
var arrMatches = null;
// Keep looping over the regular expression matches
// until we can no longer find a match.
while (arrMatches = objPattern.exec( strData )){
// Get the delimiter that was found.
var strMatchedDelimiter = arrMatches[ 1 ];
// Check to see if the given delimiter has a length
// (is not the start of string) and if it matches
// field delimiter. If id does not, then we know
// that this delimiter is a row delimiter.
if (
strMatchedDelimiter.length &&
strMatchedDelimiter !== strDelimiter
){
// Since we have reached a new row of data,
// add an empty row to our data array.
arrData.push( [] );
}
var strMatchedValue;
// Now that we have our delimiter out of the way,
// let's check to see which kind of value we
// captured (quoted or unquoted).
if (arrMatches[ 2 ]){
// We found a quoted value. When we capture
// this value, unescape any double quotes.
strMatchedValue = arrMatches[ 2 ].replace(
new RegExp( "\"\"", "g" ),
"\""
);
} else {
// We found a non-quoted value.
strMatchedValue = arrMatches[ 3 ];
}
// Now that we have our value string, let's add
// it to the data array.
arrData[ arrData.length - 1 ].push( strMatchedValue );
}
// Return the parsed data.
return( arrData );
}
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4It gives
undefined
for empty fields that is quoted. Example:CSVToArray("4,,6")
gives me[["4","","6"]]
, butCSVToArray("4,\"\",6")
gives me[["4",undefined,"6"]]
.– PangNov 14, 2012 at 4:36 -
4I've had issues with this in firefox, and the script has become unresponsive. It seemed to only affect a few users though, so couldn't find the cause Mar 18, 2013 at 11:51
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11There is a bug in the regex:
"([^\"\\"
should be"([^\\"
. Otherwise a double quote anywhere in an unquoted value will prematurely end it. Found this the hard way... Nov 30, 2015 at 21:52 -
7For anyone looking for a reduced version of the above method, with the regex fix described above applied: gist.github.com/Jezternz/c8e9fafc2c114e079829974e3764db75– Josh McSep 23, 2018 at 1:39
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3Borrowed from @JoshMc (thanks!) and added header capability and more robust character escaping. See gist.github.com/plbowers/7560ae793613ee839151624182133159 Dec 29, 2018 at 12:18
It's a jQuery plugin designed to work as an end-to-end solution for parsing CSV into JavaScript data. It handles every single edge case presented in RFC 4180, as well as some that pop up for Excel/Google spreadsheet exports (i.e., mostly involving null values) that the specification is missing.
Example:
track,artist,album,year
Dangerous,'Busta Rhymes','When Disaster Strikes',1997
// Calling this
music = $.csv.toArrays(csv)
// Outputs...
[
["track", "artist", "album", "year"],
["Dangerous", "Busta Rhymes", "When Disaster Strikes", "1997"]
]
console.log(music[1][2]) // Outputs: 'When Disaster Strikes'
Update:
Oh yeah, I should also probably mention that it's completely configurable.
music = $.csv.toArrays(csv, {
delimiter: "'", // Sets a custom value delimiter character
separator: ';', // Sets a custom field separator character
});
Update 2:
It now works with jQuery on Node.js too. So you have the option of doing either client-side or server-side parsing with the same library.
Update 3:
Since the Google Code shutdown, jquery-csv has been migrated to GitHub.
Disclaimer: I am also the author of jQuery-CSV.
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37Why is it jQuery csv? Why does it depend on jQuery? I've had a quick scan through the source... it doesn't look like you're using jQuery May 10, 2012 at 8:20
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17@paulslater19 The plugin doesn't depend on jquery. Rather, it follows the common jQuery development guidelines. All of the methods included are static and reside under their own namespace (ie $.csv). To use them without jQuery simply create a global $ object that the plugin will bind to during initialization. Nov 19, 2012 at 20:48
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2is
csv
in the solution code refer to the.csv filename
? i'm interested in a good JS/JQuery tool to parse a csv file Nov 22, 2012 at 19:59 -
1@bouncingHippo In the example it's just referring to a string of csv data but the lib can be used to open csv files locally in the browser using the HTML5 File API. Here's an example of it in action jquery-csv.googlecode.com/git/examples/file-handling.html. Nov 23, 2012 at 22:09
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3Given that it's not dependent on jQuery, it would be better to remove the global "$" dependency and let users pass any object reference they want. Perhaps default to jQuery if it's available. There are other libraries that use "$" and it might be used by development teams with minimal proxies of those libraries.– RobGJul 8, 2018 at 6:47
Here's an extremely simple CSV parser that handles quoted fields with commas, new lines, and escaped double quotation marks. There's no splitting or regular expression. It scans the input string 1-2 characters at a time and builds an array.
Test it at http://jsfiddle.net/vHKYH/.
function parseCSV(str) {
const arr = [];
let quote = false; // 'true' means we're inside a quoted field
// Iterate over each character, keep track of current row and column (of the returned array)
for (let row = 0, col = 0, c = 0; c < str.length; c++) {
let cc = str[c], nc = str[c+1]; // Current character, next character
arr[row] = arr[row] || []; // Create a new row if necessary
arr[row][col] = arr[row][col] || ''; // Create a new column (start with empty string) if necessary
// If the current character is a quotation mark, and we're inside a
// quoted field, and the next character is also a quotation mark,
// add a quotation mark to the current column and skip the next character
if (cc == '"' && quote && nc == '"') { arr[row][col] += cc; ++c; continue; }
// If it's just one quotation mark, begin/end quoted field
if (cc == '"') { quote = !quote; continue; }
// If it's a comma and we're not in a quoted field, move on to the next column
if (cc == ',' && !quote) { ++col; continue; }
// If it's a newline (CRLF) and we're not in a quoted field, skip the next character
// and move on to the next row and move to column 0 of that new row
if (cc == '\r' && nc == '\n' && !quote) { ++row; col = 0; ++c; continue; }
// If it's a newline (LF or CR) and we're not in a quoted field,
// move on to the next row and move to column 0 of that new row
if (cc == '\n' && !quote) { ++row; col = 0; continue; }
if (cc == '\r' && !quote) { ++row; col = 0; continue; }
// Otherwise, append the current character to the current column
arr[row][col] += cc;
}
return arr;
}
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4This seems cleaner and more straight forward. I had to parse a 4mb file and the other answers crashed on me in ie8, but this managed it. Jun 22, 2014 at 15:26
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3This also worked for me. I had to do one modification though to allow proper handling of line feeds:
if (cc == '\r' && nc == '\n' && !quote) { ++row; col = 0; ++c; continue; } if (cc == '\n' && !quote) { ++row; col = 0; continue; }
Apr 8, 2015 at 13:00 -
1Another user (@sorin-postelnicu) helpfully published a companion function to turn the result into a dictionary object: jsfiddle.net/8t2po6wh. Oct 20, 2017 at 12:37
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1Yeah, anytime speed is needed or memory footprints matter, a clean solution like this is far superior. State machine-esque parsing is so much smoother.– TatarizeAug 9, 2018 at 5:22
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1
I have an implementation as part of a spreadsheet project.
This code is not yet tested thoroughly, but anyone is welcome to use it.
As some of the answers noted though, your implementation can be much simpler if you actually have DSV or TSV file, as they disallow the use of the record and field separators in the values. CSV, on the other hand, can actually have commas and newlines inside a field, which breaks most regular expression and split-based approaches.
var CSV = {
parse: function(csv, reviver) {
reviver = reviver || function(r, c, v) { return v; };
var chars = csv.split(''), c = 0, cc = chars.length, start, end, table = [], row;
while (c < cc) {
table.push(row = []);
while (c < cc && '\r' !== chars[c] && '\n' !== chars[c]) {
start = end = c;
if ('"' === chars[c]){
start = end = ++c;
while (c < cc) {
if ('"' === chars[c]) {
if ('"' !== chars[c+1]) {
break;
}
else {
chars[++c] = ''; // unescape ""
}
}
end = ++c;
}
if ('"' === chars[c]) {
++c;
}
while (c < cc && '\r' !== chars[c] && '\n' !== chars[c] && ',' !== chars[c]) {
++c;
}
} else {
while (c < cc && '\r' !== chars[c] && '\n' !== chars[c] && ',' !== chars[c]) {
end = ++c;
}
}
row.push(reviver(table.length-1, row.length, chars.slice(start, end).join('')));
if (',' === chars[c]) {
++c;
}
}
if ('\r' === chars[c]) {
++c;
}
if ('\n' === chars[c]) {
++c;
}
}
return table;
},
stringify: function(table, replacer) {
replacer = replacer || function(r, c, v) { return v; };
var csv = '', c, cc, r, rr = table.length, cell;
for (r = 0; r < rr; ++r) {
if (r) {
csv += '\r\n';
}
for (c = 0, cc = table[r].length; c < cc; ++c) {
if (c) {
csv += ',';
}
cell = replacer(r, c, table[r][c]);
if (/[,\r\n"]/.test(cell)) {
cell = '"' + cell.replace(/"/g, '""') + '"';
}
csv += (cell || 0 === cell) ? cell : '';
}
}
return csv;
}
};
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9This is one of my favorite answers. It's a real parser implemented in not a lot of code. Dec 20, 2012 at 7:15
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2If a comma is placed at the end of a line, an empty cell should follow it. This code just skips to the next line, resulting in an
undefined
cell. For example,console.log(CSV.parse("first,last,age\r\njohn,doe,"));
– skibulkAug 21, 2016 at 12:39 -
Also, empty cells should parse to empty strings. This code parses them into zeros, which is confusing since cells can actually contain zeros:
console.log(CSV.parse("0,,2,3"));
– skibulkAug 21, 2016 at 12:58 -
@skibulk Your second comment is incorrect (at least in Chrome is works fine with your example). Your first comment is valid though, although it is easily fixed - add the following right before
if ('\r' === chars[c]) { ... }
:if (end === c-1) { row.push(reviver(table.length-1, row.length, '')); }
Nov 7, 2016 at 21:01
csvToArray v1.3
A compact (645 bytes), but compliant function to convert a CSV string into a 2D array, conforming to the RFC4180 standard.
https://code.google.com/archive/p/csv-to-array/downloads
Common Usage: jQuery
$.ajax({
url: "test.csv",
dataType: 'text',
cache: false
}).done(function(csvAsString){
csvAsArray=csvAsString.csvToArray();
});
Common usage: JavaScript
csvAsArray = csvAsString.csvToArray();
Override field separator
csvAsArray = csvAsString.csvToArray("|");
Override record separator
csvAsArray = csvAsString.csvToArray("", "#");
Override Skip Header
csvAsArray = csvAsString.csvToArray("", "", 1);
Override all
csvAsArray = csvAsString.csvToArray("|", "#", 1);
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This sounds interesting but I can't find the code now. Can you post it again? Apr 3, 2018 at 3:37
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1
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It is in the Google Code archive, but perhaps update to a new location? Sep 1, 2020 at 13:36
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The examples in this answer may not work as I have seen the source code has been changed. The modified version of the above examples for csvToArray v2.1 should be like this: Override field separator
csvAsArray = csvAsString.csvToArray({fSep: "|"});
Override record separatorcsvAsArray = csvAsString.csvToArray({rSep: "#"});
Override Skip HeadercsvAsArray = csvAsString.csvToArray({head: true});
Override allcsvAsArray = csvAsString.csvToArray({fSep: "|", rSep: "#", head: true});
Aug 1, 2022 at 14:11
Here's my PEG(.js) grammar that seems to do ok at RFC 4180 (i.e. it handles the examples at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values):
start
= [\n\r]* first:line rest:([\n\r]+ data:line { return data; })* [\n\r]* { rest.unshift(first); return rest; }
line
= first:field rest:("," text:field { return text; })*
& { return !!first || rest.length; } // ignore blank lines
{ rest.unshift(first); return rest; }
field
= '"' text:char* '"' { return text.join(''); }
/ text:[^\n\r,]* { return text.join(''); }
char
= '"' '"' { return '"'; }
/ [^"]
Try it out at http://jsfiddle.net/knvzk/10 or http://pegjs.majda.cz/online. Download the generated parser at https://gist.github.com/3362830.
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2PEG? Isn't building an AST a little memory heavy for a Type III grammar. Can it handle fields that contain newline chars because that's the most difficult case to cover in a 'regular grammar' parser. Either way, +1 for a novel approach. Jan 31, 2013 at 1:37
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1
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2Nice... With that alone, it's better than 95% of all the implementations I have ever seen. If you want to check for full RFC compliance, take a look at the tests here (jquery-csv.googlecode.com/git/test/test.html). Jan 31, 2013 at 18:24
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7Well played. +1 for turning me on to PEG. I do love parser-generators. "Why program by hand in five days what you can spend five years of your life automating?" -- Terence Parr, ANTLR Mar 28, 2013 at 22:51
Here's another solution. This uses:
- a coarse global regular expression for splitting the CSV string (which includes surrounding quotes and trailing commas)
- fine-grained regular expression for cleaning up the surrounding quotes and trailing commas
- also, has type correction differentiating strings, numbers, boolean values and null values
For the following input string:
"This is\, a value",Hello,4,-123,3.1415,'This is also\, possible',true,
The code outputs:
[
"This is, a value",
"Hello",
4,
-123,
3.1415,
"This is also, possible",
true,
null
]
Here's my implementation of parseCSVLine() in a runnable code snippet:
function parseCSVLine(text) {
return text.match( /\s*(\"[^"]*\"|'[^']*'|[^,]*)\s*(,|$)/g ).map( function (text) {
let m;
if (m = text.match(/^\s*,?$/)) return null; // null value
if (m = text.match(/^\s*\"([^"]*)\"\s*,?$/)) return m[1]; // Double Quoted Text
if (m = text.match(/^\s*'([^']*)'\s*,?$/)) return m[1]; // Single Quoted Text
if (m = text.match(/^\s*(true|false)\s*,?$/)) return m[1] === "true"; // Boolean
if (m = text.match(/^\s*((?:\+|\-)?\d+)\s*,?$/)) return parseInt(m[1]); // Integer Number
if (m = text.match(/^\s*((?:\+|\-)?\d*\.\d*)\s*,?$/)) return parseFloat(m[1]); // Floating Number
if (m = text.match(/^\s*(.*?)\s*,?$/)) return m[1]; // Unquoted Text
return text;
} );
}
let data = `"This is\, a value",Hello,4,-123,3.1415,'This is also\, possible',true,`;
let obj = parseCSVLine(data);
console.log( JSON.stringify( obj, undefined, 2 ) );
-
2
-
I made one change to the first regex:
text.match( /\s*(\".*?\"|'.*?'|[^,]+|)\s*(,|$)/g )
I had to add the last|
to the first capture group to allow for an empty cell in a CSV.– cstratJun 18, 2021 at 9:47 -
Now I quickly realised this created another edge case for me where it matches an empty string at the end superfluously. Tried adding a negative lookahead to not count an empty at the end:
text.match(/\s*(".*?"|'.*?'|[^,]+|(?!$))\s*(,|$)/g)
This created another issue where I can't have an empty last cell. I might go back to the original fix and just filter out extra empty cells in the last column.– cstratJun 18, 2021 at 9:59 -
how to do u multiple entries with each entry having multi lined columns? Jun 3, 2022 at 8:11
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@cstrat I made a change last match from
[^,]+
to[^,]*
so that it now matches an empty cell and returns it as null. I have updated the example to reflect it. @BoruchHashem I have replaced the(\".*?\")
with(\"[^"]*\")
so that it can now match multiline double-quoted strings. I did a similar change for single quoted strings. Sep 13, 2022 at 2:18
Here's my simple vanilla JavaScript code:
let a = 'one,two,"three, but with a comma",four,"five, with ""quotes"" in it.."'
console.log(splitQuotes(a))
function splitQuotes(line) {
if(line.indexOf('"') < 0)
return line.split(',')
let result = [], cell = '', quote = false;
for(let i = 0; i < line.length; i++) {
char = line[i]
if(char == '"' && line[i+1] == '"') {
cell += char
i++
} else if(char == '"') {
quote = !quote;
} else if(!quote && char == ',') {
result.push(cell)
cell = ''
} else {
cell += char
}
if ( i == line.length-1 && cell) {
result.push(cell)
}
}
return result
}
I'm not sure why I couldn't get Kirtan's example to work for me. It seemed to be failing on empty fields or maybe fields with trailing commas...
This one seems to handle both.
I did not write the parser code, just a wrapper around the parser function to make this work for a file. See attribution.
var Strings = {
/**
* Wrapped CSV line parser
* @param s String delimited CSV string
* @param sep Separator override
* @attribution: http://www.greywyvern.com/?post=258 (comments closed on blog :( )
*/
parseCSV : function(s,sep) {
// http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1155678/javascript-string-newline-character
var universalNewline = /\r\n|\r|\n/g;
var a = s.split(universalNewline);
for(var i in a){
for (var f = a[i].split(sep = sep || ","), x = f.length - 1, tl; x >= 0; x--) {
if (f[x].replace(/"\s+$/, '"').charAt(f[x].length - 1) == '"') {
if ((tl = f[x].replace(/^\s+"/, '"')).length > 1 && tl.charAt(0) == '"') {
f[x] = f[x].replace(/^\s*"|"\s*$/g, '').replace(/""/g, '"');
} else if (x) {
f.splice(x - 1, 2, [f[x - 1], f[x]].join(sep));
} else f = f.shift().split(sep).concat(f);
} else f[x].replace(/""/g, '"');
} a[i] = f;
}
return a;
}
}
Regular expressions to the rescue! These few lines of code handle properly quoted fields with embedded commas, quotes, and newlines based on the RFC 4180 standard.
function parseCsv(data, fieldSep, newLine) {
fieldSep = fieldSep || ',';
newLine = newLine || '\n';
var nSep = '\x1D';
var qSep = '\x1E';
var cSep = '\x1F';
var nSepRe = new RegExp(nSep, 'g');
var qSepRe = new RegExp(qSep, 'g');
var cSepRe = new RegExp(cSep, 'g');
var fieldRe = new RegExp('(?<=(^|[' + fieldSep + '\\n]))"(|[\\s\\S]+?(?<![^"]"))"(?=($|[' + fieldSep + '\\n]))', 'g');
var grid = [];
data.replace(/\r/g, '').replace(/\n+$/, '').replace(fieldRe, function(match, p1, p2) {
return p2.replace(/\n/g, nSep).replace(/""/g, qSep).replace(/,/g, cSep);
}).split(/\n/).forEach(function(line) {
var row = line.split(fieldSep).map(function(cell) {
return cell.replace(nSepRe, newLine).replace(qSepRe, '"').replace(cSepRe, ',');
});
grid.push(row);
});
return grid;
}
const csv = 'A1,B1,C1\n"A ""2""","B, 2","C\n2"';
const separator = ','; // field separator, default: ','
const newline = ' <br /> '; // newline representation in case a field contains newlines, default: '\n'
var grid = parseCsv(csv, separator, newline);
// expected: [ [ 'A1', 'B1', 'C1' ], [ 'A "2"', 'B, 2', 'C <br /> 2' ] ]
You don't need a parser-generator such as lex/yacc. The regular expression handles RFC 4180 properly thanks to positive lookbehind, negative lookbehind, and positive lookahead.
Clone/download code at https://github.com/peterthoeny/parse-csv-js
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1Regexps are implemented using finite state machines so you do, in fact, need FSM. Apr 30, 2020 at 18:26
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1@HenryHenrinson: Not necessarily. I challenge you to find an issue with above code. I use it in production. It's also possible to do more complex parsing with regular expressions. You don't need an LL parser to create a syntax tree. Here is a blog: How to Use Regular Expressions to Parse Nested Structures, twiki.org/cgi-bin/view/Blog/BlogEntry201109x3 May 2, 2020 at 4:36
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1@HenryHenrinson: Oh, yes, dummy me, we are in violent agreement :-) May 24, 2020 at 22:16
Just throwing this out there.. I recently ran into the need to parse CSV columns with Javascript, and I opted for my own simple solution. It works for my needs, and may help someone else.
const csvString = '"Some text, some text",,"",true,false,"more text","more,text, more, text ",true';
const parseCSV = text => {
const lines = text.split('\n');
const output = [];
lines.forEach(line => {
line = line.trim();
if (line.length === 0) return;
const skipIndexes = {};
const columns = line.split(',');
output.push(columns.reduce((result, item, index) => {
if (skipIndexes[index]) return result;
if (item.startsWith('"') && !item.endsWith('"')) {
while (!columns[index + 1].endsWith('"')) {
index++;
item += `,${columns[index]}`;
skipIndexes[index] = true;
}
index++;
skipIndexes[index] = true;
item += `,${columns[index]}`;
}
result.push(item);
return result;
}, []));
});
return output;
};
console.log(parseCSV(csvString));
Personally I like to use deno std library since most modules are officially compatible with the browser
The problem is that the std is in typescript but official solution might happen in the future https://github.com/denoland/deno_std/issues/641 https://github.com/denoland/dotland/issues/1728
For now there is an actively maintained on the fly transpiler https://bundle.deno.dev/
so you can use it simply like this
<script type="module">
import { parse } from "https://bundle.deno.dev/https://deno.land/std@0.126.0/encoding/csv.ts"
console.log(await parse("a,b,c\n1,2,3"))
</script>
I have constructed this JavaScript script to parse a CSV in string to array object. I find it better to break down the whole CSV into lines, fields and process them accordingly. I think that it will make it easy for you to change the code to suit your need.
//
//
// CSV to object
//
//
const new_line_char = '\n';
const field_separator_char = ',';
function parse_csv(csv_str) {
var result = [];
let line_end_index_moved = false;
let line_start_index = 0;
let line_end_index = 0;
let csr_index = 0;
let cursor_val = csv_str[csr_index];
let found_new_line_char = get_new_line_char(csv_str);
let in_quote = false;
// Handle \r\n
if (found_new_line_char == '\r\n') {
csv_str = csv_str.split(found_new_line_char).join(new_line_char);
}
// Handle the last character is not \n
if (csv_str[csv_str.length - 1] !== new_line_char) {
csv_str += new_line_char;
}
while (csr_index < csv_str.length) {
if (cursor_val === '"') {
in_quote = !in_quote;
} else if (cursor_val === new_line_char) {
if (in_quote === false) {
if (line_end_index_moved && (line_start_index <= line_end_index)) {
result.push(parse_csv_line(csv_str.substring(line_start_index, line_end_index)));
line_start_index = csr_index + 1;
} // Else: just ignore line_end_index has not moved or line has not been sliced for parsing the line
} // Else: just ignore because we are in a quote
}
csr_index++;
cursor_val = csv_str[csr_index];
line_end_index = csr_index;
line_end_index_moved = true;
}
// Handle \r\n
if (found_new_line_char == '\r\n') {
let new_result = [];
let curr_row;
for (var i = 0; i < result.length; i++) {
curr_row = [];
for (var j = 0; j < result[i].length; j++) {
curr_row.push(result[i][j].split(new_line_char).join('\r\n'));
}
new_result.push(curr_row);
}
result = new_result;
}
return result;
}
function parse_csv_line(csv_line_str) {
var result = [];
//let field_end_index_moved = false;
let field_start_index = 0;
let field_end_index = 0;
let csr_index = 0;
let cursor_val = csv_line_str[csr_index];
let in_quote = false;
// Pretend that the last char is the separator_char to complete the loop
csv_line_str += field_separator_char;
while (csr_index < csv_line_str.length) {
if (cursor_val === '"') {
in_quote = !in_quote;
} else if (cursor_val === field_separator_char) {
if (in_quote === false) {
if (field_start_index <= field_end_index) {
result.push(parse_csv_field(csv_line_str.substring(field_start_index, field_end_index)));
field_start_index = csr_index + 1;
} // Else: just ignore field_end_index has not moved or field has not been sliced for parsing the field
} // Else: just ignore because we are in quote
}
csr_index++;
cursor_val = csv_line_str[csr_index];
field_end_index = csr_index;
field_end_index_moved = true;
}
return result;
}
function parse_csv_field(csv_field_str) {
with_quote = (csv_field_str[0] === '"');
if (with_quote) {
csv_field_str = csv_field_str.substring(1, csv_field_str.length - 1); // remove the start and end quotes
csv_field_str = csv_field_str.split('""').join('"'); // handle double quotes
}
return csv_field_str;
}
// Initial method: check the first newline character only
function get_new_line_char(csv_str) {
if (csv_str.indexOf('\r\n') > -1) {
return '\r\n';
} else {
return '\n'
}
}
Just use .split(',')
:
var str = "How are you doing today?";
var n = str.split(" ");
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2Why is this a bad answer? It is native, places string content into workable array...– MicahSep 26, 2012 at 15:41
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21Lots of reasons. First, it doesn't remove the double quotes on delimited values. Doesn't handle line splitting. Doesn't escape double-double quotes used to escape double quotes used in delimited values. Doesn't allow empty values. etc, etc... The flexibility of the CSV format makes it very easy to use but difficult to parse. I won't downvote this but only because I don't downvote competing answers. Oct 6, 2012 at 0:51
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1What about when you encounter a value that contains a newline char? A simple split function will incorrectly interpret it as the end of an entry instead of skipping over it like it should. Parsing CSV is a lot more complicated than just providing 2 split routines (one for newlines, one for delimiters). Oct 16, 2012 at 21:40
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2(cont) Also split on null values (a,null,,value) returns nothing whereas it should return an empty string. Don't get me wrong, split is a good start if you are 100% positive that the incoming data won't break the parser but creating a robust parser that can handle any data that is RFC 4801 compliant is significantly more complicated. Oct 16, 2012 at 21:45
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8Evan, I think your javascript library is awesome. But here's another perspective - I appreciated this answer, as I am simply storing a series of numbers in a very predictable fashion. It is much more important to me to get guaranteed cross-browser Javascript compatibility and maintainability as far into the future as possible, than include a large (albeit well-written and well-tested) library. Different needs require different approaches. If I ever need real CSV power I will DEFINITELY commit to using your library! :-)– moodboomFeb 20, 2013 at 1:01