69

I have a csv file, some hockey stats, for example:

09.09.2008,1,HC Vitkovice Steel,BK Mlada Boleslav,1:0 (PP)
09.09.2008,1,HC Lasselsberger Plzen,RI OKNA ZLIN,6:2
09.09.2008,1,HC Litvinov,HC Sparta Praha,3:5

I want to save them in an array of hashes. I don't have any headers and I would like to add keys to each value like "time" => "09.09.2008" and so on. Each line should by accessible like arr[i], each value by for example arr[i]["time"]. I prefer CSV class rather than FasterCSV or split. Can you show the way or redirect to some thread where a similar problem was solved?

2
  • What is so on? Other than "time", we have no clue what keys you want. Maybe you should show the expected output.
    – sawa
    Jan 7, 2013 at 16:25
  • 2
    so on.. I meant etc. , my english isn't probably so good. Other key could be round, home and visiting team and score. Expected Output is {["time" => "09.09.2008", "round" => "1", "home" => "Vitkovice Steel", "visiting" => "BK Mlada Boleslav", "score" => "1:0 (PP)"],[next lines...]}
    – Mythago
    Jan 7, 2013 at 16:45

10 Answers 10

94

Just pass headers: true

CSV.foreach(data_file, headers: true) do |row|
  puts row.inspect # hash
end

From there, you can manipulate the hash however you like.

(Tested with Ruby 2.0, but I think this has worked for quite a while.)

Edit

You say you don't have any headers - could you add a header line to the beginning of the file contents after reading them?

2
  • 6
    Technically, I think each row is an instance of CSV::Row, which acts like a Hash but doesn't actually inherit Hash.
    – Jared Beck
    May 28, 2015 at 18:52
  • 10
    You can also use CSV.parse(data, headers: true).map(&:to_h) to similar effect, taking into account Jared's note above. This turns your CSV into an array of hashes with headers as keys. You can also want to toss in the option header_converters: :symbol to use symbols as keys instead of the column name as strings.
    – Mr. Tim
    Sep 13, 2017 at 14:15
43

You can use the Ruby CSV parser to parse it, and then use Hash[ keys.zip(values) ] to make it a hash.

Example:

test = '''
09.09.2008,1,HC Vitkovice Steel,BK Mlada Boleslav,1:0 (PP)
09.09.2008,1,HC Lasselsberger Plzen,RI OKNA ZLIN,6:2
09.09.2008,1,HC Litvinov,HC Sparta Praha,3:5
'''.strip

keys = ['time', etc... ]
CSV.parse(test).map {|a| Hash[ keys.zip(a) ] }
5
  • I tried that 'require 'csv' csv_data = CSV.read 'data.txt' keys = ['time',"round","home","visiting","score"] CSV.parse(csv_data).map {|a| Hash[ keys.zip(a) ] }' but i probably didn catch the idea because it returned some errors
    – Mythago
    Jan 7, 2013 at 16:37
  • c:/Ruby193/lib/ruby/1.9.1/csv.rb:1381:in ensure in parse': undefined method close' for #<Array:0x8f2050> (NoMethodError) from c:/Ruby193/lib/ruby/1.9.1/csv.rb:1381:in parse' from C:/Users/Mythago/My Documents/Aptana Studio 3 Workspace/elh stats/main.rb:5:in <main>'
    – Mythago
    Jan 7, 2013 at 16:45
  • looks like you're calling close on the array. Dont do that
    – AJcodez
    Jan 7, 2013 at 17:00
  • 3
    @user1955522 CSV.parse method accepts string as its argument, not an array. Try CSV.read('data.txt').map {|a| Hash[ keys.zip(a) ]} . Jan 7, 2013 at 17:10
  • Beautiful code. This is a great example of Ruby's strengths!
    – xHocquet
    Dec 1, 2017 at 22:29
43

This is a fantastic post by Josh Nichols which explains how to do what you're asking.

To summarize, here his code:

csv = CSV.new(body, :headers => true, :header_converters => :symbol, :converters => [:all, :blank_to_nil])
csv.to_a.map {|row| row.to_hash }
=> [{:year=>1997, :make=>"Ford", :model=>"E350", :description=>"ac, abs, moon", :price=>3000.0}, {:year=>1999, :make=>"Chevy", :model=>"Venture \"Extended Edition\"", :description=>nil, :price=>4900.0}, {:year=>1999, :make=>"Chevy", :model=>"Venture \"Extended Edition, Very Large\"", :description=>nil, :price=>5000.0}, {:year=>1996, :make=>"Jeep", :model=>"Grand Cherokee", :description=>"MUST SELL!\nair, moon roof, loaded", :price=>4799.0}]

So, you could save the body of your CSV file into a string called body.

body = "09.09.2008,1,HC Vitkovice Steel,BK Mlada Boleslav,1:0 (PP)
09.09.2008,1,HC Lasselsberger Plzen,RI OKNA ZLIN,6:2
09.09.2008,1,HC Litvinov,HC Sparta Praha,3:5"

And then run his code as listed above on it.

5
  • 1
    Thanks for the post reference, very useful. I'm not sure if it was my data specifically; however, I needed to ommit the :blank_to_nil otherwise I was getting an error *** NoMethodError Exception: undefined method arity' for nil:NilClass`
    – shakerlxxv
    Jan 17, 2014 at 6:32
  • @CodeBiker @shakerlxxv I have the same error message, NoMethodError: undefined method encode for nil:Nilclass. What is the solution to get it working? Feb 13, 2014 at 21:15
  • 1
    @user2012677, I omitted the :blank_to_nil converter, so my final expression looks like CSV.new(File.new(file), :headers => true, :header_converters => :symbol, :converters => [:all]).to_a.map {|row| row.to_hash }
    – shakerlxxv
    Mar 8, 2014 at 17:09
  • 11
    You can also reduce it to this: CSV.new(body, headers: true).map(&:to_hash) (in Ruby 2.1.5, at least)
    – tjmcewan
    Aug 18, 2015 at 0:46
  • 1
    I like Pavel's solution above better
    – kirhgoff
    Sep 4, 2018 at 2:53
39

A little shorter solution

Parse string:

CSV.parse(content, headers: :first_row).map(&:to_h)

Parse file:

CSV.open(filename, headers: :first_row).map(&:to_h)
1
  • 1
    Parse file code lead to: /usr/lib/ruby/2.5.0/csv.rb:1764:in to_h': wrong element type String at 0 (expected array) (TypeError)` Mar 26, 2019 at 15:53
8

Slight variation on Nathan Long's answer

data_file = './sheet.csv'
data = CSV.foreach(data_file, headers: true).map(&:to_h)

Now data is an array of hashes to do your bidding with!

2
  • 4
    Even leaner: data = CSV.foreach(data_file, headers: true).map{ |row| row.to_h }
    – dekeguard
    Aug 16, 2017 at 21:16
  • 1
    Even leaner than that: data = CSV.foreach(data_file, headers: true).map(&:to_h) :D
    – agbodike
    Apr 20, 2022 at 16:22
2

The headers option to the CSV module accepts an array of strings to be used as the headers, when they're not present as the first row in the CSV content.

CSV.parse(content, headers: %w(time number team_1 team_2 score))

This will generate an enumerable of hashes using the given headers as keys.

1

You can try the following gem also

require 'csv_hasher'
arr_of_hashes = CSVHasher.hashify('/path/to/csv/file')

The keys of the returned hashes will be the header values of the csv file.

If you want to pass your own keys then

keys = [:key1, :key2, ... ]
arr_of_hashers = CSVHasher.hashify('/path/to/csv/file', { keys: keys }) 
1

I guess this is the shortest version:

keys = ["time", ...]
CSV.parse(content, headers: keys).map(&:to_h)
0

you could also use the SmarterCSV gem, which returns data from CSV files as Ruby hashes by default.

It has a lot of features, including processing the data in chunks, which is very benefitial for huge data files.

  require 'smarter_csv'

  options = {} # see GitHub README
  data = SmarterCSV.process(your_file_name, options)
0

For me

data_file = 'file.csv'
data = CSV.foreach(data_file, headers: true).map(&:to_h)

works as mentioned by lacostenycoder with that your csv file with the content let's say

id,amount
1,10.10
2,20.20

will be converted to

[{"id"=>"1", "amount"=>"10.10"},
 {"id"=>"2", "amount"=>"20.20"}]

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