80

If we were on a nodeJS server, we could write a header, set a mime type, and send it:

res.header("Content-Disposition", "attachment;filename="+name+".csv"); 
res.type("text/csv");
res.send(200, csvString);

and because of the headers, the browser will create a download for the named csv file.

When useful data is generated in a browser, one solution to getting it in a CSV file is to use ajax, upload it to the server, (perhaps optionally save it there) and get the server to send it back with these headers to become a csv download back at the browser.

However, I would like a 100% browser solution that does not involve ping-pong with the server.

So it occurred to me that one could open a new window and try to set the header with a META tag equivalent.

But this doesn't work for me in recent Chrome.

I do get a new window, and it contains the csvString, but does not act as a download.

I guess I expected to get either a download in a bottom tab or a blank new window with a download in a bottom tab.

I'm wondering if the meta tags are correct or if other tags are also needed.

Is there a way to make this work without punting it to the server?

JsFiddle for Creating a CSV in the Browser (not working - outputs window but no download)

var A = [['n','sqrt(n)']];  // initialize array of rows with header row as 1st item
for(var j=1;j<10;++j){ A.push([j, Math.sqrt(j)]) }
var csvRows = [];
for(var i=0,l=A.length; i<l; ++i){
    csvRows.push(A[i].join(','));   // unquoted CSV row
}
var csvString = csvRows.join("\n");
console.log(csvString);
var csvWin = window.open("","","");
csvWin.document.write('<meta name="content-type" content="text/csv">');
csvWin.document.write('<meta name="content-disposition" content="attachment;  filename=data.csv">  ');
csvWin.document.write(csvString);
3

6 Answers 6

164

There's always the HTML5 download attribute :

This attribute, if present, indicates that the author intends the hyperlink to be used for downloading a resource so that when the user clicks on the link they will be prompted to save it as a local file.

If the attribute has a value, the value will be used as the pre-filled file name in the Save prompt that opens when the user clicks on the link.

var A = [['n','sqrt(n)']];

for(var j=1; j<10; ++j){ 
    A.push([j, Math.sqrt(j)]);
}

var csvRows = [];

for(var i=0, l=A.length; i<l; ++i){
    csvRows.push(A[i].join(','));
}

var csvString = csvRows.join("%0A");
var a         = document.createElement('a');
a.href        = 'data:attachment/csv,' +  encodeURIComponent(csvString);
a.target      = '_blank';
a.download    = 'myFile.csv';

document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();

FIDDLE

Tested in Chrome and Firefox, works fine in the newest versions (as of July 2013).
Works in Opera as well, but does not set the filename (as of July 2013).
Does not seem to work in IE9 (big suprise) (as of July 2013).

An overview over what browsers support the download attribute can be found Here
For non-supporting browsers, one has to set the appropriate headers on the serverside.


Apparently there is a hack for IE10 and IE11, which doesn't support the download attribute (Edge does however).

var A = [['n','sqrt(n)']];

for(var j=1; j<10; ++j){ 
    A.push([j, Math.sqrt(j)]);
}

var csvRows = [];

for(var i=0, l=A.length; i<l; ++i){
    csvRows.push(A[i].join(','));
}

var csvString = csvRows.join("%0A");

if (window.navigator.msSaveOrOpenBlob) {
    var blob = new Blob([csvString]);
    window.navigator.msSaveOrOpenBlob(blob, 'myFile.csv');
} else {
    var a         = document.createElement('a');
    a.href        = 'data:attachment/csv,' +  encodeURIComponent(csvString);
    a.target      = '_blank';
    a.download    = 'myFile.csv';
    document.body.appendChild(a);
    a.click();
}
25
  • 2
    Couldn't figure out how to set a filename, but I'm sure it's possible somehow. It's usually attachment;filename=somefile.csv but that doesn't seem to work for csv strings ?
    – adeneo
    Jul 24, 2013 at 14:34
  • 19
    a.href = 'data:attachment/csv,' + encodeURIComponent(csvString);
    – Paul
    Jul 24, 2013 at 14:54
  • 1
    I suspect they might get converted back in the actual file... but not sure
    – Paul
    Jul 24, 2013 at 14:56
  • 1
    The filename did not work for me in Chrome. It worked when I changed a.href to this: a.href = window.URL.createObjectURL(new Blob([csvString], { type: "attachment/csv" })); Jun 11, 2014 at 16:03
  • 1
    @FacioRatio Google changed something in Chrome. breaking the ability to set the filename. See: code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=373182
    – Paul
    Jun 12, 2014 at 8:47
30

@adeneo answer works for Firefox and chrome... For IE the below can be used.

if (window.navigator.msSaveOrOpenBlob) {
  var blob = new Blob([decodeURIComponent(encodeURI(result.data))], {
    type: "text/csv;charset=utf-8;"
  });
  navigator.msSaveBlob(blob, 'FileName.csv');
}

1
  • 3
    I can confirm this works in IE11, and have updated my library html5csv to include IE 11 support based on this technique. I credited your post in the code comments. Thanks a lot.
    – Paul
    Jan 11, 2015 at 8:29
15

See adeneo's answer, but don't forget encodeURIComponent!

a.href     = 'data:application/csv;charset=utf-8,' + encodeURIComponent(csvString);

Also, I needed to do "\r\n" not just "\n" for the row delimiter.

var csvString = csvRows.join("\r\n");

Revised fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/7Q3c6/

0
7

Once I packed JS code doing that to a tiny library:

https://github.com/AlexLibs/client-side-csv-generator

The Code, Documentation and Demo/Playground are provided on Github.

Enjoy :)

Pull requests are welcome.

0
3

We can easily create and export/download the excel file with any separator (in this answer I am using the comma separator) using javascript. I am not using any external package for creating the excel file.

    var Head = [[
        'Heading 1',
        'Heading 2', 
        'Heading 3', 
        'Heading 4'
    ]];

    var row = [
       {key1:1,key2:2, key3:3, key4:4},
       {key1:2,key2:5, key3:6, key4:7},
       {key1:3,key2:2, key3:3, key4:4},
       {key1:4,key2:2, key3:3, key4:4},
       {key1:5,key2:2, key3:3, key4:4}
    ];

for (var item = 0; item < row.length; ++item) {
       Head.push([
          row[item].key1,
          row[item].key2,
          row[item].key3,
          row[item].key4
       ]);
}

var csvRows = [];
for (var cell = 0; cell < Head.length; ++cell) {
       csvRows.push(Head[cell].join(','));
}
            
var csvString = csvRows.join("\n");
let csvFile = new Blob([csvString], { type: "text/csv" });
let downloadLink = document.createElement("a");
downloadLink.download = 'MYCSVFILE.csv';
downloadLink.href = window.URL.createObjectURL(csvFile);
downloadLink.style.display = "none";
document.body.appendChild(downloadLink);
downloadLink.click();

2

See adeneo's answer, but to make this work in Excel in all countries you should add "SEP=," to the first line of the file. This will set the standard separator in Excel and will not show up in the actual document

var csvString = "SEP=, \n" + csvRows.join("\r\n");
2
  • I doubt R or Pandas (Python) is going to like that in a csv file.
    – Paul
    Oct 18, 2018 at 5:03
  • 1
    @Paul That might be true, but in my case I needed to make a csv file to be opened in excel and I want it to open in a presentable manner regardless of locality. If you have a better solution for this I'd love to hear it!
    – Thyselius
    Oct 19, 2018 at 6:12

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