Just a CSV generator :)
It ensures string fields quoted.
Standard CSV also can quote values with force_quotes
option, like this:
CSV.open(filename, 'w', force_quotes: true) do |csv|
csv << ['0123', 987]
end
This example above quotes ALL values (including the numeric value 987).
It generates
"0123","987"
Note that the numeric value 987 is also quoted. In most cases, this behavior is sufficient.
However, sometimes it would be useful if you can distinguish string values and numeric values with quotation, in following manner:
- if a value is quoted, it is a string
- if not, it is a number
CsvGenerator follows these rules.
You can generate:
"0123",987
As you see, numeric value 987 is not quoted.
Some CSV-readable application might interpret "0123" as a string, 987 as a number. Is such a case, CsvGenerator will be useful.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'csv_generator'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install csv_generator
Basic usage is something like this:
CsvGenerator.open('example.csv') do |csv|
csv << ['0123', 456, 'this is a string']
end
# writes to example.csv:
# "0123",456,"this is a string"
If you have multiple rows,
rows = [
['0123', 456, 'this is a string'],
['1234', 987, 'this is the second row']
]
CsvGenerator.open('example.csv') do |csv|
rows.each do |row|
csv << row
end
end
# writes to example.csv:
# "0123",456,"this is a string"
# "1234",987,"this is the second row"
Or using CsvGenerator#generate
,
rows = [
['0123', 456, 'this is a string'],
['1234', 987, 'this is the second row']
]
CsvGenerator.open('example.csv').generate(rows)
# writes to example.csv:
# "0123",456,"this is a string"
# "1234",987,"this is the second row"
Data source of a row does not have to be an array. If you have objects (such as ActiveRecord instances),
class User
attr_reader :name, :score
end
users = [
User.new(name: 'test1', score: 123),
User.new(name: 'test2', socre: 987)
]
CsvGenerator.open('example.csv') do |csv|
csv.generate(users) do |user|
[user.name, user.score]
end
end
# writes to example.csv:
# "test1",123
# "test2",987
If you need a string instead of a file, use StringIO like this:
io = StringIO.new
CsvGenerator.new(io) do |csv|
csv << ['test', 123]
end
io.string # => "test",123
- Fork it ( https://github.com/cesare/csv_generator/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new Pull Request