Copyright | Copyright (C) 2005-2011 John Goerzen |
---|---|
License | BSD3 |
Maintainer | John Goerzen <jgoerzen@complete.org> |
Stability | provisional |
Portability | portable |
Safe Haskell | Safe |
Language | Haskell98 |
Haskell Parsec parsers for comma-separated value (CSV) files.
Written by John Goerzen, jgoerzen@complete.org
Synopsis
- csvFile :: CharParser st [[String]]
- genCsvFile :: [[String]] -> String
Documentation
csvFile :: CharParser st [[String]] Source #
Parse a Comma-Separated Value (CSV) file. The return value is a list of lines; each line is a list of cells; and each cell is a String.
Please note that CSV files may have a different number of cells on each line. Also, it is impossible to distinguish a CSV line that has a call with no data from a CSV line that has no cells.
Here are some examples:
Input (literal strings) Parses As (Haskell String syntax) -------------------------------- --------------------------------- 1,2,3 [["1", "2", "3"]] l1 [["l1"], ["l2"]] l2 (empty line) [[""]] NQ,"Quoted" [["NQ", "Quoted"]] NQ,"Embedded""Quote" [["NQ", "Embedded\"Quote"]]
To parse a String, you might use:
import Text.ParserCombinators.Parsec import Data.String.CSV .... parse csvFile "" mystring
To parse a file, you might instead use:
do result <- parseFromFile csvFile "/path/to/file"
Please note that the result of parsing will be of type (Either ParseError [[String]]). A Left result indicates an error. For more details, see the Parsec information.
genCsvFile :: [[String]] -> String Source #
Generate CSV data for a file. The resulting string can be written out to disk directly.