#csv #parser #reading #manipulating #read #language #quote

csv-tools

A Rust crate for reading, creating and manipulating CSV files easily

3 stable releases

1.1.1 Mar 27, 2024
1.0.0 Mar 18, 2024

#999 in Parser implementations

Download history 84/week @ 2024-03-13 32/week @ 2024-03-20 239/week @ 2024-03-27 40/week @ 2024-04-03

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MIT license

55KB
1K SLoC

CSV Tools

A Rust crate to easily read, manipulate and create CSV files, supporting double quotes and escaped characters.

How to use

See the documentation in crates.io for further information about the individual methods of the crate.

As of now this crate doesn't use any external dependencies.

Simple overview

Here a basic overview with the following example (langs.csv):

language,level_of_fun,level_of_difficulty
C++,10,8
Rust,10,9
JavaScript,9,1
TypeScript,10,1
Java,0,2
HTML,10,-1
GDScript,10,1
Lua,7,1

Read the file:

use csv_tools::CSVFile;

let filename = String::from("langs.csv");
let file = CSVFile::new(&filename, &',')?;

assert_eq!(file.columns, vec![
  "language".to_string(),
  "level_of_fun".to_string(),
  "level_of_difficulty".to_string()
]);

assert_eq!(file.rows, vec![
  vec!["C++".to_string(),        "10".to_string(),  "8".to_string()],
  vec!["Rust".to_string(),       "10".to_string(),  "9".to_string()],
  vec!["JavaScript".to_string(), "9".to_string(),   "1".to_string()],
  vec!["TypeScript".to_string(), "10".to_string(),  "1".to_string()],
  vec!["Java".to_string(),       "0".to_string(),   "2".to_string()],
  vec!["HTML".to_string(),       "10".to_string(), "-1".to_string()],
  vec!["GDScript".to_string(),   "10".to_string() , "1".to_string()],
  vec!["Lua".to_string(),        "7".to_string(),   "1".to_string()],
]);

A lot of utility methods are here to help you manipulate the data more easily:

// continuing with the above example
// ...

use csv_tools::CSVCoords;

// get the value at specific coordinates
assert_eq!(file.get_cell(&CSVCoords { row: 0, column: 0 }), Some(&"C++".to_string()));

Map your CSV to a data structure

// continuing with the above example
// ...

#[derive(Debug, PartialEq)]
struct Language {
    name: String,
    level_of_fun: i32,
    level_of_difficulty: i32,
}

// mapped_rows is a vector of Language.
let mapped_rows = file.map_rows(|row: &Vec<String>| {
    Language {
        name: row[0].clone(),
        level_of_fun: row[1].parse().unwrap(),
        level_of_difficulty: row[2].parse().unwrap(),
    }
});

assert_eq!(mapped_rows.len(), 8);
assert_eq!(
    mapped_rows[0],
    Language {
        name: "C++".to_string(),
        level_of_fun: 10,
        level_of_difficulty: 8
    }
);

You also have methods such as:

  • find_text
  • check_validity
  • trim_end
  • trim_start
  • trim
  • merge (for merging CSV files)
  • ...

No runtime deps