| package Text::CSV; |
| |
| |
| use strict; |
| use Exporter; |
| use Carp (); |
| use vars qw( $VERSION $DEBUG @ISA @EXPORT_OK ); |
| @ISA = qw( Exporter ); |
| @EXPORT_OK = qw( csv ); |
| |
| BEGIN { |
| $VERSION = '1.95'; |
| $DEBUG = 0; |
| } |
| |
| # if use CSV_XS, requires version |
| my $Module_XS = 'Text::CSV_XS'; |
| my $Module_PP = 'Text::CSV_PP'; |
| my $XS_Version = '1.02'; |
| |
| my $Is_Dynamic = 0; |
| |
| my @PublicMethods = qw/ |
| version new error_diag error_input |
| known_attributes csv |
| PV IV NV |
| /; |
| # |
| |
| # Check the environment variable to decide worker module. |
| |
| unless ($Text::CSV::Worker) { |
| $Text::CSV::DEBUG and Carp::carp("Check used worker module..."); |
| |
| if ( exists $ENV{PERL_TEXT_CSV} ) { |
| if ($ENV{PERL_TEXT_CSV} eq '0' or $ENV{PERL_TEXT_CSV} eq 'Text::CSV_PP') { |
| _load_pp() or Carp::croak $@; |
| } |
| elsif ($ENV{PERL_TEXT_CSV} eq '1' or $ENV{PERL_TEXT_CSV} =~ /Text::CSV_XS\s*,\s*Text::CSV_PP/) { |
| _load_xs() or _load_pp() or Carp::croak $@; |
| } |
| elsif ($ENV{PERL_TEXT_CSV} eq '2' or $ENV{PERL_TEXT_CSV} eq 'Text::CSV_XS') { |
| _load_xs() or Carp::croak $@; |
| } |
| else { |
| Carp::croak "The value of environmental variable 'PERL_TEXT_CSV' is invalid."; |
| } |
| } |
| else { |
| _load_xs() or _load_pp() or Carp::croak $@; |
| } |
| |
| } |
| |
| sub new { # normal mode |
| my $proto = shift; |
| my $class = ref($proto) || $proto; |
| |
| unless ( $proto ) { # for Text::CSV_XS/PP::new(0); |
| return eval qq| $Text::CSV::Worker\::new( \$proto ) |; |
| } |
| |
| #if (ref $_[0] and $_[0]->{module}) { |
| # Carp::croak("Can't set 'module' in non dynamic mode."); |
| #} |
| |
| if ( my $obj = $Text::CSV::Worker->new(@_) ) { |
| $obj->{_MODULE} = $Text::CSV::Worker; |
| bless $obj, $class; |
| return $obj; |
| } |
| else { |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| |
| } |
| |
| |
| sub require_xs_version { $XS_Version; } |
| |
| |
| sub module { |
| my $proto = shift; |
| return !ref($proto) ? $Text::CSV::Worker |
| : ref($proto->{_MODULE}) ? ref($proto->{_MODULE}) : $proto->{_MODULE}; |
| } |
| |
| *backend = *module; |
| |
| |
| sub is_xs { |
| return $_[0]->module eq $Module_XS; |
| } |
| |
| |
| sub is_pp { |
| return $_[0]->module eq $Module_PP; |
| } |
| |
| |
| sub is_dynamic { $Is_Dynamic; } |
| |
| sub _load_xs { _load($Module_XS, $XS_Version) } |
| |
| sub _load_pp { _load($Module_PP) } |
| |
| sub _load { |
| my ($module, $version) = @_; |
| $version ||= ''; |
| |
| $Text::CSV::DEBUG and Carp::carp "Load $module."; |
| |
| eval qq| use $module $version |; |
| |
| return if $@; |
| |
| push @Text::CSV::ISA, $module; |
| $Text::CSV::Worker = $module; |
| |
| local $^W; |
| no strict qw(refs); |
| |
| for my $method (@PublicMethods) { |
| *{"Text::CSV::$method"} = \&{"$module\::$method"}; |
| } |
| return 1; |
| } |
| |
| |
| |
| 1; |
| __END__ |
| |
| =pod |
| |
| =head1 NAME |
| |
| Text::CSV - comma-separated values manipulator (using XS or PurePerl) |
| |
| |
| =head1 SYNOPSIS |
| |
| use Text::CSV; |
| |
| my @rows; |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ( { binary => 1 } ) # should set binary attribute. |
| or die "Cannot use CSV: ".Text::CSV->error_diag (); |
| |
| open my $fh, "<:encoding(utf8)", "test.csv" or die "test.csv: $!"; |
| while ( my $row = $csv->getline( $fh ) ) { |
| $row->[2] =~ m/pattern/ or next; # 3rd field should match |
| push @rows, $row; |
| } |
| $csv->eof or $csv->error_diag(); |
| close $fh; |
| |
| $csv->eol ("\r\n"); |
| |
| open $fh, ">:encoding(utf8)", "new.csv" or die "new.csv: $!"; |
| $csv->print ($fh, $_) for @rows; |
| close $fh or die "new.csv: $!"; |
| |
| # |
| # parse and combine style |
| # |
| |
| $status = $csv->combine(@columns); # combine columns into a string |
| $line = $csv->string(); # get the combined string |
| |
| $status = $csv->parse($line); # parse a CSV string into fields |
| @columns = $csv->fields(); # get the parsed fields |
| |
| $status = $csv->status (); # get the most recent status |
| $bad_argument = $csv->error_input (); # get the most recent bad argument |
| $diag = $csv->error_diag (); # if an error occurred, explains WHY |
| |
| $status = $csv->print ($io, $colref); # Write an array of fields |
| # immediately to a file $io |
| $colref = $csv->getline ($io); # Read a line from file $io, |
| # parse it and return an array |
| # ref of fields |
| $csv->column_names (@names); # Set column names for getline_hr () |
| $ref = $csv->getline_hr ($io); # getline (), but returns a hashref |
| $eof = $csv->eof (); # Indicate if last parse or |
| # getline () hit End Of File |
| |
| $csv->types(\@t_array); # Set column types |
| |
| =head1 DESCRIPTION |
| |
| Text::CSV is a thin wrapper for L<Text::CSV_XS>-compatible modules now. |
| All the backend modules provide facilities for the composition and |
| decomposition of comma-separated values. Text::CSV uses Text::CSV_XS |
| by default, and when Text::CSV_XS is not available, falls back on |
| L<Text::CSV_PP>, which is bundled in the same distribution as this module. |
| |
| =head1 CHOOSING BACKEND |
| |
| This module respects an environmental variable called C<PERL_TEXT_CSV> |
| when it decides a backend module to use. If this environmental variable |
| is not set, it tries to load Text::CSV_XS, and if Text::CSV_XS is not |
| available, falls back on Text::CSV_PP; |
| |
| If you always don't want it to fall back on Text::CSV_PP, set the variable |
| like this (C<export> may be C<setenv>, C<set> and the likes, depending |
| on your environment): |
| |
| > export PERL_TEXT_CSV=Text::CSV_XS |
| |
| If you prefer Text::CSV_XS to Text::CSV_PP (default), then: |
| |
| > export PERL_TEXT_CSV=Text::CSV_XS,Text::CSV_PP |
| |
| You may also want to set this variable at the top of your test files, in order |
| not to be bothered with incompatibilities between backends (you need to wrap |
| this in C<BEGIN>, and set before actually C<use>-ing Text::CSV module, as it |
| decides its backend as soon as it's loaded): |
| |
| BEGIN { $ENV{PERL_TEXT_CSV}='Text::CSV_PP'; } |
| use Text::CSV; |
| |
| =head1 NOTES |
| |
| This section is taken from Text::CSV_XS. |
| |
| =head2 Embedded newlines |
| |
| B<Important Note>: The default behavior is to accept only ASCII characters |
| in the range from C<0x20> (space) to C<0x7E> (tilde). This means that the |
| fields can not contain newlines. If your data contains newlines embedded in |
| fields, or characters above C<0x7E> (tilde), or binary data, you B<I<must>> |
| set C<< binary => 1 >> in the call to L</new>. To cover the widest range of |
| parsing options, you will always want to set binary. |
| |
| But you still have the problem that you have to pass a correct line to the |
| L</parse> method, which is more complicated from the usual point of usage: |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ binary => 1, eol => $/ }); |
| while (<>) { # WRONG! |
| $csv->parse ($_); |
| my @fields = $csv->fields (); |
| } |
| |
| this will break, as the C<while> might read broken lines: it does not care |
| about the quoting. If you need to support embedded newlines, the way to go |
| is to B<not> pass L<C<eol>|/eol> in the parser (it accepts C<\n>, C<\r>, |
| B<and> C<\r\n> by default) and then |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ binary => 1 }); |
| open my $io, "<", $file or die "$file: $!"; |
| while (my $row = $csv->getline ($io)) { |
| my @fields = @$row; |
| } |
| |
| The old(er) way of using global file handles is still supported |
| |
| while (my $row = $csv->getline (*ARGV)) { ... } |
| |
| =head2 Unicode |
| |
| Unicode is only tested to work with perl-5.8.2 and up. |
| |
| The simplest way to ensure the correct encoding is used for in- and output |
| is by either setting layers on the filehandles, or setting the L</encoding> |
| argument for L</csv>. |
| |
| open my $fh, "<:encoding(UTF-8)", "in.csv" or die "in.csv: $!"; |
| or |
| my $aoa = csv (in => "in.csv", encoding => "UTF-8"); |
| |
| open my $fh, ">:encoding(UTF-8)", "out.csv" or die "out.csv: $!"; |
| or |
| csv (in => $aoa, out => "out.csv", encoding => "UTF-8"); |
| |
| On parsing (both for L</getline> and L</parse>), if the source is marked |
| being UTF8, then all fields that are marked binary will also be marked UTF8. |
| |
| On combining (L</print> and L</combine>): if any of the combining fields |
| was marked UTF8, the resulting string will be marked as UTF8. Note however |
| that all fields I<before> the first field marked UTF8 and contained 8-bit |
| characters that were not upgraded to UTF8, these will be C<bytes> in the |
| resulting string too, possibly causing unexpected errors. If you pass data |
| of different encoding, or you don't know if there is different encoding, |
| force it to be upgraded before you pass them on: |
| |
| $csv->print ($fh, [ map { utf8::upgrade (my $x = $_); $x } @data ]); |
| |
| For complete control over encoding, please use L<Text::CSV::Encoded>: |
| |
| use Text::CSV::Encoded; |
| my $csv = Text::CSV::Encoded->new ({ |
| encoding_in => "iso-8859-1", # the encoding comes into Perl |
| encoding_out => "cp1252", # the encoding comes out of Perl |
| }); |
| |
| $csv = Text::CSV::Encoded->new ({ encoding => "utf8" }); |
| # combine () and print () accept *literally* utf8 encoded data |
| # parse () and getline () return *literally* utf8 encoded data |
| |
| $csv = Text::CSV::Encoded->new ({ encoding => undef }); # default |
| # combine () and print () accept UTF8 marked data |
| # parse () and getline () return UTF8 marked data |
| |
| =head1 METHODS |
| |
| This whole section is also taken from Text::CSV_XS. |
| |
| =head2 version () |
| |
| (Class method) Returns the current backend module version. |
| |
| =head2 new (\%attr) |
| |
| (Class method) Returns a new instance of Text::CSV backend. The attributes |
| are described by the (optional) hash ref C<\%attr>. |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ attributes ... }); |
| |
| The following attributes are available: |
| |
| =head3 eol |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ eol => $/ }); |
| $csv->eol (undef); |
| my $eol = $csv->eol; |
| |
| The end-of-line string to add to rows for L</print> or the record separator |
| for L</getline>. |
| |
| When not passed in a B<parser> instance, the default behavior is to accept |
| C<\n>, C<\r>, and C<\r\n>, so it is probably safer to not specify C<eol> at |
| all. Passing C<undef> or the empty string behave the same. |
| |
| When not passed in a B<generating> instance, records are not terminated at |
| all, so it is probably wise to pass something you expect. A safe choice for |
| C<eol> on output is either C<$/> or C<\r\n>. |
| |
| Common values for C<eol> are C<"\012"> (C<\n> or Line Feed), C<"\015\012"> |
| (C<\r\n> or Carriage Return, Line Feed), and C<"\015"> (C<\r> or Carriage |
| Return). The L<C<eol>|/eol> attribute cannot exceed 7 (ASCII) characters. |
| |
| If both C<$/> and L<C<eol>|/eol> equal C<"\015">, parsing lines that end on |
| only a Carriage Return without Line Feed, will be L</parse>d correct. |
| |
| =head3 sep_char |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ sep_char => ";" }); |
| $csv->sep_char (";"); |
| my $c = $csv->sep_char; |
| |
| The char used to separate fields, by default a comma. (C<,>). Limited to a |
| single-byte character, usually in the range from C<0x20> (space) to C<0x7E> |
| (tilde). When longer sequences are required, use L<C<sep>|/sep>. |
| |
| The separation character can not be equal to the quote character or to the |
| escape character. |
| |
| =head3 sep |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ sep => "\N{FULLWIDTH COMMA}" }); |
| $csv->sep (";"); |
| my $sep = $csv->sep; |
| |
| The chars used to separate fields, by default undefined. Limited to 8 bytes. |
| |
| When set, overrules L<C<sep_char>|/sep_char>. If its length is one byte it |
| acts as an alias to L<C<sep_char>|/sep_char>. |
| |
| =head3 quote_char |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ quote_char => "'" }); |
| $csv->quote_char (undef); |
| my $c = $csv->quote_char; |
| |
| The character to quote fields containing blanks or binary data, by default |
| the double quote character (C<">). A value of undef suppresses quote chars |
| (for simple cases only). Limited to a single-byte character, usually in the |
| range from C<0x20> (space) to C<0x7E> (tilde). When longer sequences are |
| required, use L<C<quote>|/quote>. |
| |
| C<quote_char> can not be equal to L<C<sep_char>|/sep_char>. |
| |
| =head3 quote |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ quote => "\N{FULLWIDTH QUOTATION MARK}" }); |
| $csv->quote ("'"); |
| my $quote = $csv->quote; |
| |
| The chars used to quote fields, by default undefined. Limited to 8 bytes. |
| |
| When set, overrules L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char>. If its length is one byte |
| it acts as an alias to L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char>. |
| |
| =head3 escape_char |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ escape_char => "\\" }); |
| $csv->escape_char (undef); |
| my $c = $csv->escape_char; |
| |
| The character to escape certain characters inside quoted fields. This is |
| limited to a single-byte character, usually in the range from C<0x20> |
| (space) to C<0x7E> (tilde). |
| |
| The C<escape_char> defaults to being the double-quote mark (C<">). In other |
| words the same as the default L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char>. This means that |
| doubling the quote mark in a field escapes it: |
| |
| "foo","bar","Escape ""quote mark"" with two ""quote marks""","baz" |
| |
| If you change the L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char> without changing the |
| C<escape_char>, the C<escape_char> will still be the double-quote (C<">). |
| If instead you want to escape the L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char> by doubling |
| it you will need to also change the C<escape_char> to be the same as what |
| you have changed the L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char> to. |
| |
| The escape character can not be equal to the separation character. |
| |
| =head3 binary |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ binary => 1 }); |
| $csv->binary (0); |
| my $f = $csv->binary; |
| |
| If this attribute is C<1>, you may use binary characters in quoted fields, |
| including line feeds, carriage returns and C<NULL> bytes. (The latter could |
| be escaped as C<"0>.) By default this feature is off. |
| |
| If a string is marked UTF8, C<binary> will be turned on automatically when |
| binary characters other than C<CR> and C<NL> are encountered. Note that a |
| simple string like C<"\x{00a0}"> might still be binary, but not marked UTF8, |
| so setting C<< { binary => 1 } >> is still a wise option. |
| |
| =head3 decode_utf8 |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ decode_utf8 => 1 }); |
| $csv->decode_utf8 (0); |
| my $f = $csv->decode_utf8; |
| |
| This attributes defaults to TRUE. |
| |
| While I<parsing>, fields that are valid UTF-8, are automatically set to be |
| UTF-8, so that |
| |
| $csv->parse ("\xC4\xA8\n"); |
| |
| results in |
| |
| PV("\304\250"\0) [UTF8 "\x{128}"] |
| |
| Sometimes it might not be a desired action. To prevent those upgrades, set |
| this attribute to false, and the result will be |
| |
| PV("\304\250"\0) |
| |
| =head3 auto_diag |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ auto_diag => 1 }); |
| $csv->auto_diag (2); |
| my $l = $csv->auto_diag; |
| |
| Set this attribute to a number between C<1> and C<9> causes L</error_diag> |
| to be automatically called in void context upon errors. |
| |
| In case of error C<2012 - EOF>, this call will be void. |
| |
| If C<auto_diag> is set to a numeric value greater than C<1>, it will C<die> |
| on errors instead of C<warn>. If set to anything unrecognized, it will be |
| silently ignored. |
| |
| Future extensions to this feature will include more reliable auto-detection |
| of C<autodie> being active in the scope of which the error occurred which |
| will increment the value of C<auto_diag> with C<1> the moment the error is |
| detected. |
| |
| =head3 diag_verbose |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ diag_verbose => 1 }); |
| $csv->diag_verbose (2); |
| my $l = $csv->diag_verbose; |
| |
| Set the verbosity of the output triggered by C<auto_diag>. Currently only |
| adds the current input-record-number (if known) to the diagnostic output |
| with an indication of the position of the error. |
| |
| =head3 blank_is_undef |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ blank_is_undef => 1 }); |
| $csv->blank_is_undef (0); |
| my $f = $csv->blank_is_undef; |
| |
| Under normal circumstances, C<CSV> data makes no distinction between quoted- |
| and unquoted empty fields. These both end up in an empty string field once |
| read, thus |
| |
| 1,"",," ",2 |
| |
| is read as |
| |
| ("1", "", "", " ", "2") |
| |
| When I<writing> C<CSV> files with either L<C<always_quote>|/always_quote> |
| or L<C<quote_empty>|/quote_empty> set, the unquoted I<empty> field is the |
| result of an undefined value. To enable this distinction when I<reading> |
| C<CSV> data, the C<blank_is_undef> attribute will cause unquoted empty |
| fields to be set to C<undef>, causing the above to be parsed as |
| |
| ("1", "", undef, " ", "2") |
| |
| note that this is specifically important when loading C<CSV> fields into a |
| database that allows C<NULL> values, as the perl equivalent for C<NULL> is |
| C<undef> in L<DBI> land. |
| |
| =head3 empty_is_undef |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ empty_is_undef => 1 }); |
| $csv->empty_is_undef (0); |
| my $f = $csv->empty_is_undef; |
| |
| Going one step further than L<C<blank_is_undef>|/blank_is_undef>, this |
| attribute converts all empty fields to C<undef>, so |
| |
| 1,"",," ",2 |
| |
| is read as |
| |
| (1, undef, undef, " ", 2) |
| |
| Note that this effects only fields that are originally empty, not fields |
| that are empty after stripping allowed whitespace. YMMV. |
| |
| =head3 allow_whitespace |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ allow_whitespace => 1 }); |
| $csv->allow_whitespace (0); |
| my $f = $csv->allow_whitespace; |
| |
| When this option is set to true, the whitespace (C<TAB>'s and C<SPACE>'s) |
| surrounding the separation character is removed when parsing. If either |
| C<TAB> or C<SPACE> is one of the three characters L<C<sep_char>|/sep_char>, |
| L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char>, or L<C<escape_char>|/escape_char> it will not |
| be considered whitespace. |
| |
| Now lines like: |
| |
| 1 , "foo" , bar , 3 , zapp |
| |
| are parsed as valid C<CSV>, even though it violates the C<CSV> specs. |
| |
| Note that B<all> whitespace is stripped from both start and end of each |
| field. That would make it I<more> than a I<feature> to enable parsing bad |
| C<CSV> lines, as |
| |
| 1, 2.0, 3, ape , monkey |
| |
| will now be parsed as |
| |
| ("1", "2.0", "3", "ape", "monkey") |
| |
| even if the original line was perfectly acceptable C<CSV>. |
| |
| =head3 allow_loose_quotes |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ allow_loose_quotes => 1 }); |
| $csv->allow_loose_quotes (0); |
| my $f = $csv->allow_loose_quotes; |
| |
| By default, parsing unquoted fields containing L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char> |
| characters like |
| |
| 1,foo "bar" baz,42 |
| |
| would result in parse error 2034. Though it is still bad practice to allow |
| this format, we cannot help the fact that some vendors make their |
| applications spit out lines styled this way. |
| |
| If there is B<really> bad C<CSV> data, like |
| |
| 1,"foo "bar" baz",42 |
| |
| or |
| |
| 1,""foo bar baz"",42 |
| |
| there is a way to get this data-line parsed and leave the quotes inside the |
| quoted field as-is. This can be achieved by setting C<allow_loose_quotes> |
| B<AND> making sure that the L<C<escape_char>|/escape_char> is I<not> equal |
| to L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char>. |
| |
| =head3 allow_loose_escapes |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ allow_loose_escapes => 1 }); |
| $csv->allow_loose_escapes (0); |
| my $f = $csv->allow_loose_escapes; |
| |
| Parsing fields that have L<C<escape_char>|/escape_char> characters that |
| escape characters that do not need to be escaped, like: |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ escape_char => "\\" }); |
| $csv->parse (qq{1,"my bar\'s",baz,42}); |
| |
| would result in parse error 2025. Though it is bad practice to allow this |
| format, this attribute enables you to treat all escape character sequences |
| equal. |
| |
| =head3 allow_unquoted_escape |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ allow_unquoted_escape => 1 }); |
| $csv->allow_unquoted_escape (0); |
| my $f = $csv->allow_unquoted_escape; |
| |
| A backward compatibility issue where L<C<escape_char>|/escape_char> differs |
| from L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char> prevents L<C<escape_char>|/escape_char> |
| to be in the first position of a field. If L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char> is |
| equal to the default C<"> and L<C<escape_char>|/escape_char> is set to C<\>, |
| this would be illegal: |
| |
| 1,\0,2 |
| |
| Setting this attribute to C<1> might help to overcome issues with backward |
| compatibility and allow this style. |
| |
| =head3 always_quote |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ always_quote => 1 }); |
| $csv->always_quote (0); |
| my $f = $csv->always_quote; |
| |
| By default the generated fields are quoted only if they I<need> to be. For |
| example, if they contain the separator character. If you set this attribute |
| to C<1> then I<all> defined fields will be quoted. (C<undef> fields are not |
| quoted, see L</blank_is_undef>). This makes it quite often easier to handle |
| exported data in external applications. |
| |
| =head3 quote_space |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ quote_space => 1 }); |
| $csv->quote_space (0); |
| my $f = $csv->quote_space; |
| |
| By default, a space in a field would trigger quotation. As no rule exists |
| this to be forced in C<CSV>, nor any for the opposite, the default is true |
| for safety. You can exclude the space from this trigger by setting this |
| attribute to 0. |
| |
| =head3 quote_empty |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ quote_empty => 1 }); |
| $csv->quote_empty (0); |
| my $f = $csv->quote_empty; |
| |
| By default the generated fields are quoted only if they I<need> to be. An |
| empty (defined) field does not need quotation. If you set this attribute to |
| C<1> then I<empty> defined fields will be quoted. (C<undef> fields are not |
| quoted, see L</blank_is_undef>). See also L<C<always_quote>|/always_quote>. |
| |
| =head3 quote_binary |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ quote_binary => 1 }); |
| $csv->quote_binary (0); |
| my $f = $csv->quote_binary; |
| |
| By default, all "unsafe" bytes inside a string cause the combined field to |
| be quoted. By setting this attribute to C<0>, you can disable that trigger |
| for bytes >= C<0x7F>. |
| |
| =head3 escape_null or quote_null (deprecated) |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ escape_null => 1 }); |
| $csv->escape_null (0); |
| my $f = $csv->escape_null; |
| |
| By default, a C<NULL> byte in a field would be escaped. This option enables |
| you to treat the C<NULL> byte as a simple binary character in binary mode |
| (the C<< { binary => 1 } >> is set). The default is true. You can prevent |
| C<NULL> escapes by setting this attribute to C<0>. |
| |
| The default when using the C<csv> function is C<false>. |
| |
| =head3 keep_meta_info |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ keep_meta_info => 1 }); |
| $csv->keep_meta_info (0); |
| my $f = $csv->keep_meta_info; |
| |
| By default, the parsing of input records is as simple and fast as possible. |
| However, some parsing information - like quotation of the original field - |
| is lost in that process. Setting this flag to true enables retrieving that |
| information after parsing with the methods L</meta_info>, L</is_quoted>, |
| and L</is_binary> described below. Default is false for performance. |
| |
| If you set this attribute to a value greater than 9, than you can control |
| output quotation style like it was used in the input of the the last parsed |
| record (unless quotation was added because of other reasons). |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ |
| binary => 1, |
| keep_meta_info => 1, |
| quote_space => 0, |
| }); |
| |
| my $row = $csv->parse (q{1,,"", ," ",f,"g","h""h",help,"help"}); |
| |
| $csv->print (*STDOUT, \@row); |
| # 1,,, , ,f,g,"h""h",help,help |
| $csv->keep_meta_info (11); |
| $csv->print (*STDOUT, \@row); |
| # 1,,"", ," ",f,"g","h""h",help,"help" |
| |
| =head3 verbatim |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ verbatim => 1 }); |
| $csv->verbatim (0); |
| my $f = $csv->verbatim; |
| |
| This is a quite controversial attribute to set, but makes some hard things |
| possible. |
| |
| The rationale behind this attribute is to tell the parser that the normally |
| special characters newline (C<NL>) and Carriage Return (C<CR>) will not be |
| special when this flag is set, and be dealt with as being ordinary binary |
| characters. This will ease working with data with embedded newlines. |
| |
| When C<verbatim> is used with L</getline>, L</getline> auto-C<chomp>'s |
| every line. |
| |
| Imagine a file format like |
| |
| M^^Hans^Janssen^Klas 2\n2A^Ja^11-06-2007#\r\n |
| |
| where, the line ending is a very specific C<"#\r\n">, and the sep_char is a |
| C<^> (caret). None of the fields is quoted, but embedded binary data is |
| likely to be present. With the specific line ending, this should not be too |
| hard to detect. |
| |
| By default, Text::CSV' parse function is instructed to only know about |
| C<"\n"> and C<"\r"> to be legal line endings, and so has to deal with the |
| embedded newline as a real C<end-of-line>, so it can scan the next line if |
| binary is true, and the newline is inside a quoted field. With this option, |
| we tell L</parse> to parse the line as if C<"\n"> is just nothing more than |
| a binary character. |
| |
| For L</parse> this means that the parser has no more idea about line ending |
| and L</getline> C<chomp>s line endings on reading. |
| |
| =head3 types |
| |
| A set of column types; the attribute is immediately passed to the L</types> |
| method. |
| |
| =head3 callbacks |
| |
| See the L</Callbacks> section below. |
| |
| =head3 accessors |
| |
| To sum it up, |
| |
| $csv = Text::CSV->new (); |
| |
| is equivalent to |
| |
| $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ |
| eol => undef, # \r, \n, or \r\n |
| sep_char => ',', |
| sep => undef, |
| quote_char => '"', |
| quote => undef, |
| escape_char => '"', |
| binary => 0, |
| decode_utf8 => 1, |
| auto_diag => 0, |
| diag_verbose => 0, |
| blank_is_undef => 0, |
| empty_is_undef => 0, |
| allow_whitespace => 0, |
| allow_loose_quotes => 0, |
| allow_loose_escapes => 0, |
| allow_unquoted_escape => 0, |
| always_quote => 0, |
| quote_empty => 0, |
| quote_space => 1, |
| escape_null => 1, |
| quote_binary => 1, |
| keep_meta_info => 0, |
| verbatim => 0, |
| types => undef, |
| callbacks => undef, |
| }); |
| |
| For all of the above mentioned flags, an accessor method is available where |
| you can inquire the current value, or change the value |
| |
| my $quote = $csv->quote_char; |
| $csv->binary (1); |
| |
| It is not wise to change these settings halfway through writing C<CSV> data |
| to a stream. If however you want to create a new stream using the available |
| C<CSV> object, there is no harm in changing them. |
| |
| If the L</new> constructor call fails, it returns C<undef>, and makes the |
| fail reason available through the L</error_diag> method. |
| |
| $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ ecs_char => 1 }) or |
| die "".Text::CSV->error_diag (); |
| |
| L</error_diag> will return a string like |
| |
| "INI - Unknown attribute 'ecs_char'" |
| |
| =head2 known_attributes |
| |
| @attr = Text::CSV->known_attributes; |
| @attr = Text::CSV::known_attributes; |
| @attr = $csv->known_attributes; |
| |
| This method will return an ordered list of all the supported attributes as |
| described above. This can be useful for knowing what attributes are valid |
| in classes that use or extend Text::CSV. |
| |
| =head2 print |
| |
| $status = $csv->print ($io, $colref); |
| |
| Similar to L</combine> + L</string> + L</print>, but much more efficient. |
| It expects an array ref as input (not an array!) and the resulting string |
| is not really created, but immediately written to the C<$io> object, |
| typically an IO handle or any other object that offers a L</print> method. |
| |
| For performance reasons C<print> does not create a result string, so all |
| L</string>, L</status>, L</fields>, and L</error_input> methods will return |
| undefined information after executing this method. |
| |
| If C<$colref> is C<undef> (explicit, not through a variable argument) and |
| L</bind_columns> was used to specify fields to be printed, it is possible |
| to make performance improvements, as otherwise data would have to be copied |
| as arguments to the method call: |
| |
| $csv->bind_columns (\($foo, $bar)); |
| $status = $csv->print ($fh, undef); |
| |
| =head2 say |
| |
| $status = $csv->say ($io, $colref); |
| |
| Like L<C<print>|/print>, but L<C<eol>|/eol> defaults to C<$\>. |
| |
| =head2 print_hr |
| |
| $csv->print_hr ($io, $ref); |
| |
| Provides an easy way to print a C<$ref> (as fetched with L</getline_hr>) |
| provided the column names are set with L</column_names>. |
| |
| It is just a wrapper method with basic parameter checks over |
| |
| $csv->print ($io, [ map { $ref->{$_} } $csv->column_names ]); |
| |
| =head2 combine |
| |
| $status = $csv->combine (@fields); |
| |
| This method constructs a C<CSV> record from C<@fields>, returning success |
| or failure. Failure can result from lack of arguments or an argument that |
| contains an invalid character. Upon success, L</string> can be called to |
| retrieve the resultant C<CSV> string. Upon failure, the value returned by |
| L</string> is undefined and L</error_input> could be called to retrieve the |
| invalid argument. |
| |
| =head2 string |
| |
| $line = $csv->string (); |
| |
| This method returns the input to L</parse> or the resultant C<CSV> string |
| of L</combine>, whichever was called more recently. |
| |
| =head2 getline |
| |
| $colref = $csv->getline ($io); |
| |
| This is the counterpart to L</print>, as L</parse> is the counterpart to |
| L</combine>: it parses a row from the C<$io> handle using the L</getline> |
| method associated with C<$io> and parses this row into an array ref. This |
| array ref is returned by the function or C<undef> for failure. When C<$io> |
| does not support C<getline>, you are likely to hit errors. |
| |
| When fields are bound with L</bind_columns> the return value is a reference |
| to an empty list. |
| |
| The L</string>, L</fields>, and L</status> methods are meaningless again. |
| |
| =head2 getline_all |
| |
| $arrayref = $csv->getline_all ($io); |
| $arrayref = $csv->getline_all ($io, $offset); |
| $arrayref = $csv->getline_all ($io, $offset, $length); |
| |
| This will return a reference to a list of L<getline ($io)|/getline> results. |
| In this call, C<keep_meta_info> is disabled. If C<$offset> is negative, as |
| with C<splice>, only the last C<abs ($offset)> records of C<$io> are taken |
| into consideration. |
| |
| Given a CSV file with 10 lines: |
| |
| lines call |
| ----- --------------------------------------------------------- |
| 0..9 $csv->getline_all ($io) # all |
| 0..9 $csv->getline_all ($io, 0) # all |
| 8..9 $csv->getline_all ($io, 8) # start at 8 |
| - $csv->getline_all ($io, 0, 0) # start at 0 first 0 rows |
| 0..4 $csv->getline_all ($io, 0, 5) # start at 0 first 5 rows |
| 4..5 $csv->getline_all ($io, 4, 2) # start at 4 first 2 rows |
| 8..9 $csv->getline_all ($io, -2) # last 2 rows |
| 6..7 $csv->getline_all ($io, -4, 2) # first 2 of last 4 rows |
| |
| =head2 getline_hr |
| |
| The L</getline_hr> and L</column_names> methods work together to allow you |
| to have rows returned as hashrefs. You must call L</column_names> first to |
| declare your column names. |
| |
| $csv->column_names (qw( code name price description )); |
| $hr = $csv->getline_hr ($io); |
| print "Price for $hr->{name} is $hr->{price} EUR\n"; |
| |
| L</getline_hr> will croak if called before L</column_names>. |
| |
| Note that L</getline_hr> creates a hashref for every row and will be much |
| slower than the combined use of L</bind_columns> and L</getline> but still |
| offering the same ease of use hashref inside the loop: |
| |
| my @cols = @{$csv->getline ($io)}; |
| $csv->column_names (@cols); |
| while (my $row = $csv->getline_hr ($io)) { |
| print $row->{price}; |
| } |
| |
| Could easily be rewritten to the much faster: |
| |
| my @cols = @{$csv->getline ($io)}; |
| my $row = {}; |
| $csv->bind_columns (\@{$row}{@cols}); |
| while ($csv->getline ($io)) { |
| print $row->{price}; |
| } |
| |
| Your mileage may vary for the size of the data and the number of rows. |
| |
| =head2 getline_hr_all |
| |
| $arrayref = $csv->getline_hr_all ($io); |
| $arrayref = $csv->getline_hr_all ($io, $offset); |
| $arrayref = $csv->getline_hr_all ($io, $offset, $length); |
| |
| This will return a reference to a list of L<getline_hr ($io)|/getline_hr> |
| results. In this call, L<C<keep_meta_info>|/keep_meta_info> is disabled. |
| |
| =head2 parse |
| |
| $status = $csv->parse ($line); |
| |
| This method decomposes a C<CSV> string into fields, returning success or |
| failure. Failure can result from a lack of argument or the given C<CSV> |
| string is improperly formatted. Upon success, L</fields> can be called to |
| retrieve the decomposed fields. Upon failure calling L</fields> will return |
| undefined data and L</error_input> can be called to retrieve the invalid |
| argument. |
| |
| You may use the L</types> method for setting column types. See L</types>' |
| description below. |
| |
| The C<$line> argument is supposed to be a simple scalar. Everything else is |
| supposed to croak and set error 1500. |
| |
| =head2 fragment |
| |
| This function tries to implement RFC7111 (URI Fragment Identifiers for the |
| text/csv Media Type) - http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7111 |
| |
| my $AoA = $csv->fragment ($io, $spec); |
| |
| In specifications, C<*> is used to specify the I<last> item, a dash (C<->) |
| to indicate a range. All indices are C<1>-based: the first row or column |
| has index C<1>. Selections can be combined with the semi-colon (C<;>). |
| |
| When using this method in combination with L</column_names>, the returned |
| reference will point to a list of hashes instead of a list of lists. A |
| disjointed cell-based combined selection might return rows with different |
| number of columns making the use of hashes unpredictable. |
| |
| $csv->column_names ("Name", "Age"); |
| my $AoH = $csv->fragment ($io, "col=3;8"); |
| |
| If the L</after_parse> callback is active, it is also called on every line |
| parsed and skipped before the fragment. |
| |
| =over 2 |
| |
| =item row |
| |
| row=4 |
| row=5-7 |
| row=6-* |
| row=1-2;4;6-* |
| |
| =item col |
| |
| col=2 |
| col=1-3 |
| col=4-* |
| col=1-2;4;7-* |
| |
| =item cell |
| |
| In cell-based selection, the comma (C<,>) is used to pair row and column |
| |
| cell=4,1 |
| |
| The range operator (C<->) using C<cell>s can be used to define top-left and |
| bottom-right C<cell> location |
| |
| cell=3,1-4,6 |
| |
| The C<*> is only allowed in the second part of a pair |
| |
| cell=3,2-*,2 # row 3 till end, only column 2 |
| cell=3,2-3,* # column 2 till end, only row 3 |
| cell=3,2-*,* # strip row 1 and 2, and column 1 |
| |
| Cells and cell ranges may be combined with C<;>, possibly resulting in rows |
| with different number of columns |
| |
| cell=1,1-2,2;3,3-4,4;1,4;4,1 |
| |
| Disjointed selections will only return selected cells. The cells that are |
| not specified will not be included in the returned set, not even as |
| C<undef>. As an example given a C<CSV> like |
| |
| 11,12,13,...19 |
| 21,22,...28,29 |
| : : |
| 91,...97,98,99 |
| |
| with C<cell=1,1-2,2;3,3-4,4;1,4;4,1> will return: |
| |
| 11,12,14 |
| 21,22 |
| 33,34 |
| 41,43,44 |
| |
| Overlapping cell-specs will return those cells only once, So |
| C<cell=1,1-3,3;2,2-4,4;2,3;4,2> will return: |
| |
| 11,12,13 |
| 21,22,23,24 |
| 31,32,33,34 |
| 42,43,44 |
| |
| =back |
| |
| L<RFC7111|http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7111> does B<not> allow different |
| types of specs to be combined (either C<row> I<or> C<col> I<or> C<cell>). |
| Passing an invalid fragment specification will croak and set error 2013. |
| |
| =head2 column_names |
| |
| Set the "keys" that will be used in the L</getline_hr> calls. If no keys |
| (column names) are passed, it will return the current setting as a list. |
| |
| L</column_names> accepts a list of scalars (the column names) or a single |
| array_ref, so you can pass the return value from L</getline> too: |
| |
| $csv->column_names ($csv->getline ($io)); |
| |
| L</column_names> does B<no> checking on duplicates at all, which might lead |
| to unexpected results. Undefined entries will be replaced with the string |
| C<"\cAUNDEF\cA">, so |
| |
| $csv->column_names (undef, "", "name", "name"); |
| $hr = $csv->getline_hr ($io); |
| |
| Will set C<< $hr->{"\cAUNDEF\cA"} >> to the 1st field, C<< $hr->{""} >> to |
| the 2nd field, and C<< $hr->{name} >> to the 4th field, discarding the 3rd |
| field. |
| |
| L</column_names> croaks on invalid arguments. |
| |
| =head2 header |
| |
| This method does NOT work in perl-5.6.x |
| |
| Parse the CSV header and set L<C<sep>|/sep>, column_names and encoding. |
| |
| my @hdr = $csv->header ($fh); |
| $csv->header ($fh, { sep_set => [ ";", ",", "|", "\t" ] }); |
| $csv->header ($fh, { detect_bom => 1, munge_column_names => "lc" }); |
| |
| The first argument should be a file handle. |
| |
| Assuming that the file opened for parsing has a header, and the header does |
| not contain problematic characters like embedded newlines, read the first |
| line from the open handle then auto-detect whether the header separates the |
| column names with a character from the allowed separator list. |
| |
| If any of the allowed separators matches, and none of the I<other> allowed |
| separators match, set L<C<sep>|/sep> to that separator for the current |
| CSV_PP instance and use it to parse the first line, map those to lowercase, |
| and use that to set the instance L</column_names>: |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ binary => 1, auto_diag => 1 }); |
| open my $fh, "<", "file.csv"; |
| binmode $fh; # for Windows |
| $csv->header ($fh); |
| while (my $row = $csv->getline_hr ($fh)) { |
| ... |
| } |
| |
| If the header is empty, contains more than one unique separator out of the |
| allowed set, contains empty fields, or contains identical fields (after |
| folding), it will croak with error 1010, 1011, 1012, or 1013 respectively. |
| |
| If the header contains embedded newlines or is not valid CSV in any other |
| way, this method will croak and leave the parse error untouched. |
| |
| A successful call to C<header> will always set the L<C<sep>|/sep> of the |
| C<$csv> object. This behavior can not be disabled. |
| |
| =head3 return value |
| |
| On error this method will croak. |
| |
| In list context, the headers will be returned whether they are used to set |
| L</column_names> or not. |
| |
| In scalar context, the instance itself is returned. B<Note>: the values as |
| found in the header will effectively be B<lost> if C<set_column_names> is |
| false. |
| |
| =head3 Options |
| |
| =over 2 |
| |
| =item sep_set |
| |
| $csv->header ($fh, { sep_set => [ ";", ",", "|", "\t" ] }); |
| |
| The list of legal separators defaults to C<[ ";", "," ]> and can be changed |
| by this option. As this is probably the most often used option, it can be |
| passed on its own as an unnamed argument: |
| |
| $csv->header ($fh, [ ";", ",", "|", "\t", "::", "\x{2063}" ]); |
| |
| Multi-byte sequences are allowed, both multi-character and Unicode. See |
| L<C<sep>|/sep>. |
| |
| =item detect_bom |
| |
| $csv->header ($fh, { detect_bom => 1 }); |
| |
| The default behavior is to detect if the header line starts with a BOM. If |
| the header has a BOM, use that to set the encoding of C<$fh>. This default |
| behavior can be disabled by passing a false value to C<detect_bom>. |
| |
| Supported encodings from BOM are: UTF-8, UTF-16BE, UTF-16LE, UTF-32BE, and |
| UTF-32LE. BOM's also support UTF-1, UTF-EBCDIC, SCSU, BOCU-1, and GB-18030 |
| but L<Encode> does not (yet). UTF-7 is not supported. |
| |
| The encoding is set using C<binmode> on C<$fh>. |
| |
| If the handle was opened in a (correct) encoding, this method will B<not> |
| alter the encoding, as it checks the leading B<bytes> of the first line. |
| |
| =item munge_column_names |
| |
| This option offers the means to modify the column names into something that |
| is most useful to the application. The default is to map all column names |
| to lower case. |
| |
| $csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => "lc" }); |
| |
| The following values are available: |
| |
| lc - lower case |
| uc - upper case |
| none - do not change |
| \&cb - supply a callback |
| |
| $csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => sub { fc } }); |
| $csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => sub { "column_".$col++ } }); |
| $csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => sub { lc (s/\W+/_/gr) } }); |
| |
| As this callback is called in a C<map>, you can use C<$_> directly. |
| |
| =item set_column_names |
| |
| $csv->header ($fh, { set_column_names => 1 }); |
| |
| The default is to set the instances column names using L</column_names> if |
| the method is successful, so subsequent calls to L</getline_hr> can return |
| a hash. Disable setting the header can be forced by using a false value for |
| this option. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head3 Validation |
| |
| When receiving CSV files from external sources, this method can be used to |
| protect against changes in the layout by restricting to known headers (and |
| typos in the header fields). |
| |
| my %known = ( |
| "record key" => "c_rec", |
| "rec id" => "c_rec", |
| "id_rec" => "c_rec", |
| "kode" => "code", |
| "code" => "code", |
| "vaule" => "value", |
| "value" => "value", |
| ); |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ binary => 1, auto_diag => 1 }); |
| open my $fh, "<", $source or die "$source: $!"; |
| $csv->header ($fh, { munge_column_names => sub { |
| s/\s+$//; |
| s/^\s+//; |
| $known{lc $_} or die "Unknown column '$_' in $source"; |
| }}); |
| while (my $row = $csv->getline_hr ($fh)) { |
| say join "\t", $row->{c_rec}, $row->{code}, $row->{value}; |
| } |
| |
| =head2 bind_columns |
| |
| Takes a list of scalar references to be used for output with L</print> or |
| to store in the fields fetched by L</getline>. When you do not pass enough |
| references to store the fetched fields in, L</getline> will fail with error |
| C<3006>. If you pass more than there are fields to return, the content of |
| the remaining references is left untouched. |
| |
| $csv->bind_columns (\$code, \$name, \$price, \$description); |
| while ($csv->getline ($io)) { |
| print "The price of a $name is \x{20ac} $price\n"; |
| } |
| |
| To reset or clear all column binding, call L</bind_columns> with the single |
| argument C<undef>. This will also clear column names. |
| |
| $csv->bind_columns (undef); |
| |
| If no arguments are passed at all, L</bind_columns> will return the list of |
| current bindings or C<undef> if no binds are active. |
| |
| Note that in parsing with C<bind_columns>, the fields are set on the fly. |
| That implies that if the third field of a row causes an error, the first |
| two fields already have been assigned the values of the current row, while |
| the rest will still hold the values of the previous row. |
| |
| =head2 eof |
| |
| $eof = $csv->eof (); |
| |
| If L</parse> or L</getline> was used with an IO stream, this method will |
| return true (1) if the last call hit end of file, otherwise it will return |
| false (''). This is useful to see the difference between a failure and end |
| of file. |
| |
| Note that if the parsing of the last line caused an error, C<eof> is still |
| true. That means that if you are I<not> using L</auto_diag>, an idiom like |
| |
| while (my $row = $csv->getline ($fh)) { |
| # ... |
| } |
| $csv->eof or $csv->error_diag; |
| |
| will I<not> report the error. You would have to change that to |
| |
| while (my $row = $csv->getline ($fh)) { |
| # ... |
| } |
| +$csv->error_diag and $csv->error_diag; |
| |
| =head2 types |
| |
| $csv->types (\@tref); |
| |
| This method is used to force that (all) columns are of a given type. For |
| example, if you have an integer column, two columns with doubles and a |
| string column, then you might do a |
| |
| $csv->types ([Text::CSV::IV (), |
| Text::CSV::NV (), |
| Text::CSV::NV (), |
| Text::CSV::PV ()]); |
| |
| Column types are used only for I<decoding> columns while parsing, in other |
| words by the L</parse> and L</getline> methods. |
| |
| You can unset column types by doing a |
| |
| $csv->types (undef); |
| |
| or fetch the current type settings with |
| |
| $types = $csv->types (); |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item IV |
| |
| Set field type to integer. |
| |
| =item NV |
| |
| Set field type to numeric/float. |
| |
| =item PV |
| |
| Set field type to string. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head2 fields |
| |
| @columns = $csv->fields (); |
| |
| This method returns the input to L</combine> or the resultant decomposed |
| fields of a successful L</parse>, whichever was called more recently. |
| |
| Note that the return value is undefined after using L</getline>, which does |
| not fill the data structures returned by L</parse>. |
| |
| =head2 meta_info |
| |
| @flags = $csv->meta_info (); |
| |
| This method returns the "flags" of the input to L</combine> or the flags of |
| the resultant decomposed fields of L</parse>, whichever was called more |
| recently. |
| |
| For each field, a meta_info field will hold flags that inform something |
| about the field returned by the L</fields> method or passed to the |
| L</combine> method. The flags are bit-wise-C<or>'d like: |
| |
| =over 2 |
| |
| =item C< >0x0001 |
| |
| The field was quoted. |
| |
| =item C< >0x0002 |
| |
| The field was binary. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| See the C<is_***> methods below. |
| |
| =head2 is_quoted |
| |
| my $quoted = $csv->is_quoted ($column_idx); |
| |
| Where C<$column_idx> is the (zero-based) index of the column in the last |
| result of L</parse>. |
| |
| This returns a true value if the data in the indicated column was enclosed |
| in L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char> quotes. This might be important for fields |
| where content C<,20070108,> is to be treated as a numeric value, and where |
| C<,"20070108",> is explicitly marked as character string data. |
| |
| This method is only valid when L</keep_meta_info> is set to a true value. |
| |
| =head2 is_binary |
| |
| my $binary = $csv->is_binary ($column_idx); |
| |
| Where C<$column_idx> is the (zero-based) index of the column in the last |
| result of L</parse>. |
| |
| This returns a true value if the data in the indicated column contained any |
| byte in the range C<[\x00-\x08,\x10-\x1F,\x7F-\xFF]>. |
| |
| This method is only valid when L</keep_meta_info> is set to a true value. |
| |
| =head2 is_missing |
| |
| my $missing = $csv->is_missing ($column_idx); |
| |
| Where C<$column_idx> is the (zero-based) index of the column in the last |
| result of L</getline_hr>. |
| |
| $csv->keep_meta_info (1); |
| while (my $hr = $csv->getline_hr ($fh)) { |
| $csv->is_missing (0) and next; # This was an empty line |
| } |
| |
| When using L</getline_hr>, it is impossible to tell if the parsed fields |
| are C<undef> because they where not filled in the C<CSV> stream or because |
| they were not read at all, as B<all> the fields defined by L</column_names> |
| are set in the hash-ref. If you still need to know if all fields in each |
| row are provided, you should enable L<C<keep_meta_info>|/keep_meta_info> so |
| you can check the flags. |
| |
| If L<C<keep_meta_info>|/keep_meta_info> is C<false>, C<is_missing> will |
| always return C<undef>, regardless of C<$column_idx> being valid or not. If |
| this attribute is C<true> it will return either C<0> (the field is present) |
| or C<1> (the field is missing). |
| |
| A special case is the empty line. If the line is completely empty - after |
| dealing with the flags - this is still a valid CSV line: it is a record of |
| just one single empty field. However, if C<keep_meta_info> is set, invoking |
| C<is_missing> with index C<0> will now return true. |
| |
| =head2 status |
| |
| $status = $csv->status (); |
| |
| This method returns the status of the last invoked L</combine> or L</parse> |
| call. Status is success (true: C<1>) or failure (false: C<undef> or C<0>). |
| |
| =head2 error_input |
| |
| $bad_argument = $csv->error_input (); |
| |
| This method returns the erroneous argument (if it exists) of L</combine> or |
| L</parse>, whichever was called more recently. If the last invocation was |
| successful, C<error_input> will return C<undef>. |
| |
| =head2 error_diag |
| |
| Text::CSV->error_diag (); |
| $csv->error_diag (); |
| $error_code = 0 + $csv->error_diag (); |
| $error_str = "" . $csv->error_diag (); |
| ($cde, $str, $pos, $rec, $fld) = $csv->error_diag (); |
| |
| If (and only if) an error occurred, this function returns the diagnostics |
| of that error. |
| |
| If called in void context, this will print the internal error code and the |
| associated error message to STDERR. |
| |
| If called in list context, this will return the error code and the error |
| message in that order. If the last error was from parsing, the rest of the |
| values returned are a best guess at the location within the line that was |
| being parsed. Their values are 1-based. The position currently is index of |
| the byte at which the parsing failed in the current record. It might change |
| to be the index of the current character in a later release. The records is |
| the index of the record parsed by the csv instance. The field number is the |
| index of the field the parser thinks it is currently trying to parse. See |
| F<examples/csv-check> for how this can be used. |
| |
| If called in scalar context, it will return the diagnostics in a single |
| scalar, a-la C<$!>. It will contain the error code in numeric context, and |
| the diagnostics message in string context. |
| |
| When called as a class method or a direct function call, the diagnostics |
| are that of the last L</new> call. |
| |
| =head2 record_number |
| |
| $recno = $csv->record_number (); |
| |
| Returns the records parsed by this csv instance. This value should be more |
| accurate than C<$.> when embedded newlines come in play. Records written by |
| this instance are not counted. |
| |
| =head2 SetDiag |
| |
| $csv->SetDiag (0); |
| |
| Use to reset the diagnostics if you are dealing with errors. |
| |
| =head1 ADDITIONAL METHODS |
| |
| =over |
| |
| =item backend |
| |
| Returns the backend module name called by Text::CSV. |
| C<module> is an alias. |
| |
| =item is_xs |
| |
| Returns true value if Text::CSV uses an XS backend. |
| |
| =item is_pp |
| |
| Returns true value if Text::CSV uses a pure-Perl backend. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head1 FUNCTIONS |
| |
| This whole section is also taken from Text::CSV_XS. |
| |
| =head2 csv |
| |
| This function is not exported by default and should be explicitly requested: |
| |
| use Text::CSV qw( csv ); |
| |
| This is an high-level function that aims at simple (user) interfaces. This |
| can be used to read/parse a C<CSV> file or stream (the default behavior) or |
| to produce a file or write to a stream (define the C<out> attribute). It |
| returns an array- or hash-reference on parsing (or C<undef> on fail) or the |
| numeric value of L</error_diag> on writing. When this function fails you |
| can get to the error using the class call to L</error_diag> |
| |
| my $aoa = csv (in => "test.csv") or |
| die Text::CSV->error_diag; |
| |
| This function takes the arguments as key-value pairs. This can be passed as |
| a list or as an anonymous hash: |
| |
| my $aoa = csv ( in => "test.csv", sep_char => ";"); |
| my $aoh = csv ({ in => $fh, headers => "auto" }); |
| |
| The arguments passed consist of two parts: the arguments to L</csv> itself |
| and the optional attributes to the C<CSV> object used inside the function |
| as enumerated and explained in L</new>. |
| |
| If not overridden, the default option used for CSV is |
| |
| auto_diag => 1 |
| escape_null => 0 |
| |
| The option that is always set and cannot be altered is |
| |
| binary => 1 |
| |
| As this function will likely be used in one-liners, it allows C<quote> to |
| be abbreviated as C<quo>, and C<escape_char> to be abbreviated as C<esc> |
| or C<escape>. |
| |
| Alternative invocations: |
| |
| my $aoa = Text::CSV::csv (in => "file.csv"); |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new (); |
| my $aoa = $csv->csv (in => "file.csv"); |
| |
| In the latter case, the object attributes are used from the existing object |
| and the attribute arguments in the function call are ignored: |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ sep_char => ";" }); |
| my $aoh = $csv->csv (in => "file.csv", bom => 1); |
| |
| will parse using C<;> as C<sep_char>, not C<,>. |
| |
| =head3 in |
| |
| Used to specify the source. C<in> can be a file name (e.g. C<"file.csv">), |
| which will be opened for reading and closed when finished, a file handle |
| (e.g. C<$fh> or C<FH>), a reference to a glob (e.g. C<\*ARGV>), the glob |
| itself (e.g. C<*STDIN>), or a reference to a scalar (e.g. C<\q{1,2,"csv"}>). |
| |
| When used with L</out>, C<in> should be a reference to a CSV structure (AoA |
| or AoH) or a CODE-ref that returns an array-reference or a hash-reference. |
| The code-ref will be invoked with no arguments. |
| |
| my $aoa = csv (in => "file.csv"); |
| |
| open my $fh, "<", "file.csv"; |
| my $aoa = csv (in => $fh); |
| |
| my $csv = [ [qw( Foo Bar )], [ 1, 2 ], [ 2, 3 ]]; |
| my $err = csv (in => $csv, out => "file.csv"); |
| |
| If called in void context without the L</out> attribute, the resulting ref |
| will be used as input to a subsequent call to csv: |
| |
| csv (in => "file.csv", filter => { 2 => sub { length > 2 }}) |
| |
| will be a shortcut to |
| |
| csv (in => csv (in => "file.csv", filter => { 2 => sub { length > 2 }})) |
| |
| where, in the absence of the C<out> attribute, this is a shortcut to |
| |
| csv (in => csv (in => "file.csv", filter => { 2 => sub { length > 2 }}), |
| out => *STDOUT) |
| |
| =head3 out |
| |
| In output mode, the default CSV options when producing CSV are |
| |
| eol => "\r\n" |
| |
| The L</fragment> attribute is ignored in output mode. |
| |
| C<out> can be a file name (e.g. C<"file.csv">), which will be opened for |
| writing and closed when finished, a file handle (e.g. C<$fh> or C<FH>), a |
| reference to a glob (e.g. C<\*STDOUT>), or the glob itself (e.g. C<*STDOUT>). |
| |
| csv (in => sub { $sth->fetch }, out => "dump.csv"); |
| csv (in => sub { $sth->fetchrow_hashref }, out => "dump.csv", |
| headers => $sth->{NAME_lc}); |
| |
| When a code-ref is used for C<in>, the output is generated per invocation, |
| so no buffering is involved. This implies that there is no size restriction |
| on the number of records. The C<csv> function ends when the coderef returns |
| a false value. |
| |
| =head3 encoding |
| |
| If passed, it should be an encoding accepted by the C<:encoding()> option |
| to C<open>. There is no default value. This attribute does not work in perl |
| 5.6.x. C<encoding> can be abbreviated to C<enc> for ease of use in command |
| line invocations. |
| |
| If C<encoding> is set to the literal value C<"auto">, the method L</header> |
| will be invoked on the opened stream to check if there is a BOM and set the |
| encoding accordingly. This is equal to passing a true value in the option |
| L<C<detect_bom>|/detect_bom>. |
| |
| =head3 detect_bom |
| |
| If C<detect_bom> is given, the method L</header> will be invoked on the |
| opened stream to check if there is a BOM and set the encoding accordingly. |
| |
| C<detect_bom> can be abbreviated to C<bom>. |
| |
| This is the same as setting L<C<encoding>|/encoding> to C<"auto">. |
| |
| Note that as L</header> is invoked, its default is to also set the headers. |
| |
| =head3 headers |
| |
| If this attribute is not given, the default behavior is to produce an array |
| of arrays. |
| |
| If C<headers> is supplied, it should be an anonymous list of column names, |
| an anonymous hashref, a coderef, or a literal flag: C<auto>, C<lc>, C<uc>, |
| or C<skip>. |
| |
| =over 2 |
| |
| =item skip |
| |
| When C<skip> is used, the header will not be included in the output. |
| |
| my $aoa = csv (in => $fh, headers => "skip"); |
| |
| =item auto |
| |
| If C<auto> is used, the first line of the C<CSV> source will be read as the |
| list of field headers and used to produce an array of hashes. |
| |
| my $aoh = csv (in => $fh, headers => "auto"); |
| |
| =item lc |
| |
| If C<lc> is used, the first line of the C<CSV> source will be read as the |
| list of field headers mapped to lower case and used to produce an array of |
| hashes. This is a variation of C<auto>. |
| |
| my $aoh = csv (in => $fh, headers => "lc"); |
| |
| =item uc |
| |
| If C<uc> is used, the first line of the C<CSV> source will be read as the |
| list of field headers mapped to upper case and used to produce an array of |
| hashes. This is a variation of C<auto>. |
| |
| my $aoh = csv (in => $fh, headers => "uc"); |
| |
| =item CODE |
| |
| If a coderef is used, the first line of the C<CSV> source will be read as |
| the list of mangled field headers in which each field is passed as the only |
| argument to the coderef. This list is used to produce an array of hashes. |
| |
| my $aoh = csv (in => $fh, |
| headers => sub { lc ($_[0]) =~ s/kode/code/gr }); |
| |
| this example is a variation of using C<lc> where all occurrences of C<kode> |
| are replaced with C<code>. |
| |
| =item ARRAY |
| |
| If C<headers> is an anonymous list, the entries in the list will be used |
| as field names. The first line is considered data instead of headers. |
| |
| my $aoh = csv (in => $fh, headers => [qw( Foo Bar )]); |
| csv (in => $aoa, out => $fh, headers => [qw( code description price )]); |
| |
| =item HASH |
| |
| If C<headers> is an hash reference, this implies C<auto>, but header fields |
| for that exist as key in the hashref will be replaced by the value for that |
| key. Given a CSV file like |
| |
| post-kode,city,name,id number,fubble |
| 1234AA,Duckstad,Donald,13,"X313DF" |
| |
| using |
| |
| csv (headers => { "post-kode" => "pc", "id number" => "ID" }, ... |
| |
| will return an entry like |
| |
| { pc => "1234AA", |
| city => "Duckstad", |
| name => "Donald", |
| ID => "13", |
| fubble => "X313DF", |
| } |
| |
| =back |
| |
| See also L<C<munge_column_names>|/munge_column_names> and |
| L<C<set_column_names>|/set_column_names>. |
| |
| =head3 munge_column_names |
| |
| If C<munge_column_names> is set, the method L</header> is invoked on the |
| opened stream with all matching arguments to detect and set the headers. |
| |
| C<munge_column_names> can be abbreviated to C<munge>. |
| |
| =head3 key |
| |
| If passed, will default L<C<headers>|/headers> to C<"auto"> and return a |
| hashref instead of an array of hashes. |
| |
| my $ref = csv (in => "test.csv", key => "code"); |
| |
| with test.csv like |
| |
| code,product,price,color |
| 1,pc,850,gray |
| 2,keyboard,12,white |
| 3,mouse,5,black |
| |
| will return |
| |
| { 1 => { |
| code => 1, |
| color => 'gray', |
| price => 850, |
| product => 'pc' |
| }, |
| 2 => { |
| code => 2, |
| color => 'white', |
| price => 12, |
| product => 'keyboard' |
| }, |
| 3 => { |
| code => 3, |
| color => 'black', |
| price => 5, |
| product => 'mouse' |
| } |
| } |
| |
| =head3 fragment |
| |
| Only output the fragment as defined in the L</fragment> method. This option |
| is ignored when I<generating> C<CSV>. See L</out>. |
| |
| Combining all of them could give something like |
| |
| use Text::CSV qw( csv ); |
| my $aoh = csv ( |
| in => "test.txt", |
| encoding => "utf-8", |
| headers => "auto", |
| sep_char => "|", |
| fragment => "row=3;6-9;15-*", |
| ); |
| say $aoh->[15]{Foo}; |
| |
| =head3 sep_set |
| |
| If C<sep_set> is set, the method L</header> is invoked on the opened stream |
| to detect and set L<C<sep_char>|/sep_char> with the given set. |
| |
| C<sep_set> can be abbreviated to C<seps>. |
| |
| Note that as L</header> is invoked, its default is to also set the headers. |
| |
| =head3 set_column_names |
| |
| If C<set_column_names> is passed, the method L</header> is invoked on the |
| opened stream with all arguments meant for L</header>. |
| |
| =head2 Callbacks |
| |
| Callbacks enable actions triggered from the I<inside> of Text::CSV. |
| |
| While most of what this enables can easily be done in an unrolled loop as |
| described in the L</SYNOPSIS> callbacks can be used to meet special demands |
| or enhance the L</csv> function. |
| |
| =over 2 |
| |
| =item error |
| |
| $csv->callbacks (error => sub { $csv->SetDiag (0) }); |
| |
| the C<error> callback is invoked when an error occurs, but I<only> when |
| L</auto_diag> is set to a true value. A callback is invoked with the values |
| returned by L</error_diag>: |
| |
| my ($c, $s); |
| |
| sub ignore3006 |
| { |
| my ($err, $msg, $pos, $recno, $fldno) = @_; |
| if ($err == 3006) { |
| # ignore this error |
| ($c, $s) = (undef, undef); |
| Text::CSV->SetDiag (0); |
| } |
| # Any other error |
| return; |
| } # ignore3006 |
| |
| $csv->callbacks (error => \&ignore3006); |
| $csv->bind_columns (\$c, \$s); |
| while ($csv->getline ($fh)) { |
| # Error 3006 will not stop the loop |
| } |
| |
| =item after_parse |
| |
| $csv->callbacks (after_parse => sub { push @{$_[1]}, "NEW" }); |
| while (my $row = $csv->getline ($fh)) { |
| $row->[-1] eq "NEW"; |
| } |
| |
| This callback is invoked after parsing with L</getline> only if no error |
| occurred. The callback is invoked with two arguments: the current C<CSV> |
| parser object and an array reference to the fields parsed. |
| |
| The return code of the callback is ignored unless it is a reference to the |
| string "skip", in which case the record will be skipped in L</getline_all>. |
| |
| sub add_from_db |
| { |
| my ($csv, $row) = @_; |
| $sth->execute ($row->[4]); |
| push @$row, $sth->fetchrow_array; |
| } # add_from_db |
| |
| my $aoa = csv (in => "file.csv", callbacks => { |
| after_parse => \&add_from_db }); |
| |
| This hook can be used for validation: |
| |
| =over 2 |
| |
| =item FAIL |
| |
| Die if any of the records does not validate a rule: |
| |
| after_parse => sub { |
| $_[1][4] =~ m/^[0-9]{4}\s?[A-Z]{2}$/ or |
| die "5th field does not have a valid Dutch zipcode"; |
| } |
| |
| =item DEFAULT |
| |
| Replace invalid fields with a default value: |
| |
| after_parse => sub { $_[1][2] =~ m/^\d+$/ or $_[1][2] = 0 } |
| |
| =item SKIP |
| |
| Skip records that have invalid fields (only applies to L</getline_all>): |
| |
| after_parse => sub { $_[1][0] =~ m/^\d+$/ or return \"skip"; } |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =item before_print |
| |
| my $idx = 1; |
| $csv->callbacks (before_print => sub { $_[1][0] = $idx++ }); |
| $csv->print (*STDOUT, [ 0, $_ ]) for @members; |
| |
| This callback is invoked before printing with L</print> only if no error |
| occurred. The callback is invoked with two arguments: the current C<CSV> |
| parser object and an array reference to the fields passed. |
| |
| The return code of the callback is ignored. |
| |
| sub max_4_fields |
| { |
| my ($csv, $row) = @_; |
| @$row > 4 and splice @$row, 4; |
| } # max_4_fields |
| |
| csv (in => csv (in => "file.csv"), out => *STDOUT, |
| callbacks => { before print => \&max_4_fields }); |
| |
| This callback is not active for L</combine>. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head3 Callbacks for csv () |
| |
| The L</csv> allows for some callbacks that do not integrate in XS internals |
| but only feature the L</csv> function. |
| |
| csv (in => "file.csv", |
| callbacks => { |
| filter => { 6 => sub { $_ > 15 } }, # first |
| after_parse => sub { say "AFTER PARSE"; }, # first |
| after_in => sub { say "AFTER IN"; }, # second |
| on_in => sub { say "ON IN"; }, # third |
| }, |
| ); |
| |
| csv (in => $aoh, |
| out => "file.csv", |
| callbacks => { |
| on_in => sub { say "ON IN"; }, # first |
| before_out => sub { say "BEFORE OUT"; }, # second |
| before_print => sub { say "BEFORE PRINT"; }, # third |
| }, |
| ); |
| |
| =over 2 |
| |
| =item filter |
| |
| This callback can be used to filter records. It is called just after a new |
| record has been scanned. The callback accepts a hashref where the keys are |
| the index to the row (the field number, 1-based) and the values are subs to |
| return a true or false value. |
| |
| csv (in => "file.csv", filter => { |
| 3 => sub { m/a/ }, # third field should contain an "a" |
| 5 => sub { length > 4 }, # length of the 5th field minimal 5 |
| }); |
| |
| csv (in => "file.csv", filter => "not_blank"); |
| csv (in => "file.csv", filter => "not_empty"); |
| csv (in => "file.csv", filter => "filled"); |
| |
| If the keys to the filter hash contain any character that is not a digit it |
| will also implicitly set L</headers> to C<"auto"> unless L</headers> was |
| already passed as argument. When headers are active, returning an array of |
| hashes, the filter is not applicable to the header itself. |
| |
| csv (in => "file.csv", filter => { foo => sub { $_ > 4 }}); |
| |
| All sub results should match, as in AND. |
| |
| The context of the callback sets C<$_> localized to the field indicated by |
| the filter. The two arguments are as with all other callbacks, so the other |
| fields in the current row can be seen: |
| |
| filter => { 3 => sub { $_ > 100 ? $_[1][1] =~ m/A/ : $_[1][6] =~ m/B/ }} |
| |
| If the context is set to return a list of hashes (L</headers> is defined), |
| the current record will also be available in the localized C<%_>: |
| |
| filter => { 3 => sub { $_ > 100 && $_{foo} =~ m/A/ && $_{bar} < 1000 }} |
| |
| If the filter is used to I<alter> the content by changing C<$_>, make sure |
| that the sub returns true in order not to have that record skipped: |
| |
| filter => { 2 => sub { $_ = uc }} |
| |
| will upper-case the second field, and then skip it if the resulting content |
| evaluates to false. To always accept, end with truth: |
| |
| filter => { 2 => sub { $_ = uc; 1 }} |
| |
| B<Predefined filters> |
| |
| Given a file like (line numbers prefixed for doc purpose only): |
| |
| 1:1,2,3 |
| 2: |
| 3:, |
| 4:"" |
| 5:,, |
| 6:, , |
| 7:"", |
| 8:" " |
| 9:4,5,6 |
| |
| =over 2 |
| |
| =item not_blank |
| |
| Filter out the blank lines |
| |
| This filter is a shortcut for |
| |
| filter => { 0 => sub { @{$_[1]} > 1 or |
| defined $_[1][0] && $_[1][0] ne "" } } |
| |
| Due to the implementation, it is currently impossible to also filter lines |
| that consists only of a quoted empty field. These lines are also considered |
| blank lines. |
| |
| With the given example, lines 2 and 4 will be skipped. |
| |
| =item not_empty |
| |
| Filter out lines where all the fields are empty. |
| |
| This filter is a shortcut for |
| |
| filter => { 0 => sub { grep { defined && $_ ne "" } @{$_[1]} } } |
| |
| A space is not regarded being empty, so given the example data, lines 2, 3, |
| 4, 5, and 7 are skipped. |
| |
| =item filled |
| |
| Filter out lines that have no visible data |
| |
| This filter is a shortcut for |
| |
| filter => { 0 => sub { grep { defined && m/\S/ } @{$_[1]} } } |
| |
| This filter rejects all lines that I<not> have at least one field that does |
| not evaluate to the empty string. |
| |
| With the given example data, this filter would skip lines 2 through 8. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =item after_in |
| |
| This callback is invoked for each record after all records have been parsed |
| but before returning the reference to the caller. The hook is invoked with |
| two arguments: the current C<CSV> parser object and a reference to the |
| record. The reference can be a reference to a HASH or a reference to an |
| ARRAY as determined by the arguments. |
| |
| This callback can also be passed as an attribute without the C<callbacks> |
| wrapper. |
| |
| =item before_out |
| |
| This callback is invoked for each record before the record is printed. The |
| hook is invoked with two arguments: the current C<CSV> parser object and a |
| reference to the record. The reference can be a reference to a HASH or a |
| reference to an ARRAY as determined by the arguments. |
| |
| This callback can also be passed as an attribute without the C<callbacks> |
| wrapper. |
| |
| This callback makes the row available in C<%_> if the row is a hashref. In |
| this case C<%_> is writable and will change the original row. |
| |
| =item on_in |
| |
| This callback acts exactly as the L</after_in> or the L</before_out> hooks. |
| |
| This callback can also be passed as an attribute without the C<callbacks> |
| wrapper. |
| |
| This callback makes the row available in C<%_> if the row is a hashref. In |
| this case C<%_> is writable and will change the original row. So e.g. with |
| |
| my $aoh = csv ( |
| in => \"foo\n1\n2\n", |
| headers => "auto", |
| on_in => sub { $_{bar} = 2; }, |
| ); |
| |
| C<$aoh> will be: |
| |
| [ { foo => 1, |
| bar => 2, |
| } |
| { foo => 2, |
| bar => 2, |
| } |
| ] |
| |
| =item csv |
| |
| The I<function> L</csv> can also be called as a method or with an existing |
| Text::CSV object. This could help if the function is to be invoked a lot |
| of times and the overhead of creating the object internally over and over |
| again would be prevented by passing an existing instance. |
| |
| my $csv = Text::CSV->new ({ binary => 1, auto_diag => 1 }); |
| |
| my $aoa = $csv->csv (in => $fh); |
| my $aoa = csv (in => $fh, csv => $csv); |
| |
| both act the same. Running this 20000 times on a 20 lines CSV file, showed |
| a 53% speedup. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head1 DIAGNOSTICS |
| |
| This section is also taken from Text::CSV_XS. |
| |
| If an error occurs, C<< $csv->error_diag >> can be used to get information |
| on the cause of the failure. Note that for speed reasons the internal value |
| is never cleared on success, so using the value returned by L</error_diag> |
| in normal cases - when no error occurred - may cause unexpected results. |
| |
| If the constructor failed, the cause can be found using L</error_diag> as a |
| class method, like C<< Text::CSV_PP->error_diag >>. |
| |
| The C<< $csv->error_diag >> method is automatically invoked upon error when |
| the contractor was called with L<C<auto_diag>|/auto_diag> set to C<1> or |
| C<2>, or when L<autodie> is in effect. When set to C<1>, this will cause a |
| C<warn> with the error message, when set to C<2>, it will C<die>. C<2012 - |
| EOF> is excluded from L<C<auto_diag>|/auto_diag> reports. |
| |
| Errors can be (individually) caught using the L</error> callback. |
| |
| The errors as described below are available. I have tried to make the error |
| itself explanatory enough, but more descriptions will be added. For most of |
| these errors, the first three capitals describe the error category: |
| |
| =over 2 |
| |
| =item * |
| INI |
| |
| Initialization error or option conflict. |
| |
| =item * |
| ECR |
| |
| Carriage-Return related parse error. |
| |
| =item * |
| EOF |
| |
| End-Of-File related parse error. |
| |
| =item * |
| EIQ |
| |
| Parse error inside quotation. |
| |
| =item * |
| EIF |
| |
| Parse error inside field. |
| |
| =item * |
| ECB |
| |
| Combine error. |
| |
| =item * |
| EHR |
| |
| HashRef parse related error. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| And below should be the complete list of error codes that can be returned: |
| |
| =over 2 |
| |
| =item * |
| 1001 "INI - sep_char is equal to quote_char or escape_char" |
| X<1001> |
| |
| The L<separation character|/sep_char> cannot be equal to L<the quotation |
| character|/quote_char> or to L<the escape character|/escape_char>, as this |
| would invalidate all parsing rules. |
| |
| =item * |
| 1002 "INI - allow_whitespace with escape_char or quote_char SP or TAB" |
| X<1002> |
| |
| Using the L<C<allow_whitespace>|/allow_whitespace> attribute when either |
| L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char> or L<C<escape_char>|/escape_char> is equal to |
| C<SPACE> or C<TAB> is too ambiguous to allow. |
| |
| =item * |
| 1003 "INI - \r or \n in main attr not allowed" |
| X<1003> |
| |
| Using default L<C<eol>|/eol> characters in either L<C<sep_char>|/sep_char>, |
| L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char>, or L<C<escape_char>|/escape_char> is not |
| allowed. |
| |
| =item * |
| 1004 "INI - callbacks should be undef or a hashref" |
| X<1004> |
| |
| The L<C<callbacks>|/Callbacks> attribute only allows one to be C<undef> or |
| a hash reference. |
| |
| =item * |
| 1005 "INI - EOL too long" |
| X<1005> |
| |
| The value passed for EOL is exceeding its maximum length (16). |
| |
| =item * |
| 1006 "INI - SEP too long" |
| X<1006> |
| |
| The value passed for SEP is exceeding its maximum length (16). |
| |
| =item * |
| 1007 "INI - QUOTE too long" |
| X<1007> |
| |
| The value passed for QUOTE is exceeding its maximum length (16). |
| |
| =item * |
| 1008 "INI - SEP undefined" |
| X<1008> |
| |
| The value passed for SEP should be defined and not empty. |
| |
| =item * |
| 1010 "INI - the header is empty" |
| X<1010> |
| |
| The header line parsed in the L</header> is empty. |
| |
| =item * |
| 1011 "INI - the header contains more than one valid separator" |
| X<1011> |
| |
| The header line parsed in the L</header> contains more than one (unique) |
| separator character out of the allowed set of separators. |
| |
| =item * |
| 1012 "INI - the header contains an empty field" |
| X<1012> |
| |
| The header line parsed in the L</header> is contains an empty field. |
| |
| =item * |
| 1013 "INI - the header contains nun-unique fields" |
| X<1013> |
| |
| The header line parsed in the L</header> contains at least two identical |
| fields. |
| |
| =item * |
| 1014 "INI - header called on undefined stream" |
| X<1014> |
| |
| The header line cannot be parsed from an undefined sources. |
| |
| =item * |
| 1500 "PRM - Invalid/unsupported argument(s)" |
| X<1500> |
| |
| Function or method called with invalid argument(s) or parameter(s). |
| |
| =item * |
| 2010 "ECR - QUO char inside quotes followed by CR not part of EOL" |
| X<2010> |
| |
| When L<C<eol>|/eol> has been set to anything but the default, like |
| C<"\r\t\n">, and the C<"\r"> is following the B<second> (closing) |
| L<C<quote_char>|/quote_char>, where the characters following the C<"\r"> do |
| not make up the L<C<eol>|/eol> sequence, this is an error. |
| |
| =item * |
| 2011 "ECR - Characters after end of quoted field" |
| X<2011> |
| |
| Sequences like C<1,foo,"bar"baz,22,1> are not allowed. C<"bar"> is a quoted |
| field and after the closing double-quote, there should be either a new-line |
| sequence or a separation character. |
| |
| =item * |
| 2012 "EOF - End of data in parsing input stream" |
| X<2012> |
| |
| Self-explaining. End-of-file while inside parsing a stream. Can happen only |
| when reading from streams with L</getline>, as using L</parse> is done on |
| strings that are not required to have a trailing L<C<eol>|/eol>. |
| |
| =item * |
| 2013 "INI - Specification error for fragments RFC7111" |
| X<2013> |
| |
| Invalid specification for URI L</fragment> specification. |
| |
| =item * |
| 2021 "EIQ - NL char inside quotes, binary off" |
| X<2021> |
| |
| Sequences like C<1,"foo\nbar",22,1> are allowed only when the binary option |
| has been selected with the constructor. |
| |
| =item * |
| 2022 "EIQ - CR char inside quotes, binary off" |
| X<2022> |
| |
| Sequences like C<1,"foo\rbar",22,1> are allowed only when the binary option |
| has been selected with the constructor. |
| |
| =item * |
| 2023 "EIQ - QUO character not allowed" |
| X<2023> |
| |
| Sequences like C<"foo "bar" baz",qu> and C<2023,",2008-04-05,"Foo, Bar",\n> |
| will cause this error. |
| |
| =item * |
| 2024 "EIQ - EOF cannot be escaped, not even inside quotes" |
| X<2024> |
| |
| The escape character is not allowed as last character in an input stream. |
| |
| =item * |
| 2025 "EIQ - Loose unescaped escape" |
| X<2025> |
| |
| An escape character should escape only characters that need escaping. |
| |
| Allowing the escape for other characters is possible with the attribute |
| L</allow_loose_escape>. |
| |
| =item * |
| 2026 "EIQ - Binary character inside quoted field, binary off" |
| X<2026> |
| |
| Binary characters are not allowed by default. Exceptions are fields that |
| contain valid UTF-8, that will automatically be upgraded if the content is |
| valid UTF-8. Set L<C<binary>|/binary> to C<1> to accept binary data. |
| |
| =item * |
| 2027 "EIQ - Quoted field not terminated" |
| X<2027> |
| |
| When parsing a field that started with a quotation character, the field is |
| expected to be closed with a quotation character. When the parsed line is |
| exhausted before the quote is found, that field is not terminated. |
| |
| =item * |
| 2030 "EIF - NL char inside unquoted verbatim, binary off" |
| X<2030> |
| |
| =item * |
| 2031 "EIF - CR char is first char of field, not part of EOL" |
| X<2031> |
| |
| =item * |
| 2032 "EIF - CR char inside unquoted, not part of EOL" |
| X<2032> |
| |
| =item * |
| 2034 "EIF - Loose unescaped quote" |
| X<2034> |
| |
| =item * |
| 2035 "EIF - Escaped EOF in unquoted field" |
| X<2035> |
| |
| =item * |
| 2036 "EIF - ESC error" |
| X<2036> |
| |
| =item * |
| 2037 "EIF - Binary character in unquoted field, binary off" |
| X<2037> |
| |
| =item * |
| 2110 "ECB - Binary character in Combine, binary off" |
| X<2110> |
| |
| =item * |
| 2200 "EIO - print to IO failed. See errno" |
| X<2200> |
| |
| =item * |
| 3001 "EHR - Unsupported syntax for column_names ()" |
| X<3001> |
| |
| =item * |
| 3002 "EHR - getline_hr () called before column_names ()" |
| X<3002> |
| |
| =item * |
| 3003 "EHR - bind_columns () and column_names () fields count mismatch" |
| X<3003> |
| |
| =item * |
| 3004 "EHR - bind_columns () only accepts refs to scalars" |
| X<3004> |
| |
| =item * |
| 3006 "EHR - bind_columns () did not pass enough refs for parsed fields" |
| X<3006> |
| |
| =item * |
| 3007 "EHR - bind_columns needs refs to writable scalars" |
| X<3007> |
| |
| =item * |
| 3008 "EHR - unexpected error in bound fields" |
| X<3008> |
| |
| =item * |
| 3009 "EHR - print_hr () called before column_names ()" |
| X<3009> |
| |
| =item * |
| 3010 "EHR - print_hr () called with invalid arguments" |
| X<3010> |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head1 SEE ALSO |
| |
| L<Text::CSV_PP>, L<Text::CSV_XS> and L<Text::CSV::Encoded>. |
| |
| |
| =head1 AUTHORS and MAINTAINERS |
| |
| Alan Citterman F<E<lt>alan[at]mfgrtl.comE<gt>> wrote the original Perl |
| module. Please don't send mail concerning Text::CSV to Alan, as |
| he's not a present maintainer. |
| |
| Jochen Wiedmann F<E<lt>joe[at]ispsoft.deE<gt>> rewrote the encoding and |
| decoding in C by implementing a simple finite-state machine and added |
| the variable quote, escape and separator characters, the binary mode |
| and the print and getline methods. See ChangeLog releases 0.10 through |
| 0.23. |
| |
| H.Merijn Brand F<E<lt>h.m.brand[at]xs4all.nlE<gt>> cleaned up the code, |
| added the field flags methods, wrote the major part of the test suite, |
| completed the documentation, fixed some RT bugs. See ChangeLog releases |
| 0.25 and on. |
| |
| Makamaka Hannyaharamitu, E<lt>makamaka[at]cpan.orgE<gt> wrote Text::CSV_PP |
| which is the pure-Perl version of Text::CSV_XS. |
| |
| New Text::CSV (since 0.99) is maintained by Makamaka, and Kenichi Ishigaki |
| since 1.91. |
| |
| |
| =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE |
| |
| Text::CSV |
| |
| Copyright (C) 1997 Alan Citterman. All rights reserved. |
| Copyright (C) 2007-2015 Makamaka Hannyaharamitu. |
| Copyright (C) 2017- Kenichi Ishigaki |
| A large portion of the doc is taken from Text::CSV_XS. See below. |
| |
| Text::CSV_PP: |
| |
| Copyright (C) 2005-2015 Makamaka Hannyaharamitu. |
| Copyright (C) 2017- Kenichi Ishigaki |
| A large portion of the code/doc are also taken from Text::CSV_XS. See below. |
| |
| Text:CSV_XS: |
| |
| Copyright (C) 2007-2016 H.Merijn Brand for PROCURA B.V. |
| Copyright (C) 1998-2001 Jochen Wiedmann. All rights reserved. |
| Portions Copyright (C) 1997 Alan Citterman. All rights reserved. |
| |
| |
| This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| it under the same terms as Perl itself. |
| |
| =cut |