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NAME

Parse::CSV - Highly flexible CSV parser for large files

VERSION

version 2.07

SYNOPSIS

  # Simple headerless comma-separated column parser
  my $simple = Parse::CSV->new(
      file => 'file.csv',
  );

  while ( my $array_ref = $simple->fetch ) {
     # Do something...
  }

... or a more complex example...

  # Parse a colon-separated variables file  from a handle as a hash
  # based on headers from the first line.
  # Then filter, so we emit objects rather than the plain hash.
  my $objects = Parse::CSV->new(
      handle => $io_handle,
      sep_char   => ';',
      names      => 1,
      filter     => sub { My::Object->new( $_ ) },
  );

  while ( my $object = $objects->fetch ) {
      $object->do_something;
  }

DESCRIPTION

Surely the CPAN doesn't need yet another CSV parsing module.

Text::CSV_XS is the standard parser for CSV files. It is fast as hell, but unfortunately it can be a bit verbose to use.

A number of other modules have attempted to put usability wrappers around this venerable module, but they have all focused on parsing the entire file into memory at once.

This method is fine unless your CSV files start to get large. Once that happens, the only existing option is to fall back on the relatively slow and heavyweight XML::SAXDriver::CSV module.

Parse::CSV fills this functionality gap. It provides a flexible and light-weight streaming parser for large, extremely large, or arbitrarily large CSV files.

Main Features

Stream-Based Parser - All parsing a line at a time.

Array Mode - Parsing can be done in simple array mode, returning a reference to an array if the columns are not named.

Hash Mode - Parsing can be done in hash mode, putting the data into a hash and returning a reference to it.

Filter Capability - All items returned can be passed through a custom filter. This filter can either modify the data on the fly, or drop records you don't need.

Writing Filters

A Parse::CSV filter is a subroutine reference that is passed the original record as $_ (not as a function argument), and should return the alternative or modified record.

A no-op filter (does not modify or drop any records) would look like the following.

  sub { $_ }

A filter that reversed the order of the columns (assuming the parser is in array mode) might look like the following.

  sub { [ reverse @$_ ] }

To drop the record, return undef from the filter. The parser will then keep pulling and parsing new records until one passes the filter.

  # Only keep records where the 'foo' field is true
  sub { $_->{foo} ? $_ : undef }

To signal an error, throw an exception

  sub {
      $_->{foo} =~ /bar/ or die "Assumption failed";
      return $_;
  }

Feel free to modify $_ as a side-effect of your filter routine - this will have no effect on anything.

METHODS

new

The new constructor creates and initialises a new CSV parser. It returns a new Parse::CSV object, or throws an exception (dies) on error. It accepts a number of params:

file
handle

To specify the CSV data source, provide either the file param, which should be the name of the file to read, or the handle param, which should be a file handle to read instead.

csv_attr

Any parameter for Text::CSV_XS's constructor can also be provided to this new method, and they will be passed on to it. Alternatively, they can be passed as a single HASH reference as the csv_attr param. For example:

  $parser = Parse::CSV->new(
      file     => 'file.csv',
      csv_attr => {
          sep_char   => ';',
          quote_char => "'",
      },
  );
names

An optional names param can be provided, which should either be an array reference containing the names of the columns:

  $parser = Parse::CSV->new(
      file  => 'file.csv',
      names => [ 'col1', 'col2', 'col3' ],
  );

or a true value that's not a reference, indicating that the column names will be read from the first line of the input:

  $parser = Parse::CSV->new(
      file  => 'file.csv',
      names => 1,
  );

If the names param is provided, the parser will map each line to a hash where the keys are the field names provided, and the values are the values found in the CSV file.

If the names param is not provided, the parser will return simple array references of the columns, treating them just like all the other rows in the file.

If your CSV file has (or might have) a <Byte-Order Mark|https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte_order_mark>, you must use the names functionality, because this lets us call the header method of Text::CSV_XS, which is the only place the BOM is handled in that module.

filter

The optional filter param will be used to filter the records if provided. It should be a CODE reference or any otherwise callable scalar, and each value parsed (either array reference or hash reference) will be available to the filter as $_ to be changed or converted into an object, or whatever you wish. See the "Writing Filters" section for more details.

fetch

Once a Parse::CSV object has been created, the fetch method is used to parse and return the next value from the CSV file.

Returns an ARRAY, HASH or the output of the filter, based on the configuration of the object, or undef in a variety of situations.

Returning undef means either some part of the parsing and filtering process has resulted in an error, or that the end of file has been reached.

On receiving undef, you should check the errstr method. If it is an empty string you have reached the end of file. Otherwise the error message will be returned. Thus, the basic usage of Parse::CSV will look like the following.

  my $parser = Parse::CSV->new(
      file => 'file.csv',
      );
  while ( my $value = $parser->fetch ) {
      # Do something...
  }
  if ( $parser->errstr ) {
      # Handle errors...
  }

NOTE: currently the "fields" and "string" methods can be used to access the most recently-read row (as an array ref or a formatted string) after using /fetch. However, this contradicts the documentation for Text::CSV_XS, which says those methods should be "meaningless" after calling getline (which fetch() internally uses to read the input). Keeping the current behavior also incurs a speed & memory penalty. Therefore, relying on "fields" and "string" to return the current data after fetch() is deprecated and will (probably) be removed in a future release.

getline

Returns the next line of the input as an array reference, without performing possible conversion to a hash, and without running any filters. This is the routine that fetch() uses internally to read its input. It may be useful if you sometimes want to do filtering and sometimes don't, or sometimes want to do hash conversion and sometimes don't, or maybe you don't need either of those things and you just want to shave all the milliseconds off that you can (but then you might be better off just using Text::CSV directly).

row

The row method returns the line number of the most-recently-read row of the CSV file.

This is a one-based count, so when you first create the parser, the value of row will be zero (unless you are using names on automatic in which case it will be 1).

combine

  $status = $csv->combine(@columns);

The combine method is provided as a convenience, and is passed through to the underlying Text::CSV_XS object.

string

  $line = $csv->string;

The string method is provided as a convenience, and is passed through to the underlying Text::CSV_XS object.

NOTE: relying on "string" to return the current data after fetch() is deprecated and will (probably) be removed in a future release. Only rely on its value after combine(). See similar warnings in "fetch" and "fields".

print

  $status = $csv->print($io, $columns);

The print method is provided as a convenience, and is passed through to the underlying Text::CSV_XS object.

fields

  @fields = $csv->fields;

The fields method is provided as a convenience, and is passed through to the underlying Text::CSV_XS object. It shows the actual row as an array.

NOTE: relying on fields to return the current data after fetch() is deprecated and will (probably) be removed in a future release. Only rely on its value after combine(). See similar warnings in "fetch" and "string".

names

  # Get the current column names in use
  my @names = $csv->names;

  # Change the column names on the fly mid stream
  $csv->names( 'fn1', 'fn2' );

The names method gets or sets the column name mapping for the parser.

If the parser has no names or fields, returns the null list.

errstr

On error, the errstr method returns the error that occured.

If the last action was NOT an error, returns the null string ''.

SUPPORT

Bugs should always be reported via the CPAN bug tracker at

http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Parse-CSV

For other issues, or commercial enhancement or support, contact the author.

AUTHORS

Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org>

CONTRIBUTORS

Uwe Sarnowski <uwes@cpan.org>

Ken Williams <kwilliams@cpan.org>

SEE ALSO

Text::CSV_XS, http://ali.as/

COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2006 - 2012 Adam Kennedy.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.