Parsing and serializing CSV
CSV is a data serialization format that is designed to be portable for table-like applications.
import { parse, stringify } from "jsr:@std/csv";
To parse a CSV string, you can use the the standard library's CSV parse function. The value is returned as a JavaScript object.
let text = `
url,views,likes
https://deno.land,10,7
https://deno.land/x,20,15
https://deno.dev,30,23
`;
let data = parse(text, {
skipFirstRow: true,
strip: true,
});
console.log(data[0].url); // https://deno.land
console.log(data[0].views); // 10
console.log(data[0].likes); // 7
In the case where our CSV is formatted differently, we are also able to provide the columns through code.
text = `
https://deno.land,10,7
https://deno.land/x,20,15
https://deno.dev,30,23
`;
data = parse(text, {
columns: ["url", "views", "likes"],
});
console.log(data[0].url); // https://deno.land
console.log(data[0].views); // 10
console.log(data[0].likes); // 7
To turn a list of JavaScript object into a CSV string, you can use the standard library's CSV stringify function.
const obj = [
{ mascot: "dino", fans: { old: 100, new: 200 } },
{ mascot: "bread", fans: { old: 5, new: 2 } },
];
const csv = stringify(obj, {
columns: [
"mascot",
["fans", "new"],
],
});
console.log(csv);
// mascot,new
// dino,200
// bread,2
Run this example locally using the Deno CLI:
deno run https://docs.deno.com/examples/scripts/parsing_serializing_csv.ts