======== csvclean ======== Description =========== Reports and fixes common errors in a CSV file. Checks ------ - Reports rows that have a different number of columns than the header row, if the :code:`--length-mismatch` option is set. - Reports columns that are empty, if the :code:`--empty-columns` option is set. .. tip:: Enable all checks with :code:`--enable-all-checks` (:code:`-a`). Fixes ----- - If a CSV has unquoted cells that contain line breaks, like: .. code-block:: none id,address,country 1,1 Main St Springfield,US 2,123 Acadia Avenue London,GB Use :code:`--join-short-rows` to attempt to correct the errors by merging short rows into a single row: .. code-block:: none id,address,country 1,"1 Main St Springfield",US 2,"123 Acadia Avenue London",GB To change the string used to join the lines, use :code:`--separator`. For example, with :code:`--separator ", "`: .. code-block:: none id,address,country 1,"1 Main St, Springfield",US 2,"123 Acadia Avenue, London",GB - If a CSV has missing delimiters, like: .. code-block:: none id,name,country 1,Alice 2,Bob,CA You can add the missing delimiters with :code:`--fill-short-rows`: .. code-block:: none id,name,country 1,Alice, 2,Bob,CA .. tip:: :doc:`csvcut` without options also adds missing delimiters! To change the value used to fill short rows, use :code:`--fillvalue`. For example, with :code:`--fillvalue "US"`: .. code-block:: none id,name,country 1,Alice,US 2,Bob,CA .. seealso:: :code:`--header-normalize-space` under :ref:`csvclean-usage`. .. note:: Every csvkit tool does the following: - Removes optional quote characters, unless the `--quoting` (`-u`) option is set to change this behavior - Changes the field delimiter to a comma, if the input delimiter is set with the `--delimiter` (`-d`) or `--tabs` (`-t`) options - Changes the record delimiter to a line feed (LF or ``\n``) - Changes the quote character to a double-quotation mark, if the character is set with the `--quotechar` (`-q`) option - Changes the character encoding to UTF-8, if the input encoding is set with the `--encoding` (`-e`) option Output ------ :code:`csvclean` attempts to make the selected fixes. Then: - If the :code:`--omit-error-rows` option is set, **only** rows that pass the selected checks are written to standard output. If not, **all** rows are written to standard output. - If any checks are enabled, **error** rows along with line numbers and descriptions are written to standard error. If there are error rows, the exit code is 1. .. _csvclean-usage: Usage ----- .. code-block:: none usage: csvclean [-h] [-d DELIMITER] [-t] [-q QUOTECHAR] [-u {0,1,2,3}] [-b] [-p ESCAPECHAR] [-z FIELD_SIZE_LIMIT] [-e ENCODING] [-S] [-H] [-K SKIP_LINES] [-v] [-l] [--zero] [-V] [FILE] Fix common errors in a CSV file. positional arguments: FILE The CSV file to operate on. If omitted, will accept input as piped data via STDIN. optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --length-mismatch Report data rows that are shorter or longer than the header row. --empty-columns Report empty columns as errors. -a, --enable-all-checks Enable all error reporting. --omit-error-rows Omit data rows that contain errors, from standard output. --label LABEL Add a "label" column to standard error. Useful in automated workflows. Use "-" to default to the input filename. --header-normalize-space Strip leading and trailing whitespace and replace sequences of whitespace characters by a single space in the header. --join-short-rows Merges short rows into a single row. --separator SEPARATOR The string with which to join short rows. Defaults to a newline. --fill-short-rows Fill short rows with the missing cells. --fillvalue FILLVALUE The value with which to fill short rows. Defaults to none. See also: :doc:`../common_arguments`. Examples ======== Process a file with data rows that are shorter and longer than the header row, and omit those rows: .. code-block:: console $ csvclean --length-mismatch --omit-error-rows examples/bad.csv 2> errors.csv column_a,column_b,column_c 0,mixed types.... uh oh,17 .. code-block:: console $ cat errors.csv line_number,msg,column_a,column_b,column_c 1,"Expected 3 columns, found 4 columns",1,27,,I'm too long! 2,"Expected 3 columns, found 2 columns",,I'm too short! .. note:: If any data rows are longer than the header row, you need to add columns manually: for example, by adding one or more delimiters (``,``) to the end of the header row. :code:`csvclean` can't do this, because it is designed to work with standard input, and correcting an error at the start of the CSV data based on an observation later in the CSV data would require holding all the CSV data in memory – which is not an option for large files. Process a file with empty columns: .. code-block:: console $ csvclean --empty-columns examples/test_empty_columns.csv 2> errors.csv a,b,c,, a,,,, ,,c,, ,,,, .. code-block:: console :emphasize-lines: 3 $ cat errors.csv line_number,msg,a,b,c,, 1,"Empty columns named 'b', '', ''! Try: csvcut -C 2,4,5",,,,, Then, use :doc:`csvcut` to exclude the empty columns: .. code-block:: console $ csvcut -C 2,4,5 examples/test_empty_columns.csv a,c a, ,c , Check whether any errors found: .. code-block:: console $ if [ csvclean -a examples/bad.csv ]; then echo "my message"; fi my message Or: .. code-block:: console $ [ csvclean -a examples/bad.csv ] && echo "my message" my message Or: .. code-block:: console $ csvclean -a examples/bad.csv >/dev/null 2>&1 $ echo $? 1 Count the number of errors found: .. code-block:: console $ csvclean -a examples/bad.csv 2>&1 >/dev/null | csvstat --count 2 View only the errors found: .. code-block:: console $ csvclean -a examples/bad.csv 2>&1 >/dev/null line_number,msg,column_a,column_b,column_c 1,"Expected 3 columns, found 4 columns",1,27,,I'm too long! 2,"Expected 3 columns, found 2 columns",,I'm too short! To change the line ending from line feed (LF or ``\n``) to carriage return and line feed (CRLF or ``\r\n``) use: .. code-block:: bash csvformat -M $'\r\n' examples/dummy.csv