Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package csv reads and writes comma-separated values (CSV) files.
A csv file contains zero or more records of one or more fields per record. Each record is separated by the newline character. The final record may optionally be followed by a newline character.
field1,field2,field3
White space is considered part of a field.
Carriage returns before newline characters are silently removed.
Blank lines are ignored. A line with only whitespace characters (excluding the ending newline character) is not considered a blank line.
Fields which start and stop with the quote character " are called quoted-fields. The beginning and ending quote are not part of the field.
The source:
normal string,"quoted-field"
results in the fields
{`normal string`, `quoted-field`}
Within a quoted-field a quote character followed by a second quote character is considered a single quote.
"the ""word"" is true","a ""quoted-field"""
results in
{`the "word" is true`, `a "quoted-field"`}
Newlines and commas may be included in a quoted-field
"Multi-line field","comma is ,"
results in
{`Multi-line field`, `comma is ,`}
Index ¶
Constants ¶
This section is empty.
Variables ¶
var ( ErrTrailingComma = errors.New("extra delimiter at end of line") ErrBareQuote = errors.New("bare \" in non-quoted-field") ErrQuote = errors.New("extraneous \" in field") ErrFieldCount = errors.New("wrong number of fields in line") )
These are the errors that can be returned in ParseError.Error
Functions ¶
This section is empty.
Types ¶
type ParseError ¶
type ParseError struct { Line int // Line where the error occurred Column int // Column (rune index) where the error occurred Err error // The actual error }
A ParseError is returned for parsing errors. The first line is 1. The first column is 0.
func (*ParseError) Error ¶
func (e *ParseError) Error() string
type Reader ¶
type Reader struct { Comma rune // Field delimiter (set to ',' by NewReader) Comment rune // Comment character for start of line FieldsPerRecord int // Number of expected fields per record LazyQuotes bool // Allow lazy quotes TrailingComma bool // Allow trailing comma TrimLeadingSpace bool // Trim leading space // contains filtered or unexported fields }
A Reader reads records from a CSV-encoded file.
As returned by NewReader, a Reader expects input conforming to RFC 4180. The exported fields can be changed to customize the details before the first call to Read or ReadAll.
Comma is the field delimiter. It defaults to ','.
Comment, if not 0, is the comment character. Lines beginning with the Comment character are ignored.
If FieldsPerRecord is positive, Read requires each record to have the given number of fields. If FieldsPerRecord is 0, Read sets it to the number of fields in the first record, so that future records must have the same field count. If FieldsPerRecord is negative, no check is made and records may have a variable number of fields.
If LazyQuotes is true, a quote may appear in an unquoted field and a non-doubled quote may appear in a quoted field.
If TrailingComma is true, the last field may be an unquoted empty field.
If TrimLeadingSpace is true, leading white space in a field is ignored.
func (*Reader) Read ¶
Read reads one record from r. The record is a slice of strings with each string representing one field.
type Writer ¶
type Writer struct { Comma rune // Field delimiter (set to ',' by NewWriter) UseCRLF bool // True to use \r\n as the line terminator // contains filtered or unexported fields }
A Writer writes records to a CSV encoded file.
As returned by NewWriter, a Writer writes records terminated by a newline and uses ',' as the field delimiter. The exported fields can be changed to customize the details before the first call to Write or WriteAll.
Comma is the field delimiter.
If UseCRLF is true, the Writer ends each record with \r\n instead of \n.
func (*Writer) Flush ¶
func (w *Writer) Flush()
Flush writes any buffered data to the underlying io.Writer. To check if an error occurred during the Flush, call Error.