palmtree / csv
CSV Reader and Writer
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Requires
- php: >=7.4
Requires (Dev)
- palmtree/php-cs-fixer-config: ^2.0
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9.5
- vimeo/psalm: ^4.9
README
A CSV reader and writer for PHP.
The Reader
class implements the Iterator
interface, loading one line into memory at a time. This means large files can be parsed
without hitting any memory limits.
Requirements
- PHP >= 7.4
Installation
Use composer to add the package to your dependencies:
composer require palmtree/csv
Usage
Reading
Reading from a CSV File
$csv = new Reader('people.csv'); foreach($csv as $row) { $name = $row['name']; if (isset($row['age'])) { echo "age is set!"; } }
Normalize Data Types
A number of different normalizers can be used to convert data from strings into certain data types. Below is contrived example using some of the currently bundled normalizers:
$csv = new Reader('/path/to/products.csv'); $csv->addNormalizers([ // Convert to integer 'product_id' => new NumberNormalizer(), // Keep data as string but trim it 'name' => new StringNormalizer(), // Convert to float, rounded to 4 decimal places 'price' => NumberNormalizer::create()->scale(4), // Convert to boolean true or false 'enabled' => new BooleanNormalizer(), // Convert to an array of integers 'related_product_ids' => new ArrayNormalizer(new NumberNormalizer()), // Custom conversion with a callback 'specials' => new CallableNormalizer(fn ($value) => json_decode($value)), ]);
No Headers
If your CSV contains no headers pass false
as the second argument to the constructor:
$csv = new Reader('people.csv', false); // Alternatively, call the setHasHeaders() method after instantiation: //$csv->setHasHeaders(false);
Header Offset
If your CSV headers are not on the first row you may specify the (zero based) row offset:
$csv = new Reader('people.csv'); // Headers are on the second row so let's set the offset to 1 $csv->setHeaderOffset(1);
Inline Reading
You may use the InlineReader
to parse a CSV string rather than a file, if it was obtained from an API call or some other means:
$csv = new \Palmtree\Csv\InlineReader('"header_1","header_2"' . "\r\n" . '"foo","bar"');
Writing
Build and Download a CSV File
$people = []; $people[] = [ 'name' => 'Alice', 'age' => '24', 'gender' => 'Female', ]; $people[] = [ 'name' => 'Bob', 'age' => '28', 'gender' => 'Male', ]; Downloader::download('filename.csv', $people);
Writing to a CSV File
$people = []; $people[] = [ 'name' => 'Alice', 'age' => '24', 'gender' => 'Female', ]; $people[] = [ 'name' => 'Bob', 'age' => '28', 'gender' => 'Male', ]; Writer::write('/path/to/output.csv', $people);
See the examples directory for more usage examples.
Advanced Usage
CSV Control
You can access the document object to change the CSV delimiter, enclosure and escape character:
$csv = new Reader('/path/to/input.csv'); $csv->setDelimiter("\t"); $csv->setEnclosure('"'); $csv->setEscapeCharacter("\\");
Line Endings
CSVs default to \r\n
line endings. Access the document object if you need to change this:
$csv = new Writer('/path/to/output.csv'); $csv->getDocument()->setLineEnding("\n");
Fine-grained Control
The document object extends PHP's SplFileObject and inherits its methods:
$csv = new Reader('/path/to/input.csv'); $csv->getDocument()->setFlags(\SplFileObject::DROP_NEW_LINE);
Configuration
If you're trying to read a CSV file in or generated by an old Mac computer you may need to include
the following snippet before creating a new Reader
instance:
if (!ini_get('auto_detect_line_endings')) { ini_set('auto_detect_line_endings', '1'); }
This is because Macs used to use \r
as a line separator. See here for more details.
License
Released under the MIT license