JS split() function that ignores separator appearing inside quotation marks - javascript

Basically, like if you were to say
var string = 'he said "Hello World"';
var splitted = string.split(" ");
the splitted array would be:
'he' 'said' '"Hello World"'
basically treating the quotation mark'd portion as a separate item
So how would I do this in javascript? Would I have to have a for loop that goes over the string checking if the scanner is inside a set of quotation marks? Or is there a simpler way?

You could use regular expressions:
var splitted = string.match(/(".*?")|(\S+)/g);
Basically it searches at first for strings with any characters between quotes (including spaces), and then all the remaining words in the string.
For example
var string = '"This is" not a string "without" "quotes in it"';
string.match(/(".*?")|(\S+)/g);
Returns this to the console:
[""This is"", "not", "a", "string", ""without"", ""quotes in it""]

First of all, I think you mean this:
var string = 'he said "Hello World"';
Now that we've got that out of the way, you were partially correct with your idea of a for loop. Here's how I would do it:
// initialize the variables we'll use here
var string = 'he said "Hello World"', splitted = [], quotedString = "", insideQuotes = false;
string = string.split("");
// loop through string in reverse and remove everything inside of quotes
for(var i = string.length; i >= 0; i--) {
// if this character is a quote, then we're inside a quoted section
if(string[i] == '"') {
insideQuotes = true;
}
// if we're inside quotes, add this character to the current quoted string and
// remove it from the total string
if(insideQuotes) {
if(string[i] == '"' && quotedString.length > 0) {
insideQuotes = false;
}
quotedString += string[i];
string.splice(i, 1);
}
// if we've just exited a quoted section, add the quoted string to the array of
// quoted strings and set it to empty again to search for more quoted sections
if(!insideQuotes && quotedString.length > 0) {
splitted.push(quotedString.split("").reverse().join(""));
quotedString = "";
}
}
// rejoin the string and split the remaining string (everything not in quotes) on spaces
string = string.join("");
var remainingSplit = string.split(" ");
// get rid of excess spaces
for(var i = 0; i<remainingSplit.length; i++) {
if(remainingSplit[i].length == " ") {
remainingSplit.splice(i, 1);
}
}
// finally, log our splitted string with everything inside quotes _not_ split
splitted = remainingSplit.concat(splitted);
console.log(splitted);​
I'm sure there are more efficient ways, but this produces an output exactly like what you specified. Here's a link to a working version of this in jsFiddle.

Related

Search in string and quote around occurrence

Working with Javascript I need to be able to search a string input from a user and replace occurrences of semicolons with commas. Issue I have ran into is I need to be able to search the string for any commas that already exist, and quote around to the last and next occurrence of the semicolon.
Example:
User input is 12345;Joran,Michael;02;17;63 it should be converted to 12345,"Joran,Michael",02,17,63
My includes is able to locate the occurrence of a comma in the original string var srch = source.includes(","); and my replace is var converted = source.replace(/;/g, ","); which works fine, just need to figure out how to get to the last/next semicolon to place the quotes.
Using an if/else depending on if srch evaluates to True -- if true, add the quotes and then convert the rest of the string and return to the user; if false, convert and return.
I'm sure there's a way to do this with regex that just hasn't came to me yet so any suggestions on what to look at would be great.
I'd do this in two steps. First match non-; characters which have at least one ,, and surround them with quotes. Then replace all ;s in the result with ,:
console.log(
'12345;Joran,Michael;02;17;63'
.replace(/[^;,]*,[^;]*/g, '"$&"')
.replace(/;/g, ',')
);
Split the string by ;
.split(';')
which gives you an array.
Convert the elements that include a ',' to "${element}"
.map(s => s.includes(',') ? `"${s}"` : s )
Convert the array back to string
.join(',')
var str = '12345;Joran,Michael;02;17;63';
var arr = str.split(";");
var letters = /^[A-Za-z]/;
var final_str = "";
for (var i = 0; i < arr.length; i++) {
final_str = arr[i].match(letters)?final_str +'"'+ arr[i]+'"'+",":final_str + arr[i]+",";
}
console.log(final_str.substring(0,final_str.length -1));

Removing commas unless inside quotes, not using regexp

I am trying to remove commas in a string unless they appear inside quotes.
var mystring = "this, is, a, test, example, \"i, dont know\", jumps" ;
var newchar = '';
mystring = mystring.split(',').join(newchar);// working correctly
document.write(mystring);
Output I have is
this is a test example "i dont know" jumps
Expected output
this is a test example "i, dont know" jumps
A couple of questions. How can I find the index of string so that inside the quotation it will include comma but outside of quotation " it will not include comma ,. I know I have to use indexOf and substring but I don't know how to format it? (No regex please as I'm new to JavaScript and I'm just focusing on the basics.)
Loop through the string, remembering whether or not you are inside a set of quotation marks, and building a new string to which the commas inside quotes are not added:
var inQuotes = false; // Are we inside quotes?
var result = ''; // New string we will build.
for (var i = 0; i < str.length; i++) { // Loop through string.
var chr = str[i]; // Extract character.
var isComma = chr === ','; // Is this a comma?
var isQuote = chr === '"'; // Is this a quote?
if (inQuotes || !isComma) { // Include this character?
if (isQuote) inQuotes = !inQuotes; // If quote, reverse quote status.
result += chr; // Add character to result.
}
}
This solution has the advantage compared to the accepted one that it will work properly even if the input has multiple quotes strings inside it.
This will work, but it's not ideal for all cases. Example: It will not work for a string with more than 2 quotation marks.
var mystring = "this, is, a, test, example, \"i, dont know\", jumps" ;
var newchar = '';
var firstIndex = mystring.indexOf("\"");
var lastIndex = mystring.lastIndexOf("\"");
var substring1 = mystring.substring(0,firstIndex).split(',').join(newchar);
var substring2 = mystring.substring(lastIndex).split(',').join(newchar);
mystring = substring1 + mystring.substring(firstIndex, lastIndex) + substring2;
document.write(mystring);
Some day you need to start using regexp, than regexr.com is your friend. The regexp solution is simple:
var mystring = "this, is, a, test, example, \"i, dont know\", jumps" ;
var newchar = '_';
mystring = mystring.match(/(".*?"|[^",\s]+)(?=\s*,|\s*$)/g).join(newchar);// working correctly
document.write(mystring);

How to separate the values of a line of .csv file which contains commas in data? [duplicate]

I have the following type of string
var string = "'string, duppi, du', 23, lala"
I want to split the string into an array on each comma, but only the commas outside the single quotation marks.
I can't figure out the right regular expression for the split...
string.split(/,/)
will give me
["'string", " duppi", " du'", " 23", " lala"]
but the result should be:
["string, duppi, du", "23", "lala"]
Is there a cross-browser solution?
Disclaimer
2014-12-01 Update: The answer below works only for one very specific format of CSV. As correctly pointed out by DG in the comments, this solution does NOT fit the RFC 4180 definition of CSV and it also does NOT fit MS Excel format. This solution simply demonstrates how one can parse one (non-standard) CSV line of input which contains a mix of string types, where the strings may contain escaped quotes and commas.
A non-standard CSV solution
As austincheney correctly points out, you really need to parse the string from start to finish if you wish to properly handle quoted strings that may contain escaped characters. Also, the OP does not clearly define what a "CSV string" really is. First we must define what constitutes a valid CSV string and its individual values.
Given: "CSV String" Definition
For the purpose of this discussion, a "CSV string" consists of zero or more values, where multiple values are separated by a comma. Each value may consist of:
A double quoted string. (may contain unescaped single quotes.)
A single quoted string. (may contain unescaped double quotes.)
A non-quoted string. (may NOT contain quotes, commas or backslashes.)
An empty value. (An all whitespace value is considered empty.)
Rules/Notes:
Quoted values may contain commas.
Quoted values may contain escaped-anything, e.g. 'that\'s cool'.
Values containing quotes, commas, or backslashes must be quoted.
Values containing leading or trailing whitespace must be quoted.
The backslash is removed from all: \' in single quoted values.
The backslash is removed from all: \" in double quoted values.
Non-quoted strings are trimmed of any leading and trailing spaces.
The comma separator may have adjacent whitespace (which is ignored).
Find:
A JavaScript function which converts a valid CSV string (as defined above) into an array of string values.
Solution:
The regular expressions used by this solution are complex. And (IMHO) all non-trivial regexes should be presented in free-spacing mode with lots of comments and indentation. Unfortunately, JavaScript does not allow free-spacing mode. Thus, the regular expressions implemented by this solution are first presented in native regex syntax (expressed using Python's handy: r'''...''' raw-multi-line-string syntax).
First here is a regular expression which validates that a CVS string meets the above requirements:
Regex to validate a "CSV string":
re_valid = r"""
# Validate a CSV string having single, double or un-quoted values.
^ # Anchor to start of string.
\s* # Allow whitespace before value.
(?: # Group for value alternatives.
'[^'\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^'\\]*)*' # Either Single quoted string,
| "[^"\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^"\\]*)*" # or Double quoted string,
| [^,'"\s\\]*(?:\s+[^,'"\s\\]+)* # or Non-comma, non-quote stuff.
) # End group of value alternatives.
\s* # Allow whitespace after value.
(?: # Zero or more additional values
, # Values separated by a comma.
\s* # Allow whitespace before value.
(?: # Group for value alternatives.
'[^'\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^'\\]*)*' # Either Single quoted string,
| "[^"\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^"\\]*)*" # or Double quoted string,
| [^,'"\s\\]*(?:\s+[^,'"\s\\]+)* # or Non-comma, non-quote stuff.
) # End group of value alternatives.
\s* # Allow whitespace after value.
)* # Zero or more additional values
$ # Anchor to end of string.
"""
If a string matches the above regex, then that string is a valid CSV string (according to the rules previously stated) and may be parsed using the following regex. The following regex is then used to match one value from the CSV string. It is applied repeatedly until no more matches are found (and all values have been parsed).
Regex to parse one value from valid CSV string:
re_value = r"""
# Match one value in valid CSV string.
(?!\s*$) # Don't match empty last value.
\s* # Strip whitespace before value.
(?: # Group for value alternatives.
'([^'\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^'\\]*)*)' # Either $1: Single quoted string,
| "([^"\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^"\\]*)*)" # or $2: Double quoted string,
| ([^,'"\s\\]*(?:\s+[^,'"\s\\]+)*) # or $3: Non-comma, non-quote stuff.
) # End group of value alternatives.
\s* # Strip whitespace after value.
(?:,|$) # Field ends on comma or EOS.
"""
Note that there is one special case value that this regex does not match - the very last value when that value is empty. This special "empty last value" case is tested for and handled by the js function which follows.
JavaScript function to parse CSV string:
// Return array of string values, or NULL if CSV string not well formed.
function CSVtoArray(text) {
var re_valid = /^\s*(?:'[^'\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^'\\]*)*'|"[^"\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^"\\]*)*"|[^,'"\s\\]*(?:\s+[^,'"\s\\]+)*)\s*(?:,\s*(?:'[^'\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^'\\]*)*'|"[^"\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^"\\]*)*"|[^,'"\s\\]*(?:\s+[^,'"\s\\]+)*)\s*)*$/;
var re_value = /(?!\s*$)\s*(?:'([^'\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^'\\]*)*)'|"([^"\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^"\\]*)*)"|([^,'"\s\\]*(?:\s+[^,'"\s\\]+)*))\s*(?:,|$)/g;
// Return NULL if input string is not well formed CSV string.
if (!re_valid.test(text)) return null;
var a = []; // Initialize array to receive values.
text.replace(re_value, // "Walk" the string using replace with callback.
function(m0, m1, m2, m3) {
// Remove backslash from \' in single quoted values.
if (m1 !== undefined) a.push(m1.replace(/\\'/g, "'"));
// Remove backslash from \" in double quoted values.
else if (m2 !== undefined) a.push(m2.replace(/\\"/g, '"'));
else if (m3 !== undefined) a.push(m3);
return ''; // Return empty string.
});
// Handle special case of empty last value.
if (/,\s*$/.test(text)) a.push('');
return a;
};
Example input and output:
In the following examples, curly braces are used to delimit the {result strings}. (This is to help visualize leading/trailing spaces and zero-length strings.)
// Test 1: Test string from original question.
var test = "'string, duppi, du', 23, lala";
var a = CSVtoArray(test);
/* Array hes 3 elements:
a[0] = {string, duppi, du}
a[1] = {23}
a[2] = {lala} */
// Test 2: Empty CSV string.
var test = "";
var a = CSVtoArray(test);
/* Array hes 0 elements: */
// Test 3: CSV string with two empty values.
var test = ",";
var a = CSVtoArray(test);
/* Array hes 2 elements:
a[0] = {}
a[1] = {} */
// Test 4: Double quoted CSV string having single quoted values.
var test = "'one','two with escaped \' single quote', 'three, with, commas'";
var a = CSVtoArray(test);
/* Array hes 3 elements:
a[0] = {one}
a[1] = {two with escaped ' single quote}
a[2] = {three, with, commas} */
// Test 5: Single quoted CSV string having double quoted values.
var test = '"one","two with escaped \" double quote", "three, with, commas"';
var a = CSVtoArray(test);
/* Array hes 3 elements:
a[0] = {one}
a[1] = {two with escaped " double quote}
a[2] = {three, with, commas} */
// Test 6: CSV string with whitespace in and around empty and non-empty values.
var test = " one , 'two' , , ' four' ,, 'six ', ' seven ' , ";
var a = CSVtoArray(test);
/* Array hes 8 elements:
a[0] = {one}
a[1] = {two}
a[2] = {}
a[3] = { four}
a[4] = {}
a[5] = {six }
a[6] = { seven }
a[7] = {} */
Additional notes:
This solution requires that the CSV string be "valid". For example, unquoted values may not contain backslashes or quotes, e.g. the following CSV string is NOT valid:
var invalid1 = "one, that's me!, escaped \, comma"
This is not really a limitation because any sub-string may be represented as either a single or double quoted value. Note also that this solution represents only one possible definition for: "Comma Separated Values".
Edit: 2014-05-19: Added disclaimer.
Edit: 2014-12-01: Moved disclaimer to top.
RFC 4180 solution
This does not solve the string in the question since its format is not conforming with RFC 4180; the acceptable encoding is escaping double quote with double quote. The solution below works correctly with CSV files d/l from google spreadsheets.
UPDATE (3/2017)
Parsing single line would be wrong. According to RFC 4180 fields may contain CRLF which will cause any line reader to break the CSV file. Here is an updated version that parses CSV string:
'use strict';
function csvToArray(text) {
let p = '', row = [''], ret = [row], i = 0, r = 0, s = !0, l;
for (l of text) {
if ('"' === l) {
if (s && l === p) row[i] += l;
s = !s;
} else if (',' === l && s) l = row[++i] = '';
else if ('\n' === l && s) {
if ('\r' === p) row[i] = row[i].slice(0, -1);
row = ret[++r] = [l = '']; i = 0;
} else row[i] += l;
p = l;
}
return ret;
};
let test = '"one","two with escaped """" double quotes""","three, with, commas",four with no quotes,"five with CRLF\r\n"\r\n"2nd line one","two with escaped """" double quotes""","three, with, commas",four with no quotes,"five with CRLF\r\n"';
console.log(csvToArray(test));
OLD ANSWER
(Single line solution)
function CSVtoArray(text) {
let ret = [''], i = 0, p = '', s = true;
for (let l in text) {
l = text[l];
if ('"' === l) {
s = !s;
if ('"' === p) {
ret[i] += '"';
l = '-';
} else if ('' === p)
l = '-';
} else if (s && ',' === l)
l = ret[++i] = '';
else
ret[i] += l;
p = l;
}
return ret;
}
let test = '"one","two with escaped """" double quotes""","three, with, commas",four with no quotes,five for fun';
console.log(CSVtoArray(test));
And for the fun, here is how you create CSV from the array:
function arrayToCSV(row) {
for (let i in row) {
row[i] = row[i].replace(/"/g, '""');
}
return '"' + row.join('","') + '"';
}
let row = [
"one",
"two with escaped \" double quote",
"three, with, commas",
"four with no quotes (now has)",
"five for fun"
];
let text = arrayToCSV(row);
console.log(text);
I liked FakeRainBrigand's answer, however it contains a few problems: It can not handle whitespace between a quote and a comma, and does not support 2 consecutive commas. I tried editing his answer but my edit got rejected by reviewers that apparently did not understand my code. Here is my version of FakeRainBrigand's code.
There is also a fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/xTezm/46/
String.prototype.splitCSV = function() {
var matches = this.match(/(\s*"[^"]+"\s*|\s*[^,]+|,)(?=,|$)/g);
for (var n = 0; n < matches.length; ++n) {
matches[n] = matches[n].trim();
if (matches[n] == ',') matches[n] = '';
}
if (this[0] == ',') matches.unshift("");
return matches;
}
var string = ',"string, duppi, du" , 23 ,,, "string, duppi, du",dup,"", , lala';
var parsed = string.splitCSV();
alert(parsed.join('|'));
I had a very specific use case where I wanted to copy cells from Google Sheets into my web app. Cells could include double-quotes and new-line characters. Using copy and paste, the cells are delimited by a tab characters, and cells with odd data are double quoted. I tried this main solution, the linked article using regexp, and Jquery-CSV, and CSVToArray. http://papaparse.com/ Is the only one that worked out of the box. Copy and paste is seamless with Google Sheets with default auto-detect options.
PEG(.js) grammar that handles RFC 4180 examples at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values:
start
= [\n\r]* first:line rest:([\n\r]+ data:line { return data; })* [\n\r]* { rest.unshift(first); return rest; }
line
= first:field rest:("," text:field { return text; })*
& { return !!first || rest.length; } // ignore blank lines
{ rest.unshift(first); return rest; }
field
= '"' text:char* '"' { return text.join(''); }
/ text:[^\n\r,]* { return text.join(''); }
char
= '"' '"' { return '"'; }
/ [^"]
Test at http://jsfiddle.net/knvzk/10 or https://pegjs.org/online.
Download the generated parser at https://gist.github.com/3362830.
People seemed to be against RegEx for this. Why?
(\s*'[^']+'|\s*[^,]+)(?=,|$)
Here's the code. I also made a fiddle.
String.prototype.splitCSV = function(sep) {
var regex = /(\s*'[^']+'|\s*[^,]+)(?=,|$)/g;
return matches = this.match(regex);
}
var string = "'string, duppi, du', 23, 'string, duppi, du', lala";
console.log( string.splitCSV() );
.as-console-wrapper { max-height: 100% !important; top: 0; }
Adding one more to the list, because I find all of the above not quite "KISS" enough.
This one uses regex to find either commas or newlines while skipping over quoted items. Hopefully this is something noobies can read through on their own. The splitFinder regexp has three things it does (split by a |):
, - finds commas
\r?\n - finds new lines, (potentially with carriage return if the exporter was nice)
"(\\"|[^"])*?" - skips anynthing surrounded in quotes, because commas and newlines don't matter in there. If there is an escaped quote \\" in the quoted item, it will get captured before an end quote can be found.
const splitFinder = /,|\r?\n|"(\\"|[^"])*?"/g;
function csvTo2dArray(parseMe) {
let currentRow = [];
const rowsOut = [currentRow];
let lastIndex = splitFinder.lastIndex = 0;
// add text from lastIndex to before a found newline or comma
const pushCell = (endIndex) => {
endIndex = endIndex || parseMe.length;
const addMe = parseMe.substring(lastIndex, endIndex);
// remove quotes around the item
currentRow.push(addMe.replace(/^"|"$/g, ""));
lastIndex = splitFinder.lastIndex;
}
let regexResp;
// for each regexp match (either comma, newline, or quoted item)
while (regexResp = splitFinder.exec(parseMe)) {
const split = regexResp[0];
// if it's not a quote capture, add an item to the current row
// (quote captures will be pushed by the newline or comma following)
if (split.startsWith(`"`) === false) {
const splitStartIndex = splitFinder.lastIndex - split.length;
pushCell(splitStartIndex);
// then start a new row if newline
const isNewLine = /^\r?\n$/.test(split);
if (isNewLine) { rowsOut.push(currentRow = []); }
}
}
// make sure to add the trailing text (no commas or newlines after)
pushCell();
return rowsOut;
}
const rawCsv = `a,b,c\n"test\r\n","comma, test","\r\n",",",\nsecond,row,ends,with,empty\n"quote\"test"`
const rows = csvTo2dArray(rawCsv);
console.log(rows);
No regexp, readable, and according to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values#Basic_rules:
function csv2arr(str: string) {
let line = ["",];
const ret = [line,];
let quote = false;
for (let i = 0; i < str.length; i++) {
const cur = str[i];
const next = str[i + 1];
if (!quote) {
const cellIsEmpty = line[line.length - 1].length === 0;
if (cur === '"' && cellIsEmpty) quote = true;
else if (cur === ",") line.push("");
else if (cur === "\r" && next === "\n") { line = ["",]; ret.push(line); i++; }
else if (cur === "\n" || cur === "\r") { line = ["",]; ret.push(line); }
else line[line.length - 1] += cur;
} else {
if (cur === '"' && next === '"') { line[line.length - 1] += cur; i++; }
else if (cur === '"') quote = false;
else line[line.length - 1] += cur;
}
}
return ret;
}
If you can have your quote delimiter be double quotes, then this is a duplicate of Example JavaScript code to parse CSV data.
You can either translate all single-quotes to double-quotes first:
string = string.replace( /'/g, '"' );
...or you can edit the regex in that question to recognize single-quotes instead of double-quotes:
// Quoted fields.
"(?:'([^']*(?:''[^']*)*)'|" +
However, this assumes certain markup that is not clear from your question. Please clarify what all the various possibilities of markup can be, per my comment on your question.
I've used regex a number of times, but I always have to relearn it each time, which is frustrating :-)
So Here's a non-regex solution:
function csvRowToArray(row, delimiter = ',', quoteChar = '"'){
let nStart = 0, nEnd = 0, a=[], nRowLen=row.length, bQuotedValue;
while (nStart <= nRowLen) {
bQuotedValue = (row.charAt(nStart) === quoteChar);
if (bQuotedValue) {
nStart++;
nEnd = row.indexOf(quoteChar + delimiter, nStart)
} else {
nEnd = row.indexOf(delimiter, nStart)
}
if (nEnd < 0) nEnd = nRowLen;
a.push(row.substring(nStart,nEnd));
nStart = nEnd + delimiter.length + (bQuotedValue ? 1 : 0)
}
return a;
}
How it works:
Pass in the csv string in row.
While the start position of the next value is within the row, do the following:
If this value has been quoted, set nEnd to the closing quote.
Else if value has NOT been quoted, set nEnd to the next delimiter.
Add the value to an array.
Set nStart to nEnd plus the length of the delimeter.
Sometimes it's good to write your own small function, rather than use a library. Your own code is going to perform well and use only a small footprint. In addition, you can easily tweak it to suit your own needs.
Regular expressions to the rescue! These few lines of code properly handle quoted fields with embedded commas, quotes, and newlines based on the RFC 4180 standard.
function parseCsv(data, fieldSep, newLine) {
fieldSep = fieldSep || ',';
newLine = newLine || '\n';
var nSep = '\x1D';
var qSep = '\x1E';
var cSep = '\x1F';
var nSepRe = new RegExp(nSep, 'g');
var qSepRe = new RegExp(qSep, 'g');
var cSepRe = new RegExp(cSep, 'g');
var fieldRe = new RegExp('(?<=(^|[' + fieldSep + '\\n]))"(|[\\s\\S]+?(?<![^"]"))"(?=($|[' + fieldSep + '\\n]))', 'g');
var grid = [];
data.replace(/\r/g, '').replace(/\n+$/, '').replace(fieldRe, function(match, p1, p2) {
return p2.replace(/\n/g, nSep).replace(/""/g, qSep).replace(/,/g, cSep);
}).split(/\n/).forEach(function(line) {
var row = line.split(fieldSep).map(function(cell) {
return cell.replace(nSepRe, newLine).replace(qSepRe, '"').replace(cSepRe, ',');
});
grid.push(row);
});
return grid;
}
const csv = 'A1,B1,C1\n"A ""2""","B, 2","C\n2"';
const separator = ','; // field separator, default: ','
const newline = ' <br /> '; // newline representation in case a field contains newlines, default: '\n'
var grid = parseCsv(csv, separator, newline);
// expected: [ [ 'A1', 'B1', 'C1' ], [ 'A "2"', 'B, 2', 'C <br /> 2' ] ]
Unless stated elsewhere, you don't need a finite state machine. The regular expression handles RFC 4180 properly thanks to positive lookbehind, negative lookbehind, and positive lookahead.
Clone/download code at https://github.com/peterthoeny/parse-csv-js
I have also faced the same type of problem when I had to parse a CSV file.
The file contains a column address which contains the ',' .
After parsing that CSV file to JSON, I get mismatched mapping of the keys while converting it into a JSON file.
I used Node.js for parsing the file and libraries like baby parse and csvtojson.
Example of file -
address,pincode
foo,baar , 123456
While I was parsing directly without using baby parse in JSON, I was getting:
[{
address: 'foo',
pincode: 'baar',
'field3': '123456'
}]
So I wrote code which removes the comma(,) with any other delimiter
with every field:
/*
csvString(input) = "address, pincode\\nfoo, bar, 123456\\n"
output = "address, pincode\\nfoo {YOUR DELIMITER} bar, 123455\\n"
*/
const removeComma = function(csvString){
let delimiter = '|'
let Baby = require('babyparse')
let arrRow = Baby.parse(csvString).data;
/*
arrRow = [
[ 'address', 'pincode' ],
[ 'foo, bar', '123456']
]
*/
return arrRow.map((singleRow, index) => {
//the data will include
/*
singleRow = [ 'address', 'pincode' ]
*/
return singleRow.map(singleField => {
//for removing the comma in the feild
return singleField.split(',').join(delimiter)
})
}).reduce((acc, value, key) => {
acc = acc +(Array.isArray(value) ?
value.reduce((acc1, val)=> {
acc1 = acc1+ val + ','
return acc1
}, '') : '') + '\n';
return acc;
},'')
}
The function returned can be passed into the csvtojson library and thus the result can be used.
const csv = require('csvtojson')
let csvString = "address, pincode\\nfoo, bar, 123456\\n"
let jsonArray = []
modifiedCsvString = removeComma(csvString)
csv()
.fromString(modifiedCsvString)
.on('json', json => jsonArray.push(json))
.on('end', () => {
/* do any thing with the json Array */
})
Now you can get the output like:
[{
address: 'foo, bar',
pincode: 123456
}]
My answer presumes your input is a reflection of code/content from web sources where single and double quote characters are fully interchangeable provided they occur as an non-escaped matching set.
You cannot use regex for this. You actually have to write a micro parser to analyze the string you wish to split. I will, for the sake of this answer, call the quoted parts of your strings as sub-strings. You need to specifically walk across the string. Consider the following case:
var a = "some sample string with \"double quotes\" and 'single quotes' and some craziness like this: \\\" or \\'",
b = "sample of code from JavaScript with a regex containing a comma /\,/ that should probably be ignored.";
In this case you have absolutely no idea where a sub-string starts or ends by simply analyzing the input for a character pattern. Instead you have to write logic to make decisions on whether a quote character is used a quote character, is itself unquoted, and that the quote character is not following an escape.
I am not going to write that level of complexity of code for you, but you can look at something I recently wrote that has the pattern you need. This code has nothing to do with commas, but is otherwise a valid enough micro-parser for you to follow in writing your own code. Look into the asifix function of the following application:
https://github.com/austincheney/Pretty-Diff/blob/master/fulljsmin.js
To complement this answer
If you need to parse quotes escaped with another quote, example:
"some ""value"" that is on xlsx file",123
You can use
function parse(text) {
const csvExp = /(?!\s*$)\s*(?:'([^'\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^'\\]*)*)'|"([^"\\]*(?:\\[\S\s][^"\\]*)*)"|"([^""]*(?:"[\S\s][^""]*)*)"|([^,'"\s\\]*(?:\s+[^,'"\s\\]+)*))\s*(?:,|$)/g;
const values = [];
text.replace(csvExp, (m0, m1, m2, m3, m4) => {
if (m1 !== undefined) {
values.push(m1.replace(/\\'/g, "'"));
}
else if (m2 !== undefined) {
values.push(m2.replace(/\\"/g, '"'));
}
else if (m3 !== undefined) {
values.push(m3.replace(/""/g, '"'));
}
else if (m4 !== undefined) {
values.push(m4);
}
return '';
});
if (/,\s*$/.test(text)) {
values.push('');
}
return values;
}
While reading the CSV file into a string, it contains null values in between strings, so try it with \0 line by line. It works for me.
stringLine = stringLine.replace(/\0/g, "" );
Try this one.
function parseCSV(csv) {
let quotes = [];
let token = /(?:(['"`])([\s\S]*?)\1)|([^\t,\r\n]+)\3?|([\r\n])/gm;
let text = csv.replace(/\\?(['"`])\1?/gm, s => s.length != 2 ? s : `_r#${quotes.push(s) - 1}`);
return [...text.matchAll(token)]
.map(t => (t[2] || t[3] || t[4])
.replace(/^_r#\d+$/, "")
.replace(/_r#\d+/g, q => quotes[q.replace(/\D+/, '')][1]))
.reduce((a, b) => /^[\r\n]$/g.test(b)
? a.push([]) && a
: a[a.length - 1].push(b) && a, [[]])
.filter(d => d.length);
}
Use the npm library csv-string to parse the strings instead of split: https://www.npmjs.com/package/csv-string
This will handle the comma in quotes and empty entries
This one is based on niry's answer but for semicolon:
'use strict';
function csvToArray(text) {
let p = '', row = [''], ret = [row], i = 0, r = 0, s = !0, l;
for (l of text) {
if ('"' === l) {
if (s && l === p) row[i] += l;
s = !s;
} else if (';' === l && s) l = row[++i] = '';
else if ('\n' === l && s) {
if ('\r' === p) row[i] = row[i].slice(0, -1);
row = ret[++r] = [l = '']; i = 0;
} else row[i] += l;
p = l;
}
return ret;
};
let test = '"one";"two with escaped """" double quotes""";"three; with; commas";four with no quotes;"five with CRLF\r\n"\r\n"2nd line one";"two with escaped """" double quotes""";"three, with; commas and semicolons";four with no quotes;"five with CRLF\r\n"';
console.log(csvToArray(test));
Aside from the excellent and complete answer from ridgerunner, I thought of a very simple workaround for when your backend runs PHP.
Add this PHP file to your domain's backend (say: csv.php)
<?php
session_start(); // Optional
header("content-type: text/xml");
header("charset=UTF-8");
// Set the delimiter and the End of Line character of your CSV content:
echo json_encode(array_map('str_getcsv', str_getcsv($_POST["csv"], "\n")));
?>
Now add this function to your JavaScript toolkit (should be revised a bit to make crossbrowser I believe).
function csvToArray(csv) {
var oXhr = new XMLHttpRequest;
oXhr.addEventListener("readystatechange",
function () {
if (this.readyState == 4 && this.status == 200) {
console.log(this.responseText);
console.log(JSON.parse(this.responseText));
}
}
);
oXhr.open("POST","path/to/csv.php",true);
oXhr.setRequestHeader("Content-type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=utf-8");
oXhr.send("csv=" + encodeURIComponent(csv));
}
It will cost you one Ajax call, but at least you won't duplicate code nor include any external library.
Ref: http://php.net/manual/en/function.str-getcsv.php
You can use papaparse.js like the example below:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<title>CSV</title>
</head>
<body>
<input type="file" id="files" multiple="">
<button onclick="csvGetter()">CSV Getter</button>
<h3>The Result will be in the Console.</h3>
<script src="papaparse.min.js"></script>
<script>
function csvGetter() {
var file = document.getElementById('files').files[0];
Papa.parse(file, {
complete: function(results) {
console.log(results.data);
}
});
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
Don't forget to include papaparse.js in the same folder.
According to this blog post, this function should do it:
String.prototype.splitCSV = function(sep) {
for (var foo = this.split(sep = sep || ","), x = foo.length - 1, tl; x >= 0; x--) {
if (foo[x].replace(/'\s+$/, "'").charAt(foo[x].length - 1) == "'") {
if ((tl = foo[x].replace(/^\s+'/, "'")).length > 1 && tl.charAt(0) == "'") {
foo[x] = foo[x].replace(/^\s*'|'\s*$/g, '').replace(/''/g, "'");
} else if (x) {
foo.splice(x - 1, 2, [foo[x - 1], foo[x]].join(sep));
} else foo = foo.shift().split(sep).concat(foo);
} else foo[x].replace(/''/g, "'");
} return foo;
};
You would call it like so:
var string = "'string, duppi, du', 23, lala";
var parsed = string.splitCSV();
alert(parsed.join("|"));
This jsfiddle kind of works, but it looks like some of the elements have spaces before them.

Javascript: String of text to array of characters

I'm trying to change a huge string into the array of chars. In other languages there is .toCharArray(). I've used split to take dots, commas an spaces from the string and make string array, but I get only separated words and don't know how to make from them a char array. or how to add another regular expression to separate word? my main goal is something else, but I need this one first. thanks
var str = " If you don't pass anything, you'll get an array containing only the original string, rather than an array containing each character."
str = str.toLowerCase();
str = str.split(/[ ,.]+/);
You can use String#replace with regex and String#split.
arrChar = str.replace(/[', ]/g,"").split('');
Demo:
var str = " If you don't pass anything, you'll get an array containing only the original string, rather than an array containing each character.";
var arrChar = str.replace(/[', ]/g,"").split('');
document.body.innerHTML = '<pre>' + JSON.stringify(arrChar, 0, 4) + '</pre>';
Add character in [] which you want to remove from string.
This will do:
var strAr = str.replace(/ /g,' ').toLowerCase().split("")
First you have to replace the , and . then you can split it:
var str = " If you don't pass anything, you'll get an array containing only the original string, rather than an array containing each character."
var strarr = str.replace(/[\s,.]+/g, "").split("");
document.querySelector('pre').innerHTML = JSON.stringify(strarr, 0, 4)
<pre></pre>
var charArray[];
for(var i = 0; i < str.length; i++) {
charArray.push(str.charAt(i));
}
Alternatively, you can simply use:
var charArray = str.split("");
I'm trying to change a huge string into the array of chars.
This will do
str = str.toLowerCase().split("");
The split() method is used to split a string into an array of
substrings, and returns the new array.
Tip: If an empty string ("") is used as the separator, the string is
split between each character.
Note: The split() method does not change the original string.
Please read the link:
http://www.w3schools.com/jsref/jsref_split.asp
You may do it like this
var coolString,
charArray,
charArrayWithoutSpecials,
output;
coolString = "If you don't pass anything, you'll get an array containing only the original string, rather than an array containing each character.";
// does the magic, uses string as an array to slice
charArray = Array.prototype.slice.call(coolString);
// let's do this w/o specials
charArrayWithoutSpecials = Array.prototype.slice.call(coolString.replace(/[', ]/g,""))
// printing it here
output = "<b>With special chars:</b> " + JSON.stringify(charArray);
output += "<br/><br/>";
output += "<b>With special chars:</b> " + JSON.stringify(charArrayWithoutSpecials)
document.write(output);
another way would be
[].slice.call(coolString)
I guess this is what you are looking for. Ignoring all symbols and spaces and adding all characters in to an array with lower case.
var str = " If you don't pass anything, you'll get an array containing only the original string, rather than an array containing each character."
str = str.replace(/\W/g, '').toLowerCase().split("");
alert(str);

Find string in array and remove

I want to find a string in an array sql and remove the string. The string would be like:
" specimen.snop_code = ''"
There will be 4 digits between the single qoutes, which could be anything. I was thinking of using regex to find the string.
Tried just using pop() but I need to target the string to be removed from the array. Note that I need to remove all instances of the string. So something like:
disease_filter = new RegExp(" specimen.snop_code = ''", 'g');
for (var i=sql.length-1; i>=0; i--) {
if (sql[i] === disease_filter) {
array.splice(i, 1);
}
}
So how can I make " specimen.snop_code = '*'" into a regular expression with a wildcard as shown between the single quotes?
You can use .replace with a regex as the first parameter:
var input = " specimen.snop_code = 'something'";
var disease_filter = input.replace(/'(.*)'/gi, "'other stuff'");
// disease_filter is now "specimen.snop_code = 'other stuff'"
edit: removed unneccesary escaping as commented.

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