NAME¶
Text::RecordParser - read record-oriented files
SYNOPSIS¶
use Text::RecordParser;
# use default record (\n) and field (,) separators
my $p = Text::RecordParser->new( $file );
# or be explicit
my $p = Text::RecordParser->new({
filename => $file,
field_separator => "\t",
});
$p->filename('foo.csv');
# Split records on two newlines
$p->record_separator("\n\n");
# Split fields on tabs
$p->field_separator("\t");
# Skip lines beginning with hashes
$p->comment( qr/^#/ );
# Trim whitespace
$p->trim(1);
# Use the fields in the first line as column names
$p->bind_header;
# Get a list of the header fields (in order)
my @columns = $p->field_list;
# Extract a particular field from the next row
my ( $name, $age ) = $p->extract( qw[name age] );
# Return all the fields from the next row
my @fields = $p->fetchrow_array;
# Define a field alias
$p->set_field_alias( name => 'handle' );
# Return all the fields from the next row as a hashref
my $record = $p->fetchrow_hashref;
print $record->{'name'};
# or
print $record->{'handle'};
# Return the record as an object with fields as accessors
my $object = $p->fetchrow_object;
print $object->name; # or $object->handle;
# Get all data as arrayref of arrayrefs
my $data = $p->fetchall_arrayref;
# Get all data as arrayref of hashrefs
my $data = $p->fetchall_arrayref( { Columns => {} } );
# Get all data as hashref of hashrefs
my $data = $p->fetchall_hashref('name');
DESCRIPTION¶
This module is for reading record-oriented data in a delimited text file. The
most common example have records separated by newlines and fields separated by
commas or tabs, but this module aims to provide a consistent interface for
handling sequential records in a file however they may be delimited. Typically
this data lists the fields in the first line of the file, in which case you
should call "bind_header" to bind the field name (or not, and it
will be called implicitly). If the first line contains data, you can still
bind your own field names via "bind_fields". Either way, you can
then use many methods to get at the data as arrays or hashes.
METHODS¶
new¶
This is the object constructor. It takes a hash (or hashref) of arguments. Each
argument can also be set through the method of the same name.
- •
- filename
The path to the file being read. If the filename is passed and the fh is
not, then it will open a filehandle on that file and sets "fh"
accordingly.
- •
- comment
A compiled regular expression identifying comment lines that should be
skipped.
- •
- data
The data to read.
- •
- fh
The filehandle of the file to read.
- •
- field_separator | fs
The field separator (default is comma).
- •
- record_separator | rs
The record separator (default is newline).
- •
- field_filter
A callback applied to all the fields as they are read.
- •
- header_filter
A callback applied to the column names.
- •
- trim
Boolean to enable trimming of leading and trailing whitespace from fields
(useful if splitting on whitespace only).
See methods for each argument name for more information.
Alternately, if you supply a single argument to "new", it will be
treated as the "filename" argument.
bind_fields¶
$p->bind_fields( qw[ name rank serial_number ] );
Takes an array of field names and memorizes the field positions for later use.
If the input file has no header line but you still wish to retrieve the fields
by name (or even if you want to call "bind_header" and then give
your own field names), simply pass in the an array of field names you wish to
use.
Pass in an empty array reference to unset:
$p->bind_field( [] ); # unsets fields
$p->bind_header;
my $name = $p->extract('name');
Takes the fields from the next row under the cursor and assigns the field names
to the values. Usually you would call this immediately after opening the file
in order to bind the field names in the first row.
$p->comment( qr/^#/ ); # Perl-style comments
$p->comment( qr/^--/ ); # SQL-style comments
Takes a regex to apply to a record to see if it looks like a comment to skip.
data¶
$p->data( $string );
$p->data( \$string );
$p->data( @lines );
$p->data( [$line1, $line2, $line3] );
$p->data( IO::File->new('<data') );
Allows a scalar, scalar reference, glob, array, or array reference as the thing
to read instead of a file handle.
It's not advised to pass a filehandle to "data" as it will read the
entire contents of the file rather than one line at a time if you set it via
"fh".
my ( $foo, $bar, $baz ) = $p->extract( qw[ foo bar baz ] );
Extracts a list of fields out of the last row read. The field names must
correspond to the field names bound either via "bind_fields" or
"bind_header".
fetchrow_array¶
my @values = $p->fetchrow_array;
Reads a row from the file and returns an array or array reference of the fields.
fetchrow_hashref¶
my $record = $p->fetchrow_hashref;
print "Name = ", $record->{'name'}, "\n";
Reads a line of the file and returns it as a hash reference. The keys of the
hashref are the field names bound via "bind_fields" or
"bind_header". If you do not bind fields prior to calling this
method, the "bind_header" method will be implicitly called for you.
fetchrow_object¶
while ( my $object = $p->fetchrow_object ) {
my $id = $object->id;
my $name = $object->naem; # <-- this will throw a runtime error
}
This will return the next data record as a Text::RecordParser::Object object
that has read-only accessor methods of the field names and any aliases. This
allows you to enforce field names, further helping ensure that your code is
reading the input file correctly. That is, if you are using the
"fetchrow_hashref" method to read each line, you may misspell the
hash key and introduce a bug in your code. With this method, Perl will throw
an error if you attempt to read a field not defined in the file's headers.
Additionally, any defined field aliases will be created as additional accessor
methods.
fetchall_arrayref¶
my $records = $p->fetchall_arrayref;
for my $record ( @$records ) {
print "Name = ", $record->[0], "\n";
}
my $records = $p->fetchall_arrayref( { Columns => {} } );
for my $record ( @$records ) {
print "Name = ", $record->{'name'}, "\n";
}
Like DBI's fetchall_arrayref, returns an arrayref of arrayrefs. Also accepts
optional "{ Columns => {} }" argument to return an arrayref of
hashrefs.
fetchall_hashref¶
my $records = $p->fetchall_hashref('id');
for my $id ( keys %$records ) {
my $record = $records->{ $id };
print "Name = ", $record->{'name'}, "\n";
}
Like DBI's fetchall_hashref, this returns a hash reference of hash references.
The keys of the top-level hashref are the field values of the field argument
you supply. The field name you supply can be a field created by a
"field_compute".
open my $fh, '<', $file or die $!;
$p->fh( $fh );
Gets or sets the filehandle of the file being read.
field_compute¶
A callback applied to the fields identified by position (or field name if
"bind_fields" or "bind_header" was called).
The callback will be passed two arguments:
- 1.
- The current field
- 2.
- A reference to all the other fields, either as an array or
hash reference, depending on the method which you called.
If data looks like this:
parent children
Mike Greg,Peter,Bobby
Carol Marcia,Jane,Cindy
You could split the "children" field into an array reference with the
values like so:
$p->field_compute( 'children', sub { [ split /,/, shift() ] } );
The field position or name doesn't actually have to exist, which means you could
create new, computed fields on-the-fly. E.g., if you data looks like this:
1,3,5
32,4,1
9,5,4
You could write a field_compute like this:
$p->field_compute( 3,
sub {
my ( $cur, $others ) = @_;
my $sum;
$sum += $_ for @$others;
return $sum;
}
);
Field "3" will be created as the sum of the other fields. This allows
you to further write:
my $data = $p->fetchall_arrayref;
for my $rec ( @$data ) {
print "$rec->[0] + $rec->[1] + $rec->[2] = $rec->[3]\n";
}
Prints:
1 + 3 + 5 = 9
32 + 4 + 1 = 37
9 + 5 + 4 = 18
field_filter¶
$p->field_filter( sub { $_ = shift; uc(lc($_)) } );
A callback which is applied to each field. The callback will be passed the
current value of the field. Whatever is passed back will become the new value
of the field. The above example capitalizes field values. To unset the filter,
pass in the empty string.
field_list¶
$p->bind_fields( qw[ foo bar baz ] );
my @fields = $p->field_list;
print join ', ', @fields; # prints "foo, bar, baz"
Returns the fields bound via "bind_fields" (or
"bind_header").
field_positions¶
my %positions = $p->field_positions;
Returns a hash of the fields and their positions bound via
"bind_fields" (or "bind_header"). Mostly for internal use.
field_separator¶
$p->field_separator("\t"); # splits fields on tabs
$p->field_separator('::'); # splits fields on double colons
$p->field_separator(qr/\s+/); # splits fields on whitespace
my $sep = $p->field_separator; # returns the current separator
Gets and sets the token to use as the field delimiter. Regular expressions can
be specified using qr//. If not specified, it will take a guess based on the
filename extension ("comma" for ".txt," ".dat,"
or ".csv"; "tab" for ".tab"). The default is a
comma.
filename¶
$p->filename('/path/to/file.dat');
Gets or sets the complete path to the file to be read. If a file is already
opened, then the handle on it will be closed and a new one opened on the new
file.
get_field_aliases¶
my @aliases = $p->get_field_aliases('name');
Allows you to define alternate names for fields, e.g., sometimes your input file
calls city "town" or "township," sometimes a file uses
"Moniker" instead of "name."
$p->header_filter( sub { $_ = shift; s/\s+/_/g; lc $_ } );
A callback applied to column header names. The callback will be passed the
current value of the header. Whatever is returned will become the new value of
the header. The above example collapses spaces into a single underscore and
lowercases the letters. To unset a filter, pass in the empty string.
record_separator¶
$p->record_separator("\n//\n");
$p->field_separator("\n");
Gets and sets the token to use as the record separator. The default is a newline
("\n").
The above example would read a file that looks like this:
field1
field2
field3
//
data1
data2
data3
//
set_field_alias¶
$p->set_field_alias({
name => 'Moniker,handle', # comma-separated string
city => [ qw( town township ) ], # or anonymous arrayref
});
Allows you to define alternate names for fields, e.g., sometimes your input file
calls city "town" or "township," sometimes a file uses
"Moniker" instead of "name."
trim¶
my $trim_value = $p->trim(1);
Provide "true" argument to remove leading and trailing whitespace from
fields. Use a "false" argument to disable.
AUTHOR¶
Ken Youens-Clark <kclark@cpan.org>
CREDITS¶
Thanks to the following:
- •
- Benjamin Tilly
For Text::xSV, the inspirado for this module
- •
- Tim Bunce et al.
For DBI, from which many of the methods were shamelessly stolen
- •
- Tom Aldcroft
For contributing code to make it easy to parse whitespace-delimited
data
- •
- Liya Ren
For catching the column-ordering error when parsing with
"no-headers"
- •
- Sharon Wei
For catching bug in "extract" that sets up infinite loops
- •
- Lars Thegler
For bug report on missing "script_files" arg in Build.PL
BUGS¶
None known. Please use
http://rt.cpan.org/ for reporting bugs.
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (C) 2006-10 Ken Youens-Clark. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation; version 2.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more
details.