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(* File: csv.mli

   Copyright (C) 2006

     Richard Jones
     email: rjones@redhat.com

     Christophe Troestler
     email: Christophe.Troestler@umons.ac.be
     WWW: http://math.umons.ac.be/anum/software/

   This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
   it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 or
   later as published by the Free Software Foundation, with the special
   exception on linking described in the file LICENSE.

   This library 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 file
   LICENSE for more details. *)


(** Read and write the CSV (comma separated values) format.

    This library should be compatible with
    {{:https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4180} RFC4180} if one sets
    [strip=false] in the creation functions.

    @author Richard Jones <rjones\@redhat.com>
    @author Christophe Troestler <Christophe.Troestler\@umons.ac.be>
 *)


type t = string list list
(** Representation of CSV data in memory.  This is a list of rows
    (also called records), each row being a list of columns. *)


(** {2 Input/output objects} *)

(** The most basic input object for best interoperability. *)
class type in_obj_channel =
object
  method input : Bytes.t -> int -> int -> int
    (** [input buf ofs len] reads up to [len] octets from the channel
        and puts them in the substring [buf.[ofs .. ofs+len-1]].
        Returns the number of octets actually read (and stored).  When
        the channel is non-blocking, and there are currently no bytes
        to read, the number 0 will be returned.

        @raise End_of_file when there are no more bytes to read. *)

  method close_in : unit -> unit
    (** Closes the channel for input. *)
end

(** The most basic output object for best interoperability. *)
class type out_obj_channel =
object
  method output : Bytes.t -> int -> int -> int
    (** [output s ofs len] writes up to [len] bytes of the substring
        [s.[ofs .. ofs+len-1]].  Return the number of bytes actually
        written.  When the channel is non-blocking, and there are
        currently no bytes to write, the number 0 must be returned.  *)

  method close_out : unit -> unit
    (** Flushes the buffer, if any, and closes the channel for output. *)
end



(** {2 Input} *)

exception Failure of int * int * string
(** [Failure(nrecord, nfield, msg)] is raised to indicate a parsing
    error for the field number [nfield] on the record number
    [nrecord], the description [msg] says what is wrong.  The first
    record and the first field of a record are numbered [1] (to
    correspond to the usual spreadsheet numbering but differing from
    [List.nth] of the OCaml representation). *)

type in_channel
(** Stateful handle to input CSV files. *)

val of_in_obj : ?separator:char -> ?strip: bool ->
                ?has_header: bool -> ?header: string list ->
                ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
                in_obj_channel -> in_channel
(** [of_in_obj ?separator ?excel_tricks in_chan] creates a new "channel"
    to access the data in CSV form available from the channel [in_chan].

    @param separator What character the separator is.  The default is
    [','].  You should be aware however that, in the countries where
    comma is used as a decimal separator, Excel will use [';'] as the
    separator.

    @param strip Whether to remove the white space around unquoted
    fields.  The default is [true] for backward compatibility reasons.

    @param has_header tells that the first row of the CSV channel is
    to be interpreted as a header (this row will not be returned by
    {!next}).  This is useful to use the functions in the {!Rows}
    module below.  Default: [false].

    @param header Supply the header to use for this CSV channel.  If
    both [header] and [has_header] are given, the names of [header]
    take precedence; if a name in [header] is [""], the one in the CSV
    header is used.  If a name appears twice, only its first
    occurrence is used.

    @param backslash_escape Whether to allow \", \n,... in quoted
    fields.  This is used by MySQL for example but is not standard CSV
    so it is set to [false] by default.

    @param excel_tricks enables Excel tricks, namely the fact that '"'
    followed by '0' in a quoted string means ASCII NULL and the fact
    that a field of the form ="..." only returns the string inside the
    quotes.  Default: [true].
 *)

val of_channel : ?separator:char -> ?strip: bool ->
                 ?has_header: bool -> ?header: string list ->
                 ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
                 Pervasives.in_channel -> in_channel
  (** Same as {!Csv.of_in_obj} except that the data is read from a
      standard channel. *)

val of_string : ?separator:char -> ?strip: bool ->
                ?has_header: bool -> ?header: string list ->
                ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
                string -> in_channel
  (** Same as {!Csv.of_in_obj} except that the data is read from a
      string. *)

val load : ?separator:char -> ?strip: bool ->
           ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool-> string -> t
  (** [load fname] loads the CSV file [fname].  If [filename] is ["-"]
      then load from [stdin].

      @param separator What character the separator is.  The default
      is [','].  You should be aware however that, in the countries
      where comma is used as a decimal separator, Excel will use [';']
      as the separator.

      @param backslash_escape Whether to allow \", \n,... in quoted
      fields.  This is used by MySQL for example but is not standard CSV
      so it is set to [false] by default.

      @param excel_tricks enables Excel tricks, namely the fact that '"'
      followed by '0' in a quoted string means ASCII NULL and the fact
      that a field of the form ="..." only returns the string inside the
      quotes.  Default: [true].  *)

val load_in : ?separator:char -> ?strip: bool ->
              ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
              Pervasives.in_channel -> t
  (** [load_in ch] loads a CSV file from the input channel [ch].
      See {!Csv.load} for the meaning of [separator] and [excel_tricks]. *)


val to_in_obj : in_channel -> in_obj_channel
  (** For efficiency reasons, the [in_channel] buffers the data from
      the original channel.  If you want to examine the data by other
      means than the methods below (say after a failure), you need to
      use this function in order not to "loose" data in the
      buffer.  *)

val close_in : in_channel -> unit
  (** [close_in ic] closes the channel [ic].  The underlying channel
      is closed as well. *)


val next : in_channel -> string list
  (** [next ic] returns the next record in the CSV file.

      @raise End_of_file if no more record can be read.

      @raise Csv.Failure if the CSV format is not respected.  The
      partial record read is available with [#current_record]. *)

val fold_left : f:('a -> string list -> 'a) -> init:'a -> in_channel -> 'a
  (** [fold_left f a ic] computes (f ... (f (f a r0) r1) ... rN)
      where r1,...,rN are the records in the CSV file.  If [f]
      raises an exception, the record available at that moment is
      accessible through {!Csv.current_record}. *)

val fold_right : f:(string list -> 'a -> 'a) -> in_channel -> 'a -> 'a
  (** [fold_right f ic a] computes (f r1 ... (f rN-1 (f rN a)) ...)
      where r1,...,rN-1, rN are the records in the CSV file.  All
      records are read before applying [f] so this method is not
      convenient if your file is large. *)

val iter : f:(string list -> unit) -> in_channel -> unit
  (** [iter f ic] iterates [f] on all remaining records.  If [f]
      raises an exception, the record available at that moment is
      accessible through {!Csv.current_record}. *)

val input_all : in_channel -> t
  (** [input_all ic] return a list of the CSV records till the end of
      the file. *)

val current_record : in_channel -> string list
  (** The current record under examination.  This is useful in order
      to gather the parsed data in case of [Failure]. *)


val load_rows : ?separator:char -> ?strip: bool ->
                ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
                (string list -> unit) -> Pervasives.in_channel -> unit
  (** @deprecated use {!Csv.iter} on a {!Csv.in_channel} created with
      {!Csv.of_channel}. *)

(************************************************************************)
(** {2 Output} *)

type out_channel

val to_out_obj : ?separator:char ->
                 ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
                 out_obj_channel -> out_channel
  (** [to_out_obj ?separator ?excel_tricks out_chan] creates a new "channel"
      to output the data in CSV form.

      @param separator What character the separator is.  The default is [','].

      @param backslash_escape Prefer to escape the separator in a
      quoted string with a backslash (e.g. "\"") instead of doubling
      it.  Also backslash-escape '\n', '\r', '\t', '\b', '\026' (as
      '\Z') and '\000' (as '\0') This is nice for interoperability but
      is nonstandard CSV to it is set to [false] by default.

      @param excel_tricks enables Excel tricks, namely the fact that
      '\000' is represented as '"' followed by '0' and the fact that a
      field with leading or trailing spaces or a leading '0' will be
      encoded as ="..."  (to avoid Excel "helping" you).  Default:
      [false].  *)

val to_channel : ?separator:char ->
                 ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
                 Pervasives.out_channel -> out_channel
  (** Same as {!Csv.to_out_obj} but output to a standard channel. *)

val to_buffer : ?separator:char ->
                ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
                Buffer.t -> out_channel
  (** Same as {!Csv.to_out_obj} but output to a buffer. *)


val output_record : out_channel -> string list -> unit
  (** [output_record oc r] write the record [r] is CSV form to the
      channel [oc]. *)

val output_all : out_channel -> t -> unit
  (** [output_all oc csv] outputs all records in [csv] to the channel
      [oc]. *)

val save_out : ?separator:char ->
               ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
               Pervasives.out_channel -> t -> unit
  (** @deprecated Save string list list to a channel. *)

val save : ?separator:char -> ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
           string -> t -> unit
  (** [save fname csv] saves the [csv] data to the file [fname]. *)

val print : ?separator:char -> ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
            t -> unit
  (** Print the CSV data. *)

val print_readable : t -> unit
  (** Print the CSV data to [stdout] in a human-readable format.  Not
      much is guaranteed about how the CSV is printed, except that it
      will be easier to follow than a "raw" output done with
      {!Csv.print}.  This is a one-way operation.  There is no easy way
      to parse the output of this command back into CSV data.  *)

val save_out_readable : Pervasives.out_channel -> t -> unit
  (** As for {!Csv.print_readable}, allowing the output to be sent to
      a channel.  *)


(************************************************************************)
(** {2 Functions to access rows when a header is present} *)

(** A row with a header. *)
module Row : sig
  type t
  (** Representation of a row whose columns are accessible both by
      indices and by headers names. *)

  val get : t -> int -> string
  (** [get row i] returns the [i]th column of the row.  The first
      column has index [0].  Since CSV allows a file to have rows of
      different lengths, this function never fails, it returns [""] if
      the column does not exist. *)

  val find : t -> string -> string
  (** [find row header] return the value of the colum labelled with
      [header] (or [""] if not such header has been declared).  *)

  val to_list : t -> string list
  (** [to_list row] convert [row] to the usual representation, the
      list being in the column order. *)

  val to_assoc : t -> (string * string) list
  (** [to_assoc row] return an associative list of the row data as
      [(header, value)].  If no header is given for a column, [""] is
      used. *)

  val with_header : t -> string list -> t
  (** [with_header row h] return the [row] with headers [h].  If a
      name in [h] is [""], the name present in [row] is used.  If a
      name is duplicated. *)
end

(** Accessing rows (when a header was provided). *)
module Rows : sig
  val header : in_channel -> string list
  (** The header declared for this channel.  *)

  val next : in_channel -> Row.t
  (** See {!Csv.next}.  If no header was declared for the channel,
      this function will work but only access using {!Row.get} will
      work. *)

  val fold_left : f:('a -> Row.t -> 'a) -> init:'a -> in_channel -> 'a
  (** See {!Csv.fold_left}. *)

  val fold_right : f:(Row.t -> 'a -> 'a) -> in_channel -> 'a -> 'a
  (** See {!Csv.fold_right}. *)

  val iter : f:(Row.t -> unit) -> in_channel -> unit
  (** See {!Csv.iter}. *)

  val input_all : in_channel -> Row.t list
  (** See {!Csv.input_all}. *)

  val load : ?separator:char -> ?strip: bool ->
             ?has_header: bool -> ?header: string list ->
             ?backslash_escape: bool -> ?excel_tricks:bool ->
             string -> Row.t list
  (** See {!Csv.load}. *)

  val current : in_channel -> Row.t
  (** See {!Csv.current_record}. *)
end

(************************************************************************)
(** {2 Functions acting on CSV data loaded in memory} *)

val lines : t -> int
  (** Return the number of lines in a CSV data. *)

val columns : t -> int
  (** Work out the (maximum) number of columns in a CSV file.  Note
      that each line may be a different length, so this finds the one
      with the most columns.  *)

val trim : ?top:bool -> ?left:bool -> ?right:bool -> ?bottom:bool -> t -> t
  (** This takes a CSV file and trims empty cells.

      All four of the option arguments ([~top], [~left], [~right], [~bottom])
      default to [true].

      The exact behaviour is:

      [~right]: If true, remove any empty cells at the right hand end of
      any row.  The number of columns in the resulting CSV structure will
      not necessarily be the same for each row.

      [~top]: If true, remove any empty rows (no cells, or containing
      just empty cells) from the top of the CSV structure.

      [~bottom]: If true, remove any empty rows from the bottom of the
      CSV structure.

      [~left]: If true, remove any empty columns from the left of the
      CSV structure.  Note that [~left] and [~right] are quite different:
      [~left] considers the whole CSV structure, whereas [~right] considers
      each row in isolation.
   *)


val square : t -> t
  (** Make the CSV data "square" (actually rectangular).  This pads
      out each row with empty cells so that all rows are the same
      length as the longest row.  After this operation, every row will
      have length {!Csv.columns}.  *)

val is_square : t -> bool
  (** Return true iff the CSV is "square" (actually rectangular).
      This means that each row has the same number of cells.  *)

val set_columns : cols:int -> t -> t
  (** [set_columns cols csv] makes the CSV data square by forcing the
      width to the given number of [cols].  Any short rows are padded
      with blank cells.  Any long rows are truncated.  *)

val set_rows : rows:int -> t -> t
  (** [set_rows rows csv] makes the CSV data have exactly [rows] rows
      by adding empty rows or truncating rows as necessary.

      Note that [set_rows] does not make the CSV square.  If you want it
      to be square, call either {!Csv.square} or {!Csv.set_columns}
      after.  *)

val set_size : rows:int -> cols:int -> t -> t
  (** [set_size rows cols csv] makes the CSV data square by forcing
      the size to [rows * cols], adding blank cells or truncating as
      necessary.  It is the same as calling [set_columns cols
      (set_rows rows csv)] *)

val sub : r:int -> c:int -> rows:int -> cols:int -> t -> t
  (** [sub r c rows cols csv] returns a subset of [csv].  The subset is
      defined as having top left corner at row [r], column [c] (counting
      from [0]) and being [rows] deep and [cols] wide.

      The returned CSV will be "square".  *)

val compare : t -> t -> int
  (** Compare two CSV files for equality, ignoring blank cells at the
      end of a row, and empty rows appended to one or the other.  This
      is "semantic" equality - roughly speaking, the two CSV files
      would look the same if opened in a spreadsheet program.  *)

val concat : t list -> t
  (** Concatenate CSV files so that they appear side by side, arranged
      left to right across the page.  Each CSV file (except the final
      one) is first squared.

      (To concatenate CSV files so that they appear from top to
      bottom, just use [List.concat]).  *)

val transpose : t -> t
(** Permutes the lines and columns of the CSV data.  Nonexistent cells
    become empty cells after transpose if they must be created. *)

val to_array : t -> string array array
val of_array : string array array -> t
(** Convenience functions to convert to and from a matrix
   representation.  [to_array] will produce a ragged matrix (not all
   rows will have the same length) unless you call {!Csv.square}
   first.  *)

val associate : string list -> t -> (string * string) list list
(** [associate header data] takes a block of data and converts each
    row in turn into an assoc list which maps column header to data cell.

    Typically a spreadsheet will have the format:
    {v
      header1   header2   header3
      data11    data12    data13
      data21    data22    data23
      ...
    v}
    This function arranges the data into a more usable form which is
    robust against changes in column ordering.  The output of the
    function is:
    {v
      [ ["header1", "data11"; "header2", "data12"; "header3", "data13"];
        ["header1", "data21"; "header2", "data22"; "header3", "data23"];
        etc. ]
    v}
    Each row is turned into an assoc list (see [List.assoc]).

    If a row is too short, it is padded with empty cells ([""]).  If
    a row is too long, it is truncated.

    You would typically call this function as:
    {[
    let header, data = match csv with h :: d -> h, d | [] -> assert false;;
    let data = Csv.associate header data;;
    ]}
    The header strings are shared, so the actual space in memory consumed
    by the spreadsheet is not much larger.
  *)

val map : f:(string -> string) -> t -> t
(** [map f csv] applies [f] to all entries of [csv] and returns the
    resulting CSV. *)