2025-04-22 11:50:08 -07:00

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# typed: false
# DO NOT EDIT MANUALLY
# This is an autogenerated file for types exported from the `csv` gem.
# Please instead update this file by running `bin/tapioca gem csv`.
# source://csv//lib/csv/core_ext/array.rb#1
class Array
include ::Enumerable
# Equivalent to CSV::generate_line(self, options)
#
# ["CSV", "data"].to_csv
# #=> "CSV,data\n"
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/core_ext/array.rb#6
def to_csv(**options); end
end
# == \CSV
#
# === \CSV Data
#
# \CSV (comma-separated values) data is a text representation of a table:
# - A _row_ _separator_ delimits table rows.
# A common row separator is the newline character <tt>"\n"</tt>.
# - A _column_ _separator_ delimits fields in a row.
# A common column separator is the comma character <tt>","</tt>.
#
# This \CSV \String, with row separator <tt>"\n"</tt>
# and column separator <tt>","</tt>,
# has three rows and two columns:
# "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# Despite the name \CSV, a \CSV representation can use different separators.
#
# For more about tables, see the Wikipedia article
# "{Table (information)}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_(information)]",
# especially its section
# "{Simple table}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_(information)#Simple_table]"
#
# == \Class \CSV
#
# Class \CSV provides methods for:
# - Parsing \CSV data from a \String object, a \File (via its file path), or an \IO object.
# - Generating \CSV data to a \String object.
#
# To make \CSV available:
# require 'csv'
#
# All examples here assume that this has been done.
#
# == Keeping It Simple
#
# A \CSV object has dozens of instance methods that offer fine-grained control
# of parsing and generating \CSV data.
# For many needs, though, simpler approaches will do.
#
# This section summarizes the singleton methods in \CSV
# that allow you to parse and generate without explicitly
# creating \CSV objects.
# For details, follow the links.
#
# === Simple Parsing
#
# Parsing methods commonly return either of:
# - An \Array of Arrays of Strings:
# - The outer \Array is the entire "table".
# - Each inner \Array is a row.
# - Each \String is a field.
# - A CSV::Table object. For details, see
# {\CSV with Headers}[#class-CSV-label-CSV+with+Headers].
#
# ==== Parsing a \String
#
# The input to be parsed can be a string:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# \Method CSV.parse returns the entire \CSV data:
# CSV.parse(string) # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# \Method CSV.parse_line returns only the first row:
# CSV.parse_line(string) # => ["foo", "0"]
#
# \CSV extends class \String with instance method String#parse_csv,
# which also returns only the first row:
# string.parse_csv # => ["foo", "0"]
#
# ==== Parsing Via a \File Path
#
# The input to be parsed can be in a file:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
#
# \Method CSV.read returns the entire \CSV data:
# CSV.read(path) # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# \Method CSV.foreach iterates, passing each row to the given block:
# CSV.foreach(path) do |row|
# p row
# end
# Output:
# ["foo", "0"]
# ["bar", "1"]
# ["baz", "2"]
#
# \Method CSV.table returns the entire \CSV data as a CSV::Table object:
# CSV.table(path) # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:3>
#
# ==== Parsing from an Open \IO Stream
#
# The input to be parsed can be in an open \IO stream:
#
# \Method CSV.read returns the entire \CSV data:
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.read(file)
# end # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# As does method CSV.parse:
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.parse(file)
# end # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# \Method CSV.parse_line returns only the first row:
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.parse_line(file)
# end # => ["foo", "0"]
#
# \Method CSV.foreach iterates, passing each row to the given block:
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.foreach(file) do |row|
# p row
# end
# end
# Output:
# ["foo", "0"]
# ["bar", "1"]
# ["baz", "2"]
#
# \Method CSV.table returns the entire \CSV data as a CSV::Table object:
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.table(file)
# end # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:3>
#
# === Simple Generating
#
# \Method CSV.generate returns a \String;
# this example uses method CSV#<< to append the rows
# that are to be generated:
# output_string = CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << ['foo', 0]
# csv << ['bar', 1]
# csv << ['baz', 2]
# end
# output_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# \Method CSV.generate_line returns a \String containing the single row
# constructed from an \Array:
# CSV.generate_line(['foo', '0']) # => "foo,0\n"
#
# \CSV extends class \Array with instance method <tt>Array#to_csv</tt>,
# which forms an \Array into a \String:
# ['foo', '0'].to_csv # => "foo,0\n"
#
# === "Filtering" \CSV
#
# \Method CSV.filter provides a Unix-style filter for \CSV data.
# The input data is processed to form the output data:
# in_string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# out_string = ''
# CSV.filter(in_string, out_string) do |row|
# row[0] = row[0].upcase
# row[1] *= 4
# end
# out_string # => "FOO,0000\nBAR,1111\nBAZ,2222\n"
#
# == \CSV Objects
#
# There are three ways to create a \CSV object:
# - \Method CSV.new returns a new \CSV object.
# - \Method CSV.instance returns a new or cached \CSV object.
# - \Method \CSV() also returns a new or cached \CSV object.
#
# === Instance Methods
#
# \CSV has three groups of instance methods:
# - Its own internally defined instance methods.
# - Methods included by module Enumerable.
# - Methods delegated to class IO. See below.
#
# ==== Delegated Methods
#
# For convenience, a CSV object will delegate to many methods in class IO.
# (A few have wrapper "guard code" in \CSV.) You may call:
# * IO#binmode
# * #binmode?
# * IO#close
# * IO#close_read
# * IO#close_write
# * IO#closed?
# * #eof
# * #eof?
# * IO#external_encoding
# * IO#fcntl
# * IO#fileno
# * #flock
# * IO#flush
# * IO#fsync
# * IO#internal_encoding
# * #ioctl
# * IO#isatty
# * #path
# * IO#pid
# * IO#pos
# * IO#pos=
# * IO#reopen
# * #rewind
# * IO#seek
# * #stat
# * IO#string
# * IO#sync
# * IO#sync=
# * IO#tell
# * #to_i
# * #to_io
# * IO#truncate
# * IO#tty?
#
# === Options
#
# The default values for options are:
# DEFAULT_OPTIONS = {
# # For both parsing and generating.
# col_sep: ",",
# row_sep: :auto,
# quote_char: '"',
# # For parsing.
# field_size_limit: nil,
# converters: nil,
# unconverted_fields: nil,
# headers: false,
# return_headers: false,
# header_converters: nil,
# skip_blanks: false,
# skip_lines: nil,
# liberal_parsing: false,
# nil_value: nil,
# empty_value: "",
# strip: false,
# # For generating.
# write_headers: nil,
# quote_empty: true,
# force_quotes: false,
# write_converters: nil,
# write_nil_value: nil,
# write_empty_value: "",
# }
#
# ==== Options for Parsing
#
# Options for parsing, described in detail below, include:
# - +row_sep+: Specifies the row separator; used to delimit rows.
# - +col_sep+: Specifies the column separator; used to delimit fields.
# - +quote_char+: Specifies the quote character; used to quote fields.
# - +field_size_limit+: Specifies the maximum field size + 1 allowed.
# Deprecated since 3.2.3. Use +max_field_size+ instead.
# - +max_field_size+: Specifies the maximum field size allowed.
# - +converters+: Specifies the field converters to be used.
# - +unconverted_fields+: Specifies whether unconverted fields are to be available.
# - +headers+: Specifies whether data contains headers,
# or specifies the headers themselves.
# - +return_headers+: Specifies whether headers are to be returned.
# - +header_converters+: Specifies the header converters to be used.
# - +skip_blanks+: Specifies whether blanks lines are to be ignored.
# - +skip_lines+: Specifies how comments lines are to be recognized.
# - +strip+: Specifies whether leading and trailing whitespace are to be
# stripped from fields. This must be compatible with +col_sep+; if it is not,
# then an +ArgumentError+ exception will be raised.
# - +liberal_parsing+: Specifies whether \CSV should attempt to parse
# non-compliant data.
# - +nil_value+: Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each null (no-text) field.
# - +empty_value+: Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each empty field.
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/common/row_sep.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/common/col_sep.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/common/quote_char.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/field_size_limit.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/converters.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/unconverted_fields.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/headers.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/return_headers.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/header_converters.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/skip_blanks.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/skip_lines.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/strip.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/liberal_parsing.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/nil_value.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/parsing/empty_value.rdoc
#
# ==== Options for Generating
#
# Options for generating, described in detail below, include:
# - +row_sep+: Specifies the row separator; used to delimit rows.
# - +col_sep+: Specifies the column separator; used to delimit fields.
# - +quote_char+: Specifies the quote character; used to quote fields.
# - +write_headers+: Specifies whether headers are to be written.
# - +force_quotes+: Specifies whether each output field is to be quoted.
# - +quote_empty+: Specifies whether each empty output field is to be quoted.
# - +write_converters+: Specifies the field converters to be used in writing.
# - +write_nil_value+: Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each +nil+-valued field.
# - +write_empty_value+: Specifies the object that is to be substituted for each empty field.
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/common/row_sep.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/common/col_sep.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/common/quote_char.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/generating/write_headers.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/generating/force_quotes.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/generating/quote_empty.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/generating/write_converters.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/generating/write_nil_value.rdoc
#
# :include: ../doc/csv/options/generating/write_empty_value.rdoc
#
# === \CSV with Headers
#
# CSV allows to specify column names of CSV file, whether they are in data, or
# provided separately. If headers are specified, reading methods return an instance
# of CSV::Table, consisting of CSV::Row.
#
# # Headers are part of data
# data = CSV.parse(<<~ROWS, headers: true)
# Name,Department,Salary
# Bob,Engineering,1000
# Jane,Sales,2000
# John,Management,5000
# ROWS
#
# data.class #=> CSV::Table
# data.first #=> #<CSV::Row "Name":"Bob" "Department":"Engineering" "Salary":"1000">
# data.first.to_h #=> {"Name"=>"Bob", "Department"=>"Engineering", "Salary"=>"1000"}
#
# # Headers provided by developer
# data = CSV.parse('Bob,Engineering,1000', headers: %i[name department salary])
# data.first #=> #<CSV::Row name:"Bob" department:"Engineering" salary:"1000">
#
# === \Converters
#
# By default, each value (field or header) parsed by \CSV is formed into a \String.
# You can use a _field_ _converter_ or _header_ _converter_
# to intercept and modify the parsed values:
# - See {Field Converters}[#class-CSV-label-Field+Converters].
# - See {Header Converters}[#class-CSV-label-Header+Converters].
#
# Also by default, each value to be written during generation is written 'as-is'.
# You can use a _write_ _converter_ to modify values before writing.
# - See {Write Converters}[#class-CSV-label-Write+Converters].
#
# ==== Specifying \Converters
#
# You can specify converters for parsing or generating in the +options+
# argument to various \CSV methods:
# - Option +converters+ for converting parsed field values.
# - Option +header_converters+ for converting parsed header values.
# - Option +write_converters+ for converting values to be written (generated).
#
# There are three forms for specifying converters:
# - A converter proc: executable code to be used for conversion.
# - A converter name: the name of a stored converter.
# - A converter list: an array of converter procs, converter names, and converter lists.
#
# ===== Converter Procs
#
# This converter proc, +strip_converter+, accepts a value +field+
# and returns <tt>field.strip</tt>:
# strip_converter = proc {|field| field.strip }
# In this call to <tt>CSV.parse</tt>,
# the keyword argument <tt>converters: string_converter</tt>
# specifies that:
# - \Proc +string_converter+ is to be called for each parsed field.
# - The converter's return value is to replace the +field+ value.
# Example:
# string = " foo , 0 \n bar , 1 \n baz , 2 \n"
# array = CSV.parse(string, converters: strip_converter)
# array # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# A converter proc can receive a second argument, +field_info+,
# that contains details about the field.
# This modified +strip_converter+ displays its arguments:
# strip_converter = proc do |field, field_info|
# p [field, field_info]
# field.strip
# end
# string = " foo , 0 \n bar , 1 \n baz , 2 \n"
# array = CSV.parse(string, converters: strip_converter)
# array # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
# Output:
# [" foo ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=1, header=nil>]
# [" 0 ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=1, header=nil>]
# [" bar ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=2, header=nil>]
# [" 1 ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=2, header=nil>]
# [" baz ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=3, header=nil>]
# [" 2 ", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=3, header=nil>]
# Each CSV::FieldInfo object shows:
# - The 0-based field index.
# - The 1-based line index.
# - The field header, if any.
#
# ===== Stored \Converters
#
# A converter may be given a name and stored in a structure where
# the parsing methods can find it by name.
#
# The storage structure for field converters is the \Hash CSV::Converters.
# It has several built-in converter procs:
# - <tt>:integer</tt>: converts each \String-embedded integer into a true \Integer.
# - <tt>:float</tt>: converts each \String-embedded float into a true \Float.
# - <tt>:date</tt>: converts each \String-embedded date into a true \Date.
# - <tt>:date_time</tt>: converts each \String-embedded date-time into a true \DateTime
# - <tt>:time</tt>: converts each \String-embedded time into a true \Time
# .
# This example creates a converter proc, then stores it:
# strip_converter = proc {|field| field.strip }
# CSV::Converters[:strip] = strip_converter
# Then the parsing method call can refer to the converter
# by its name, <tt>:strip</tt>:
# string = " foo , 0 \n bar , 1 \n baz , 2 \n"
# array = CSV.parse(string, converters: :strip)
# array # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# The storage structure for header converters is the \Hash CSV::HeaderConverters,
# which works in the same way.
# It also has built-in converter procs:
# - <tt>:downcase</tt>: Downcases each header.
# - <tt>:symbol</tt>: Converts each header to a \Symbol.
#
# There is no such storage structure for write headers.
#
# In order for the parsing methods to access stored converters in non-main-Ractors, the
# storage structure must be made shareable first.
# Therefore, <tt>Ractor.make_shareable(CSV::Converters)</tt> and
# <tt>Ractor.make_shareable(CSV::HeaderConverters)</tt> must be called before the creation
# of Ractors that use the converters stored in these structures. (Since making the storage
# structures shareable involves freezing them, any custom converters that are to be used
# must be added first.)
#
# ===== Converter Lists
#
# A _converter_ _list_ is an \Array that may include any assortment of:
# - Converter procs.
# - Names of stored converters.
# - Nested converter lists.
#
# Examples:
# numeric_converters = [:integer, :float]
# date_converters = [:date, :date_time]
# [numeric_converters, strip_converter]
# [strip_converter, date_converters, :float]
#
# Like a converter proc, a converter list may be named and stored in either
# \CSV::Converters or CSV::HeaderConverters:
# CSV::Converters[:custom] = [strip_converter, date_converters, :float]
# CSV::HeaderConverters[:custom] = [:downcase, :symbol]
#
# There are two built-in converter lists:
# CSV::Converters[:numeric] # => [:integer, :float]
# CSV::Converters[:all] # => [:date_time, :numeric]
#
# ==== Field \Converters
#
# With no conversion, all parsed fields in all rows become Strings:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# ary = CSV.parse(string)
# ary # => # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# When you specify a field converter, each parsed field is passed to the converter;
# its return value becomes the stored value for the field.
# A converter might, for example, convert an integer embedded in a \String
# into a true \Integer.
# (In fact, that's what built-in field converter +:integer+ does.)
#
# There are three ways to use field \converters.
#
# - Using option {converters}[#class-CSV-label-Option+converters] with a parsing method:
# ary = CSV.parse(string, converters: :integer)
# ary # => [0, 1, 2] # => [["foo", 0], ["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]]
# - Using option {converters}[#class-CSV-label-Option+converters] with a new \CSV instance:
# csv = CSV.new(string, converters: :integer)
# # Field converters in effect:
# csv.converters # => [:integer]
# csv.read # => [["foo", 0], ["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]]
# - Using method #convert to add a field converter to a \CSV instance:
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# # Add a converter.
# csv.convert(:integer)
# csv.converters # => [:integer]
# csv.read # => [["foo", 0], ["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]]
#
# Installing a field converter does not affect already-read rows:
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.shift # => ["foo", "0"]
# # Add a converter.
# csv.convert(:integer)
# csv.converters # => [:integer]
# csv.read # => [["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]]
#
# There are additional built-in \converters, and custom \converters are also supported.
#
# ===== Built-In Field \Converters
#
# The built-in field converters are in \Hash CSV::Converters:
# - Each key is a field converter name.
# - Each value is one of:
# - A \Proc field converter.
# - An \Array of field converter names.
#
# Display:
# CSV::Converters.each_pair do |name, value|
# if value.kind_of?(Proc)
# p [name, value.class]
# else
# p [name, value]
# end
# end
# Output:
# [:integer, Proc]
# [:float, Proc]
# [:numeric, [:integer, :float]]
# [:date, Proc]
# [:date_time, Proc]
# [:time, Proc]
# [:all, [:date_time, :numeric]]
#
# Each of these converters transcodes values to UTF-8 before attempting conversion.
# If a value cannot be transcoded to UTF-8 the conversion will
# fail and the value will remain unconverted.
#
# Converter +:integer+ converts each field that Integer() accepts:
# data = '0,1,2,x'
# # Without the converter
# csv = CSV.parse_line(data)
# csv # => ["0", "1", "2", "x"]
# # With the converter
# csv = CSV.parse_line(data, converters: :integer)
# csv # => [0, 1, 2, "x"]
#
# Converter +:float+ converts each field that Float() accepts:
# data = '1.0,3.14159,x'
# # Without the converter
# csv = CSV.parse_line(data)
# csv # => ["1.0", "3.14159", "x"]
# # With the converter
# csv = CSV.parse_line(data, converters: :float)
# csv # => [1.0, 3.14159, "x"]
#
# Converter +:numeric+ converts with both +:integer+ and +:float+..
#
# Converter +:date+ converts each field that Date::parse accepts:
# data = '2001-02-03,x'
# # Without the converter
# csv = CSV.parse_line(data)
# csv # => ["2001-02-03", "x"]
# # With the converter
# csv = CSV.parse_line(data, converters: :date)
# csv # => [#<Date: 2001-02-03 ((2451944j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>, "x"]
#
# Converter +:date_time+ converts each field that DateTime::parse accepts:
# data = '2020-05-07T14:59:00-05:00,x'
# # Without the converter
# csv = CSV.parse_line(data)
# csv # => ["2020-05-07T14:59:00-05:00", "x"]
# # With the converter
# csv = CSV.parse_line(data, converters: :date_time)
# csv # => [#<DateTime: 2020-05-07T14:59:00-05:00 ((2458977j,71940s,0n),-18000s,2299161j)>, "x"]
#
# Converter +time+ converts each field that Time::parse accepts:
# data = '2020-05-07T14:59:00-05:00,x'
# # Without the converter
# csv = CSV.parse_line(data)
# csv # => ["2020-05-07T14:59:00-05:00", "x"]
# # With the converter
# csv = CSV.parse_line(data, converters: :time)
# csv # => [2020-05-07 14:59:00 -0500, "x"]
#
# Converter +:numeric+ converts with both +:date_time+ and +:numeric+..
#
# As seen above, method #convert adds \converters to a \CSV instance,
# and method #converters returns an \Array of the \converters in effect:
# csv = CSV.new('0,1,2')
# csv.converters # => []
# csv.convert(:integer)
# csv.converters # => [:integer]
# csv.convert(:date)
# csv.converters # => [:integer, :date]
#
# ===== Custom Field \Converters
#
# You can define a custom field converter:
# strip_converter = proc {|field| field.strip }
# string = " foo , 0 \n bar , 1 \n baz , 2 \n"
# array = CSV.parse(string, converters: strip_converter)
# array # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
# You can register the converter in \Converters \Hash,
# which allows you to refer to it by name:
# CSV::Converters[:strip] = strip_converter
# string = " foo , 0 \n bar , 1 \n baz , 2 \n"
# array = CSV.parse(string, converters: :strip)
# array # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# ==== Header \Converters
#
# Header converters operate only on headers (and not on other rows).
#
# There are three ways to use header \converters;
# these examples use built-in header converter +:downcase+,
# which downcases each parsed header.
#
# - Option +header_converters+ with a singleton parsing method:
# string = "Name,Count\nFoo,0\n,Bar,1\nBaz,2"
# tbl = CSV.parse(string, headers: true, header_converters: :downcase)
# tbl.class # => CSV::Table
# tbl.headers # => ["name", "count"]
#
# - Option +header_converters+ with a new \CSV instance:
# csv = CSV.new(string, header_converters: :downcase)
# # Header converters in effect:
# csv.header_converters # => [:downcase]
# tbl = CSV.parse(string, headers: true)
# tbl.headers # => ["Name", "Count"]
#
# - Method #header_convert adds a header converter to a \CSV instance:
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# # Add a header converter.
# csv.header_convert(:downcase)
# csv.header_converters # => [:downcase]
# tbl = CSV.parse(string, headers: true)
# tbl.headers # => ["Name", "Count"]
#
# ===== Built-In Header \Converters
#
# The built-in header \converters are in \Hash CSV::HeaderConverters.
# The keys there are the names of the \converters:
# CSV::HeaderConverters.keys # => [:downcase, :symbol]
#
# Converter +:downcase+ converts each header by downcasing it:
# string = "Name,Count\nFoo,0\n,Bar,1\nBaz,2"
# tbl = CSV.parse(string, headers: true, header_converters: :downcase)
# tbl.class # => CSV::Table
# tbl.headers # => ["name", "count"]
#
# Converter +:symbol+ converts each header by making it into a \Symbol:
# string = "Name,Count\nFoo,0\n,Bar,1\nBaz,2"
# tbl = CSV.parse(string, headers: true, header_converters: :symbol)
# tbl.headers # => [:name, :count]
# Details:
# - Strips leading and trailing whitespace.
# - Downcases the header.
# - Replaces embedded spaces with underscores.
# - Removes non-word characters.
# - Makes the string into a \Symbol.
#
# ===== Custom Header \Converters
#
# You can define a custom header converter:
# upcase_converter = proc {|header| header.upcase }
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(string, headers: true, header_converters: upcase_converter)
# table # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
# table.headers # => ["NAME", "VALUE"]
# You can register the converter in \HeaderConverters \Hash,
# which allows you to refer to it by name:
# CSV::HeaderConverters[:upcase] = upcase_converter
# table = CSV.parse(string, headers: true, header_converters: :upcase)
# table # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
# table.headers # => ["NAME", "VALUE"]
#
# ===== Write \Converters
#
# When you specify a write converter for generating \CSV,
# each field to be written is passed to the converter;
# its return value becomes the new value for the field.
# A converter might, for example, strip whitespace from a field.
#
# Using no write converter (all fields unmodified):
# output_string = CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << [' foo ', 0]
# csv << [' bar ', 1]
# csv << [' baz ', 2]
# end
# output_string # => " foo ,0\n bar ,1\n baz ,2\n"
# Using option +write_converters+ with two custom write converters:
# strip_converter = proc {|field| field.respond_to?(:strip) ? field.strip : field }
# upcase_converter = proc {|field| field.respond_to?(:upcase) ? field.upcase : field }
# write_converters = [strip_converter, upcase_converter]
# output_string = CSV.generate(write_converters: write_converters) do |csv|
# csv << [' foo ', 0]
# csv << [' bar ', 1]
# csv << [' baz ', 2]
# end
# output_string # => "FOO,0\nBAR,1\nBAZ,2\n"
#
# === Character Encodings (M17n or Multilingualization)
#
# This new CSV parser is m17n savvy. The parser works in the Encoding of the IO
# or String object being read from or written to. Your data is never transcoded
# (unless you ask Ruby to transcode it for you) and will literally be parsed in
# the Encoding it is in. Thus CSV will return Arrays or Rows of Strings in the
# Encoding of your data. This is accomplished by transcoding the parser itself
# into your Encoding.
#
# Some transcoding must take place, of course, to accomplish this multiencoding
# support. For example, <tt>:col_sep</tt>, <tt>:row_sep</tt>, and
# <tt>:quote_char</tt> must be transcoded to match your data. Hopefully this
# makes the entire process feel transparent, since CSV's defaults should just
# magically work for your data. However, you can set these values manually in
# the target Encoding to avoid the translation.
#
# It's also important to note that while all of CSV's core parser is now
# Encoding agnostic, some features are not. For example, the built-in
# converters will try to transcode data to UTF-8 before making conversions.
# Again, you can provide custom converters that are aware of your Encodings to
# avoid this translation. It's just too hard for me to support native
# conversions in all of Ruby's Encodings.
#
# Anyway, the practical side of this is simple: make sure IO and String objects
# passed into CSV have the proper Encoding set and everything should just work.
# CSV methods that allow you to open IO objects (CSV::foreach(), CSV::open(),
# CSV::read(), and CSV::readlines()) do allow you to specify the Encoding.
#
# One minor exception comes when generating CSV into a String with an Encoding
# that is not ASCII compatible. There's no existing data for CSV to use to
# prepare itself and thus you will probably need to manually specify the desired
# Encoding for most of those cases. It will try to guess using the fields in a
# row of output though, when using CSV::generate_line() or Array#to_csv().
#
# I try to point out any other Encoding issues in the documentation of methods
# as they come up.
#
# This has been tested to the best of my ability with all non-"dummy" Encodings
# Ruby ships with. However, it is brave new code and may have some bugs.
# Please feel free to {report}[mailto:james@grayproductions.net] any issues you
# find with it.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/fields_converter.rb#3
class CSV
include ::Enumerable
extend ::Forwardable
# :call-seq:
# CSV.new(string)
# CSV.new(io)
# CSV.new(string, **options)
# CSV.new(io, **options)
#
# Returns the new \CSV object created using +string+ or +io+
# and the specified +options+.
#
# - Argument +string+ should be a \String object;
# it will be put into a new StringIO object positioned at the beginning.
# :include: ../doc/csv/arguments/io.rdoc
# - Argument +options+: See:
# * {Options for Parsing}[#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Parsing]
# * {Options for Generating}[#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Generating]
# For performance reasons, the options cannot be overridden
# in a \CSV object, so those specified here will endure.
#
# In addition to the \CSV instance methods, several \IO methods are delegated.
# See {Delegated Methods}[#class-CSV-label-Delegated+Methods].
#
# ---
#
# Create a \CSV object from a \String object:
# csv = CSV.new('foo,0')
#
# Create a \CSV object from a \File object:
# File.write('t.csv', 'foo,0')
# csv = CSV.new(File.open('t.csv'))
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if the argument is +nil+:
# # Raises ArgumentError (Cannot parse nil as CSV):
# CSV.new(nil)
#
# @raise [ArgumentError]
# @return [CSV] a new instance of CSV
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2034
def initialize(data, col_sep: T.unsafe(nil), row_sep: T.unsafe(nil), quote_char: T.unsafe(nil), field_size_limit: T.unsafe(nil), max_field_size: T.unsafe(nil), converters: T.unsafe(nil), unconverted_fields: T.unsafe(nil), headers: T.unsafe(nil), return_headers: T.unsafe(nil), write_headers: T.unsafe(nil), header_converters: T.unsafe(nil), skip_blanks: T.unsafe(nil), force_quotes: T.unsafe(nil), skip_lines: T.unsafe(nil), liberal_parsing: T.unsafe(nil), internal_encoding: T.unsafe(nil), external_encoding: T.unsafe(nil), encoding: T.unsafe(nil), nil_value: T.unsafe(nil), empty_value: T.unsafe(nil), strip: T.unsafe(nil), quote_empty: T.unsafe(nil), write_converters: T.unsafe(nil), write_nil_value: T.unsafe(nil), write_empty_value: T.unsafe(nil)); end
# :call-seq:
# csv << row -> self
#
# Appends a row to +self+.
#
# - Argument +row+ must be an \Array object or a CSV::Row object.
# - The output stream must be open for writing.
#
# ---
#
# Append Arrays:
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << ['foo', 0]
# csv << ['bar', 1]
# csv << ['baz', 2]
# end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# Append CSV::Rows:
# headers = []
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['foo', 0])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['bar', 1])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['baz', 2])
# end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# Headers in CSV::Row objects are not appended:
# headers = ['Name', 'Count']
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['foo', 0])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['bar', 1])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['baz', 2])
# end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if +row+ is not an \Array or \CSV::Row:
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `collect' for :foo:Symbol)
# csv << :foo
# end
#
# Raises an exception if the output stream is not opened for writing:
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, '')
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.open(file) do |csv|
# # Raises IOError (not opened for writing)
# csv << ['foo', 0]
# end
# end
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2507
def <<(row); end
# :call-seq:
# csv << row -> self
#
# Appends a row to +self+.
#
# - Argument +row+ must be an \Array object or a CSV::Row object.
# - The output stream must be open for writing.
#
# ---
#
# Append Arrays:
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << ['foo', 0]
# csv << ['bar', 1]
# csv << ['baz', 2]
# end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# Append CSV::Rows:
# headers = []
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['foo', 0])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['bar', 1])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['baz', 2])
# end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# Headers in CSV::Row objects are not appended:
# headers = ['Name', 'Count']
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['foo', 0])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['bar', 1])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['baz', 2])
# end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if +row+ is not an \Array or \CSV::Row:
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `collect' for :foo:Symbol)
# csv << :foo
# end
#
# Raises an exception if the output stream is not opened for writing:
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, '')
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.open(file) do |csv|
# # Raises IOError (not opened for writing)
# csv << ['foo', 0]
# end
# end
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2507
def add_row(row); end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2396
def binmode?; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.col_sep -> string
#
# Returns the encoded column separator; used for parsing and writing;
# see {Option +col_sep+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+col_sep]:
# CSV.new('').col_sep # => ","
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2144
def col_sep; end
# :call-seq:
# convert(converter_name) -> array_of_procs
# convert {|field, field_info| ... } -> array_of_procs
#
# - With no block, installs a field converter (a \Proc).
# - With a block, defines and installs a custom field converter.
# - Returns the \Array of installed field converters.
#
# - Argument +converter_name+, if given, should be the name
# of an existing field converter.
#
# See {Field Converters}[#class-CSV-label-Field+Converters].
# ---
#
# With no block, installs a field converter:
# csv = CSV.new('')
# csv.convert(:integer)
# csv.convert(:float)
# csv.convert(:date)
# csv.converters # => [:integer, :float, :date]
#
# ---
#
# The block, if given, is called for each field:
# - Argument +field+ is the field value.
# - Argument +field_info+ is a CSV::FieldInfo object
# containing details about the field.
#
# The examples here assume the prior execution of:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
#
# Example giving a block:
# csv = CSV.open(path)
# csv.convert {|field, field_info| p [field, field_info]; field.upcase }
# csv.read # => [["FOO", "0"], ["BAR", "1"], ["BAZ", "2"]]
#
# Output:
# ["foo", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=1, header=nil>]
# ["0", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=1, header=nil>]
# ["bar", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=2, header=nil>]
# ["1", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=2, header=nil>]
# ["baz", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=0, line=3, header=nil>]
# ["2", #<struct CSV::FieldInfo index=1, line=3, header=nil>]
#
# The block need not return a \String object:
# csv = CSV.open(path)
# csv.convert {|field, field_info| field.to_sym }
# csv.read # => [[:foo, :"0"], [:bar, :"1"], [:baz, :"2"]]
#
# If +converter_name+ is given, the block is not called:
# csv = CSV.open(path)
# csv.convert(:integer) {|field, field_info| fail 'Cannot happen' }
# csv.read # => [["foo", 0], ["bar", 1], ["baz", 2]]
#
# ---
#
# Raises a parse-time exception if +converter_name+ is not the name of a built-in
# field converter:
# csv = CSV.open(path)
# csv.convert(:nosuch) => [nil]
# # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `arity' for nil:NilClass)
# csv.read
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2578
def convert(name = T.unsafe(nil), &converter); end
# :call-seq:
# csv.converters -> array
#
# Returns an \Array containing field converters;
# see {Field Converters}[#class-CSV-label-Field+Converters]:
# csv = CSV.new('')
# csv.converters # => []
# csv.convert(:integer)
# csv.converters # => [:integer]
# csv.convert(proc {|x| x.to_s })
# csv.converters
#
# Notes that you need to call
# +Ractor.make_shareable(CSV::Converters)+ on the main Ractor to use
# this method.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2217
def converters; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.each -> enumerator
# csv.each {|row| ...}
#
# Calls the block with each successive row.
# The data source must be opened for reading.
#
# Without headers:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.each do |row|
# p row
# end
# Output:
# ["foo", "0"]
# ["bar", "1"]
# ["baz", "2"]
#
# With headers:
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string, headers: true)
# csv.each do |row|
# p row
# end
# Output:
# <CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">
# <CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# <CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if the source is not opened for reading:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.close
# # Raises IOError (not opened for reading)
# csv.each do |row|
# p row
# end
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2689
def each(&block); end
# :call-seq:
# csv.encoding -> encoding
#
# Returns the encoding used for parsing and generating;
# see {Character Encodings (M17n or Multilingualization)}[#class-CSV-label-Character+Encodings+-28M17n+or+Multilingualization-29]:
# CSV.new('').encoding # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2327
def encoding; end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2432
def eof; end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2432
def eof?; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.field_size_limit -> integer or nil
#
# Returns the limit for field size; used for parsing;
# see {Option +field_size_limit+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+field_size_limit]:
# CSV.new('').field_size_limit # => nil
#
# Deprecated since 3.2.3. Use +max_field_size+ instead.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2176
def field_size_limit; end
# @raise [NotImplementedError]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2404
def flock(*args); end
# :call-seq:
# csv.force_quotes? -> true or false
#
# Returns the value that determines whether all output fields are to be quoted;
# used for generating;
# see {Option +force_quotes+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+force_quotes]:
# CSV.new('').force_quotes? # => false
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2307
def force_quotes?; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.shift -> array, csv_row, or nil
#
# Returns the next row of data as:
# - An \Array if no headers are used.
# - A CSV::Row object if headers are used.
#
# The data source must be opened for reading.
#
# Without headers:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.shift # => ["foo", "0"]
# csv.shift # => ["bar", "1"]
# csv.shift # => ["baz", "2"]
# csv.shift # => nil
#
# With headers:
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string, headers: true)
# csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">
# csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">
# csv.shift # => nil
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if the source is not opened for reading:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.close
# # Raises IOError (not opened for reading)
# csv.shift
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2803
def gets; end
# The block need not return a \String object:
# csv = CSV.open(path, headers: true)
# csv.header_convert {|header, field_info| header.to_sym }
# table = csv.read
# table.headers # => [:Name, :Value]
#
# If +converter_name+ is given, the block is not called:
# csv = CSV.open(path, headers: true)
# csv.header_convert(:downcase) {|header, field_info| fail 'Cannot happen' }
# table = csv.read
# table.headers # => ["name", "value"]
# ---
#
# Raises a parse-time exception if +converter_name+ is not the name of a built-in
# field converter:
# csv = CSV.open(path, headers: true)
# csv.header_convert(:nosuch)
# # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `arity' for nil:NilClass)
# csv.read
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2644
def header_convert(name = T.unsafe(nil), &converter); end
# :call-seq:
# csv.header_converters -> array
#
# Returns an \Array containing header converters; used for parsing;
# see {Header Converters}[#class-CSV-label-Header+Converters]:
# CSV.new('').header_converters # => []
#
# Notes that you need to call
# +Ractor.make_shareable(CSV::HeaderConverters)+ on the main Ractor
# to use this method.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2283
def header_converters; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.header_row? -> true or false
#
# Returns +true+ if the next row to be read is a header row\;
# +false+ otherwise.
#
# Without headers:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.header_row? # => false
#
# With headers:
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string, headers: true)
# csv.header_row? # => true
# csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">
# csv.header_row? # => false
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if the source is not opened for reading:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.close
# # Raises IOError (not opened for reading)
# csv.header_row?
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2766
def header_row?; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.headers -> object
#
# Returns the value that determines whether headers are used; used for parsing;
# see {Option +headers+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+headers]:
# CSV.new('').headers # => nil
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2241
def headers; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.inspect -> string
#
# Returns a \String showing certain properties of +self+:
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string, headers: true)
# s = csv.inspect
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2825
def inspect; end
# @raise [NotImplementedError]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2409
def ioctl(*args); end
# :call-seq:
# csv.liberal_parsing? -> true or false
#
# Returns the value that determines whether illegal input is to be handled; used for parsing;
# see {Option +liberal_parsing+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+liberal_parsing]:
# CSV.new('').liberal_parsing? # => false
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2317
def liberal_parsing?; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.line -> array
#
# Returns the line most recently read:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# CSV.open(path) do |csv|
# csv.each do |row|
# p [csv.lineno, csv.line]
# end
# end
# Output:
# [1, "foo,0\n"]
# [2, "bar,1\n"]
# [3, "baz,2\n"]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2382
def line; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.line_no -> integer
#
# Returns the count of the rows parsed or generated.
#
# Parsing:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# CSV.open(path) do |csv|
# csv.each do |row|
# p [csv.lineno, row]
# end
# end
# Output:
# [1, ["foo", "0"]]
# [2, ["bar", "1"]]
# [3, ["baz", "2"]]
#
# Generating:
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# p csv.lineno; csv << ['foo', 0]
# p csv.lineno; csv << ['bar', 1]
# p csv.lineno; csv << ['baz', 2]
# end
# Output:
# 0
# 1
# 2
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2358
def lineno; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.max_field_size -> integer or nil
#
# Returns the limit for field size; used for parsing;
# see {Option +max_field_size+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+max_field_size]:
# CSV.new('').max_field_size # => nil
#
# Since 3.2.3.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2188
def max_field_size; end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2414
def path; end
# :call-seq:
# csv << row -> self
#
# Appends a row to +self+.
#
# - Argument +row+ must be an \Array object or a CSV::Row object.
# - The output stream must be open for writing.
#
# ---
#
# Append Arrays:
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << ['foo', 0]
# csv << ['bar', 1]
# csv << ['baz', 2]
# end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# Append CSV::Rows:
# headers = []
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['foo', 0])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['bar', 1])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['baz', 2])
# end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# Headers in CSV::Row objects are not appended:
# headers = ['Name', 'Count']
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['foo', 0])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['bar', 1])
# csv << CSV::Row.new(headers, ['baz', 2])
# end # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if +row+ is not an \Array or \CSV::Row:
# CSV.generate do |csv|
# # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `collect' for :foo:Symbol)
# csv << :foo
# end
#
# Raises an exception if the output stream is not opened for writing:
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, '')
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.open(file) do |csv|
# # Raises IOError (not opened for writing)
# csv << ['foo', 0]
# end
# end
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2507
def puts(row); end
# :call-seq:
# csv.quote_char -> character
#
# Returns the encoded quote character; used for parsing and writing;
# see {Option +quote_char+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+quote_char]:
# CSV.new('').quote_char # => "\""
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2164
def quote_char; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.read -> array or csv_table
#
# Forms the remaining rows from +self+ into:
# - A CSV::Table object, if headers are in use.
# - An \Array of Arrays, otherwise.
#
# The data source must be opened for reading.
#
# Without headers:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# csv = CSV.open(path)
# csv.read # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# With headers:
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# csv = CSV.open(path, headers: true)
# csv.read # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if the source is not opened for reading:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.close
# # Raises IOError (not opened for reading)
# csv.read
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2730
def read; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.shift -> array, csv_row, or nil
#
# Returns the next row of data as:
# - An \Array if no headers are used.
# - A CSV::Row object if headers are used.
#
# The data source must be opened for reading.
#
# Without headers:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.shift # => ["foo", "0"]
# csv.shift # => ["bar", "1"]
# csv.shift # => ["baz", "2"]
# csv.shift # => nil
#
# With headers:
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string, headers: true)
# csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">
# csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">
# csv.shift # => nil
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if the source is not opened for reading:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.close
# # Raises IOError (not opened for reading)
# csv.shift
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2803
def readline; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.read -> array or csv_table
#
# Forms the remaining rows from +self+ into:
# - A CSV::Table object, if headers are in use.
# - An \Array of Arrays, otherwise.
#
# The data source must be opened for reading.
#
# Without headers:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# csv = CSV.open(path)
# csv.read # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# With headers:
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# csv = CSV.open(path, headers: true)
# csv.read # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if the source is not opened for reading:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.close
# # Raises IOError (not opened for reading)
# csv.read
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2730
def readlines; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.return_headers? -> true or false
#
# Returns the value that determines whether headers are to be returned; used for parsing;
# see {Option +return_headers+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+return_headers]:
# CSV.new('').return_headers? # => false
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2259
def return_headers?; end
# Rewinds the underlying IO object and resets CSV's lineno() counter.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2447
def rewind; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.row_sep -> string
#
# Returns the encoded row separator; used for parsing and writing;
# see {Option +row_sep+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+row_sep]:
# CSV.new('').row_sep # => "\n"
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2154
def row_sep; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.shift -> array, csv_row, or nil
#
# Returns the next row of data as:
# - An \Array if no headers are used.
# - A CSV::Row object if headers are used.
#
# The data source must be opened for reading.
#
# Without headers:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.shift # => ["foo", "0"]
# csv.shift # => ["bar", "1"]
# csv.shift # => ["baz", "2"]
# csv.shift # => nil
#
# With headers:
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string, headers: true)
# csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">
# csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# csv.shift # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">
# csv.shift # => nil
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if the source is not opened for reading:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# csv = CSV.new(string)
# csv.close
# # Raises IOError (not opened for reading)
# csv.shift
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2803
def shift; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.skip_blanks? -> true or false
#
# Returns the value that determines whether blank lines are to be ignored; used for parsing;
# see {Option +skip_blanks+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+skip_blanks]:
# CSV.new('').skip_blanks? # => false
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2296
def skip_blanks?; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.skip_lines -> regexp or nil
#
# Returns the \Regexp used to identify comment lines; used for parsing;
# see {Option +skip_lines+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+skip_lines]:
# CSV.new('').skip_lines # => nil
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2198
def skip_lines; end
# @raise [NotImplementedError]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2418
def stat(*args); end
# @raise [NotImplementedError]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2423
def to_i; end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2428
def to_io; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.unconverted_fields? -> object
#
# Returns the value that determines whether unconverted fields are to be
# available; used for parsing;
# see {Option +unconverted_fields+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+unconverted_fields]:
# CSV.new('').unconverted_fields? # => nil
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2231
def unconverted_fields?; end
# :call-seq:
# csv.write_headers? -> true or false
#
# Returns the value that determines whether headers are to be written; used for generating;
# see {Option +write_headers+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+write_headers]:
# CSV.new('').write_headers? # => nil
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2269
def write_headers?; end
private
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2957
def build_fields_converter(initial_converters, options); end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2939
def build_header_fields_converter; end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2927
def build_parser_fields_converter; end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2952
def build_writer_fields_converter; end
# Processes +fields+ with <tt>@converters</tt>, or <tt>@header_converters</tt>
# if +headers+ is passed as +true+, returning the converted field set. Any
# converter that changes the field into something other than a String halts
# the pipeline of conversion for that field. This is primarily an efficiency
# shortcut.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2902
def convert_fields(fields, headers = T.unsafe(nil)); end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2865
def determine_encoding(encoding, internal_encoding); end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2935
def header_fields_converter; end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2880
def normalize_converters(converters); end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2965
def parser; end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2974
def parser_enumerator; end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2923
def parser_fields_converter; end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2969
def parser_options; end
# Returns the encoding of the internal IO object.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2913
def raw_encoding; end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2978
def writer; end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2948
def writer_fields_converter; end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2982
def writer_options; end
class << self
# :call-seq:
# filter(in_string_or_io, **options) {|row| ... } -> array_of_arrays or csv_table
# filter(in_string_or_io, out_string_or_io, **options) {|row| ... } -> array_of_arrays or csv_table
# filter(**options) {|row| ... } -> array_of_arrays or csv_table
#
# - Parses \CSV from a source (\String, \IO stream, or ARGF).
# - Calls the given block with each parsed row:
# - Without headers, each row is an \Array.
# - With headers, each row is a CSV::Row.
# - Generates \CSV to an output (\String, \IO stream, or STDOUT).
# - Returns the parsed source:
# - Without headers, an \Array of \Arrays.
# - With headers, a CSV::Table.
#
# When +in_string_or_io+ is given, but not +out_string_or_io+,
# parses from the given +in_string_or_io+
# and generates to STDOUT.
#
# \String input without headers:
#
# in_string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2"
# CSV.filter(in_string) do |row|
# row[0].upcase!
# row[1] = - row[1].to_i
# end # => [["FOO", 0], ["BAR", -1], ["BAZ", -2]]
#
# Output (to STDOUT):
#
# FOO,0
# BAR,-1
# BAZ,-2
#
# \String input with headers:
#
# in_string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2"
# CSV.filter(in_string, headers: true) do |row|
# row[0].upcase!
# row[1] = - row[1].to_i
# end # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
#
# Output (to STDOUT):
#
# Name,Value
# FOO,0
# BAR,-1
# BAZ,-2
#
# \IO stream input without headers:
#
# File.write('t.csv', "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2")
# File.open('t.csv') do |in_io|
# CSV.filter(in_io) do |row|
# row[0].upcase!
# row[1] = - row[1].to_i
# end
# end # => [["FOO", 0], ["BAR", -1], ["BAZ", -2]]
#
# Output (to STDOUT):
#
# FOO,0
# BAR,-1
# BAZ,-2
#
# \IO stream input with headers:
#
# File.write('t.csv', "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2")
# File.open('t.csv') do |in_io|
# CSV.filter(in_io, headers: true) do |row|
# row[0].upcase!
# row[1] = - row[1].to_i
# end
# end # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
#
# Output (to STDOUT):
#
# Name,Value
# FOO,0
# BAR,-1
# BAZ,-2
#
# When both +in_string_or_io+ and +out_string_or_io+ are given,
# parses from +in_string_or_io+ and generates to +out_string_or_io+.
#
# \String output without headers:
#
# in_string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2"
# out_string = ''
# CSV.filter(in_string, out_string) do |row|
# row[0].upcase!
# row[1] = - row[1].to_i
# end # => [["FOO", 0], ["BAR", -1], ["BAZ", -2]]
# out_string # => "FOO,0\nBAR,-1\nBAZ,-2\n"
#
# \String output with headers:
#
# in_string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2"
# out_string = ''
# CSV.filter(in_string, out_string, headers: true) do |row|
# row[0].upcase!
# row[1] = - row[1].to_i
# end # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
# out_string # => "Name,Value\nFOO,0\nBAR,-1\nBAZ,-2\n"
#
# \IO stream output without headers:
#
# in_string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2"
# File.open('t.csv', 'w') do |out_io|
# CSV.filter(in_string, out_io) do |row|
# row[0].upcase!
# row[1] = - row[1].to_i
# end
# end # => [["FOO", 0], ["BAR", -1], ["BAZ", -2]]
# File.read('t.csv') # => "FOO,0\nBAR,-1\nBAZ,-2\n"
#
# \IO stream output with headers:
#
# in_string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2"
# File.open('t.csv', 'w') do |out_io|
# CSV.filter(in_string, out_io, headers: true) do |row|
# row[0].upcase!
# row[1] = - row[1].to_i
# end
# end # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
# File.read('t.csv') # => "Name,Value\nFOO,0\nBAR,-1\nBAZ,-2\n"
#
# When neither +in_string_or_io+ nor +out_string_or_io+ given,
# parses from {ARGF}[rdoc-ref:ARGF]
# and generates to STDOUT.
#
# Without headers:
#
# # Put Ruby code into a file.
# ruby = <<-EOT
# require 'csv'
# CSV.filter do |row|
# row[0].upcase!
# row[1] = - row[1].to_i
# end
# EOT
# File.write('t.rb', ruby)
# # Put some CSV into a file.
# File.write('t.csv', "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2")
# # Run the Ruby code with CSV filename as argument.
# system(Gem.ruby, "t.rb", "t.csv")
#
# Output (to STDOUT):
#
# FOO,0
# BAR,-1
# BAZ,-2
#
# With headers:
#
# # Put Ruby code into a file.
# ruby = <<-EOT
# require 'csv'
# CSV.filter(headers: true) do |row|
# row[0].upcase!
# row[1] = - row[1].to_i
# end
# EOT
# File.write('t.rb', ruby)
# # Put some CSV into a file.
# File.write('t.csv', "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2")
# # Run the Ruby code with CSV filename as argument.
# system(Gem.ruby, "t.rb", "t.csv")
#
# Output (to STDOUT):
#
# Name,Value
# FOO,0
# BAR,-1
# BAZ,-2
#
# Arguments:
#
# * Argument +in_string_or_io+ must be a \String or an \IO stream.
# * Argument +out_string_or_io+ must be a \String or an \IO stream.
# * Arguments <tt>**options</tt> must be keyword options.
#
# - Each option defined as an {option for parsing}[#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Parsing]
# is used for parsing the filter input.
# - Each option defined as an {option for generating}[#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Generating]
# is used for generator the filter input.
#
# However, there are three options that may be used for both parsing and generating:
# +col_sep+, +quote_char+, and +row_sep+.
#
# Therefore for method +filter+ (and method +filter+ only),
# there are special options that allow these parsing and generating options
# to be specified separately:
#
# - Options +input_col_sep+ and +output_col_sep+
# (and their aliases +in_col_sep+ and +out_col_sep+)
# specify the column separators for parsing and generating.
# - Options +input_quote_char+ and +output_quote_char+
# (and their aliases +in_quote_char+ and +out_quote_char+)
# specify the quote characters for parsing and generting.
# - Options +input_row_sep+ and +output_row_sep+
# (and their aliases +in_row_sep+ and +out_row_sep+)
# specify the row separators for parsing and generating.
#
# Example options (for column separators):
#
# CSV.filter # Default for both parsing and generating.
# CSV.filter(in_col_sep: ';') # ';' for parsing, default for generating.
# CSV.filter(out_col_sep: '|') # Default for parsing, '|' for generating.
# CSV.filter(in_col_sep: ';', out_col_sep: '|') # ';' for parsing, '|' for generating.
#
# Note that for a special option (e.g., +input_col_sep+)
# and its corresponding "regular" option (e.g., +col_sep+),
# the two are mutually overriding.
#
# Another example (possibly surprising):
#
# CSV.filter(in_col_sep: ';', col_sep: '|') # '|' for both parsing(!) and generating.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1259
def filter(input = T.unsafe(nil), output = T.unsafe(nil), **options); end
# :call-seq:
# foreach(path_or_io, mode='r', **options) {|row| ... )
# foreach(path_or_io, mode='r', **options) -> new_enumerator
#
# Calls the block with each row read from source +path_or_io+.
#
# \Path input without headers:
#
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# in_path = 't.csv'
# File.write(in_path, string)
# CSV.foreach(in_path) {|row| p row }
#
# Output:
#
# ["foo", "0"]
# ["bar", "1"]
# ["baz", "2"]
#
# \Path input with headers:
#
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# in_path = 't.csv'
# File.write(in_path, string)
# CSV.foreach(in_path, headers: true) {|row| p row }
#
# Output:
#
# <CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">
# <CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# <CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">
#
# \IO stream input without headers:
#
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# File.open('t.csv') do |in_io|
# CSV.foreach(in_io) {|row| p row }
# end
#
# Output:
#
# ["foo", "0"]
# ["bar", "1"]
# ["baz", "2"]
#
# \IO stream input with headers:
#
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# File.open('t.csv') do |in_io|
# CSV.foreach(in_io, headers: true) {|row| p row }
# end
#
# Output:
#
# <CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">
# <CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# <CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">
#
# With no block given, returns an \Enumerator:
#
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# CSV.foreach(path) # => #<Enumerator: CSV:foreach("t.csv", "r")>
#
# Arguments:
# * Argument +path_or_io+ must be a file path or an \IO stream.
# * Argument +mode+, if given, must be a \File mode.
# See {Access Modes}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/File.html#class-File-label-Access+Modes].
# * Arguments <tt>**options</tt> must be keyword options.
# See {Options for Parsing}[#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Parsing].
# * This method optionally accepts an additional <tt>:encoding</tt> option
# that you can use to specify the Encoding of the data read from +path+ or +io+.
# You must provide this unless your data is in the encoding
# given by <tt>Encoding::default_external</tt>.
# Parsing will use this to determine how to parse the data.
# You may provide a second Encoding to
# have the data transcoded as it is read. For example,
# would read +UTF-32BE+ data from the file
# but transcode it to +UTF-8+ before parsing.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1389
def foreach(path, mode = T.unsafe(nil), **options, &block); end
# :call-seq:
# generate(csv_string, **options) {|csv| ... }
# generate(**options) {|csv| ... }
#
# * Argument +csv_string+, if given, must be a \String object;
# defaults to a new empty \String.
# * Arguments +options+, if given, should be generating options.
# See {Options for Generating}[#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Generating].
#
# ---
#
# Creates a new \CSV object via <tt>CSV.new(csv_string, **options)</tt>;
# calls the block with the \CSV object, which the block may modify;
# returns the \String generated from the \CSV object.
#
# Note that a passed \String *is* modified by this method.
# Pass <tt>csv_string</tt>.dup if the \String must be preserved.
#
# This method has one additional option: <tt>:encoding</tt>,
# which sets the base Encoding for the output if no no +str+ is specified.
# CSV needs this hint if you plan to output non-ASCII compatible data.
#
# ---
#
# Add lines:
# input_string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# output_string = CSV.generate(input_string) do |csv|
# csv << ['bat', 3]
# csv << ['bam', 4]
# end
# output_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\nbat,3\nbam,4\n"
# input_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\nbat,3\nbam,4\n"
# output_string.equal?(input_string) # => true # Same string, modified
#
# Add lines into new string, preserving old string:
# input_string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# output_string = CSV.generate(input_string.dup) do |csv|
# csv << ['bat', 3]
# csv << ['bam', 4]
# end
# output_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\nbat,3\nbam,4\n"
# input_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# output_string.equal?(input_string) # => false # Different strings
#
# Create lines from nothing:
# output_string = CSV.generate do |csv|
# csv << ['foo', 0]
# csv << ['bar', 1]
# csv << ['baz', 2]
# end
# output_string # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if +csv_string+ is not a \String object:
# # Raises TypeError (no implicit conversion of Integer into String)
# CSV.generate(0)
#
# @yield [csv]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1455
def generate(str = T.unsafe(nil), **options); end
# :call-seq:
# CSV.generate_line(ary)
# CSV.generate_line(ary, **options)
#
# Returns the \String created by generating \CSV from +ary+
# using the specified +options+.
#
# Argument +ary+ must be an \Array.
#
# Special options:
# * Option <tt>:row_sep</tt> defaults to <tt>"\n"> on Ruby 3.0 or later
# and <tt>$INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR</tt> (<tt>$/</tt>) otherwise.:
# $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR # => "\n"
# * This method accepts an additional option, <tt>:encoding</tt>, which sets the base
# Encoding for the output. This method will try to guess your Encoding from
# the first non-+nil+ field in +row+, if possible, but you may need to use
# this parameter as a backup plan.
#
# For other +options+,
# see {Options for Generating}[#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Generating].
#
# ---
#
# Returns the \String generated from an \Array:
# CSV.generate_line(['foo', '0']) # => "foo,0\n"
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if +ary+ is not an \Array:
# # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `find' for :foo:Symbol)
# CSV.generate_line(:foo)
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1503
def generate_line(row, **options); end
# :call-seq:
# CSV.generate_lines(rows)
# CSV.generate_lines(rows, **options)
#
# Returns the \String created by generating \CSV from
# using the specified +options+.
#
# Argument +rows+ must be an \Array of row. Row is \Array of \String or \CSV::Row.
#
# Special options:
# * Option <tt>:row_sep</tt> defaults to <tt>"\n"</tt> on Ruby 3.0 or later
# and <tt>$INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR</tt> (<tt>$/</tt>) otherwise.:
# $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR # => "\n"
# * This method accepts an additional option, <tt>:encoding</tt>, which sets the base
# Encoding for the output. This method will try to guess your Encoding from
# the first non-+nil+ field in +row+, if possible, but you may need to use
# this parameter as a backup plan.
#
# For other +options+,
# see {Options for Generating}[#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Generating].
#
# ---
#
# Returns the \String generated from an
# CSV.generate_lines([['foo', '0'], ['bar', '1'], ['baz', '2']]) # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception
# # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `each' for :foo:Symbol)
# CSV.generate_lines(:foo)
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1558
def generate_lines(rows, **options); end
# :call-seq:
# instance(string, **options)
# instance(io = $stdout, **options)
# instance(string, **options) {|csv| ... }
# instance(io = $stdout, **options) {|csv| ... }
#
# Creates or retrieves cached \CSV objects.
# For arguments and options, see CSV.new.
#
# This API is not Ractor-safe.
#
# ---
#
# With no block given, returns a \CSV object.
#
# The first call to +instance+ creates and caches a \CSV object:
# s0 = 's0'
# csv0 = CSV.instance(s0)
# csv0.class # => CSV
#
# Subsequent calls to +instance+ with that _same_ +string+ or +io+
# retrieve that same cached object:
# csv1 = CSV.instance(s0)
# csv1.class # => CSV
# csv1.equal?(csv0) # => true # Same CSV object
#
# A subsequent call to +instance+ with a _different_ +string+ or +io+
# creates and caches a _different_ \CSV object.
# s1 = 's1'
# csv2 = CSV.instance(s1)
# csv2.equal?(csv0) # => false # Different CSV object
#
# All the cached objects remains available:
# csv3 = CSV.instance(s0)
# csv3.equal?(csv0) # true # Same CSV object
# csv4 = CSV.instance(s1)
# csv4.equal?(csv2) # true # Same CSV object
#
# ---
#
# When a block is given, calls the block with the created or retrieved
# \CSV object; returns the block's return value:
# CSV.instance(s0) {|csv| :foo } # => :foo
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1026
def instance(data = T.unsafe(nil), **options); end
# :call-seq:
# open(path_or_io, mode = "rb", **options ) -> new_csv
# open(path_or_io, mode = "rb", **options ) { |csv| ... } -> object
#
# possible options elements:
# keyword form:
# :invalid => nil # raise error on invalid byte sequence (default)
# :invalid => :replace # replace invalid byte sequence
# :undef => :replace # replace undefined conversion
# :replace => string # replacement string ("?" or "\uFFFD" if not specified)
#
# * Argument +path_or_io+, must be a file path or an \IO stream.
# :include: ../doc/csv/arguments/io.rdoc
# * Argument +mode+, if given, must be a \File mode.
# See {Access Modes}[https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/File.html#class-File-label-Access+Modes].
# * Arguments <tt>**options</tt> must be keyword options.
# See {Options for Generating}[#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Generating].
# * This method optionally accepts an additional <tt>:encoding</tt> option
# that you can use to specify the Encoding of the data read from +path+ or +io+.
# You must provide this unless your data is in the encoding
# given by <tt>Encoding::default_external</tt>.
# Parsing will use this to determine how to parse the data.
# You may provide a second Encoding to
# have the data transcoded as it is read. For example,
# would read +UTF-32BE+ data from the file
# but transcode it to +UTF-8+ before parsing.
#
# ---
#
# These examples assume prior execution of:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
#
# string_io = StringIO.new
# string_io << "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# ---
#
# With no block given, returns a new \CSV object.
#
# Create a \CSV object using a file path:
# csv = CSV.open(path)
#
# Create a \CSV object using an open \File:
# csv = CSV.open(File.open(path))
#
# Create a \CSV object using a \StringIO:
# csv = CSV.open(string_io)
# ---
#
# With a block given, calls the block with the created \CSV object;
# returns the block's return value:
#
# Using a file path:
# csv = CSV.open(path) {|csv| p csv}
# Output:
#
# Using an open \File:
# csv = CSV.open(File.open(path)) {|csv| p csv}
# Output:
#
# Using a \StringIO:
# csv = CSV.open(string_io) {|csv| p csv}
# Output:
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if the argument is not a \String object or \IO object:
# # Raises TypeError (no implicit conversion of Symbol into String)
# CSV.open(:foo)
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1647
def open(filename_or_io, mode = T.unsafe(nil), **options); end
# :call-seq:
# parse(string) -> array_of_arrays
# parse(io) -> array_of_arrays
# parse(string, headers: ..., **options) -> csv_table
# parse(io, headers: ..., **options) -> csv_table
# parse(string, **options) {|row| ... }
# parse(io, **options) {|row| ... }
#
# Parses +string+ or +io+ using the specified +options+.
#
# - Argument +string+ should be a \String object;
# it will be put into a new StringIO object positioned at the beginning.
# :include: ../doc/csv/arguments/io.rdoc
# - Argument +options+: see {Options for Parsing}[#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Parsing]
#
# ====== Without Option +headers+
#
# Without {option +headers+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+headers] case.
#
# These examples assume prior execution of:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
#
# ---
#
# With no block given, returns an \Array of Arrays formed from the source.
#
# Parse a \String:
# a_of_a = CSV.parse(string)
# a_of_a # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# Parse an open \File:
# a_of_a = File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.parse(file)
# end
# a_of_a # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# ---
#
# With a block given, calls the block with each parsed row:
#
# Parse a \String:
# CSV.parse(string) {|row| p row }
#
# Output:
# ["foo", "0"]
# ["bar", "1"]
# ["baz", "2"]
#
# Parse an open \File:
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.parse(file) {|row| p row }
# end
#
# Output:
# ["foo", "0"]
# ["bar", "1"]
# ["baz", "2"]
#
# ====== With Option +headers+
#
# With {option +headers+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+headers] case.
#
# These examples assume prior execution of:
# string = "Name,Count\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
#
# ---
#
# With no block given, returns a CSV::Table object formed from the source.
#
# Parse a \String:
# csv_table = CSV.parse(string, headers: ['Name', 'Count'])
# csv_table # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:5>
#
# Parse an open \File:
# csv_table = File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.parse(file, headers: ['Name', 'Count'])
# end
# csv_table # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
#
# ---
#
# With a block given, calls the block with each parsed row,
# which has been formed into a CSV::Row object:
#
# Parse a \String:
# CSV.parse(string, headers: ['Name', 'Count']) {|row| p row }
#
# Output:
# # <CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Count":"0">
# # <CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Count":"1">
# # <CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Count":"2">
#
# Parse an open \File:
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.parse(file, headers: ['Name', 'Count']) {|row| p row }
# end
#
# Output:
# # <CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Count":"0">
# # <CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Count":"1">
# # <CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Count":"2">
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if the argument is not a \String object or \IO object:
# # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `close' for :foo:Symbol)
# CSV.parse(:foo)
#
# ---
#
# Please make sure if your text contains \BOM or not. CSV.parse will not remove
# \BOM automatically. You might want to remove \BOM before calling CSV.parse :
# # remove BOM on calling File.open
# CSV.parse(file, headers: true) do |row|
# # you can get value by column name because BOM is removed
# p row['Name']
# end
# end
#
# Output:
# # "foo"
# # "bar"
# # "baz"
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1825
def parse(str, **options, &block); end
# :call-seq:
# CSV.parse_line(string) -> new_array or nil
# CSV.parse_line(io) -> new_array or nil
# CSV.parse_line(string, **options) -> new_array or nil
# CSV.parse_line(io, **options) -> new_array or nil
# CSV.parse_line(string, headers: true, **options) -> csv_row or nil
# CSV.parse_line(io, headers: true, **options) -> csv_row or nil
#
# Returns the data created by parsing the first line of +string+ or +io+
# using the specified +options+.
#
# - Argument +string+ should be a \String object;
# it will be put into a new StringIO object positioned at the beginning.
# :include: ../doc/csv/arguments/io.rdoc
# - Argument +options+: see {Options for Parsing}[#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Parsing]
#
# ====== Without Option +headers+
#
# Without option +headers+, returns the first row as a new \Array.
#
# These examples assume prior execution of:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
#
# Parse the first line from a \String object:
# CSV.parse_line(string) # => ["foo", "0"]
#
# Parse the first line from a File object:
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.parse_line(file) # => ["foo", "0"]
# end # => ["foo", "0"]
#
# Returns +nil+ if the argument is an empty \String:
# CSV.parse_line('') # => nil
#
# ====== With Option +headers+
#
# With {option +headers+}[#class-CSV-label-Option+headers],
# returns the first row as a CSV::Row object.
#
# These examples assume prior execution of:
# string = "Name,Count\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
#
# Parse the first line from a \String object:
# CSV.parse_line(string, headers: true) # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Count":"0">
#
# Parse the first line from a File object:
# File.open(path) do |file|
# CSV.parse_line(file, headers: true)
# end # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Count":"0">
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if the argument is +nil+:
# # Raises ArgumentError (Cannot parse nil as CSV):
# CSV.parse_line(nil)
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1898
def parse_line(line, **options); end
# :call-seq:
# read(source, **options) -> array_of_arrays
# read(source, headers: true, **options) -> csv_table
#
# Opens the given +source+ with the given +options+ (see CSV.open),
# reads the source (see CSV#read), and returns the result,
# which will be either an \Array of Arrays or a CSV::Table.
#
# Without headers:
# string = "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# CSV.read(path) # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# With headers:
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# CSV.read(path, headers: true) # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1922
def read(path, **options); end
# :call-seq:
# CSV.readlines(source, **options)
#
# Alias for CSV.read.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1930
def readlines(path, **options); end
# :call-seq:
# CSV.table(source, **options)
#
# Calls CSV.read with +source+, +options+, and certain default options:
# - +headers+: +true+
# - +converters+: +:numeric+
# - +header_converters+: +:symbol+
#
# Returns a CSV::Table object.
#
# Example:
# string = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# path = 't.csv'
# File.write(path, string)
# CSV.table(path) # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1949
def table(path, **options); end
private
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1990
def create_stringio(str, mode, opts); end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#1963
def may_enable_bom_detection_automatically(filename_or_io, mode, options, file_opts); end
end
end
# The encoding used by all converters.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#895
CSV::ConverterEncoding = T.let(T.unsafe(nil), Encoding)
# A \Hash containing the names and \Procs for the built-in field converters.
# See {Built-In Field Converters}[#class-CSV-label-Built-In+Field+Converters].
#
# This \Hash is intentionally left unfrozen, and may be extended with
# custom field converters.
# See {Custom Field Converters}[#class-CSV-label-Custom+Field+Converters].
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#903
CSV::Converters = T.let(T.unsafe(nil), Hash)
# A Regexp used to find and convert some common Date formats.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#884
CSV::DateMatcher = T.let(T.unsafe(nil), Regexp)
# A Regexp used to find and convert some common (Date)Time formats.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#887
CSV::DateTimeMatcher = T.let(T.unsafe(nil), Regexp)
# Note: Don't use this class directly. This is an internal class.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/fields_converter.rb#5
class CSV::FieldsConverter
include ::Enumerable
# A CSV::FieldsConverter is a data structure for storing the
# fields converter properties to be passed as a parameter
# when parsing a new file (e.g. CSV::Parser.new(@io, parser_options))
#
# @return [FieldsConverter] a new instance of FieldsConverter
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/fields_converter.rb#20
def initialize(options = T.unsafe(nil)); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/fields_converter.rb#30
def add_converter(name = T.unsafe(nil), &converter); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/fields_converter.rb#54
def convert(fields, headers, lineno, quoted_fields = T.unsafe(nil)); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/fields_converter.rb#46
def each(&block); end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/fields_converter.rb#50
def empty?; end
private
# source://csv//lib/csv/fields_converter.rb#92
def builtin_converters; end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/fields_converter.rb#87
def need_convert?; end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/fields_converter.rb#83
def need_static_convert?; end
end
# source://csv//lib/csv/fields_converter.rb#8
CSV::FieldsConverter::NO_QUOTED_FIELDS = T.let(T.unsafe(nil), Array)
# A \Hash containing the names and \Procs for the built-in header converters.
# See {Built-In Header Converters}[#class-CSV-label-Built-In+Header+Converters].
#
# This \Hash is intentionally left unfrozen, and may be extended with
# custom field converters.
# See {Custom Header Converters}[#class-CSV-label-Custom+Header+Converters].
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#944
CSV::HeaderConverters = T.let(T.unsafe(nil), Hash)
# source://csv//lib/csv/input_record_separator.rb#5
module CSV::InputRecordSeparator
class << self
# source://csv//lib/csv/input_record_separator.rb#8
def value; end
end
end
# The error thrown when the parser encounters invalid encoding in CSV.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#862
class CSV::InvalidEncodingError < ::CSV::MalformedCSVError
# @return [InvalidEncodingError] a new instance of InvalidEncodingError
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#864
def initialize(encoding, line_number); end
# Returns the value of attribute encoding.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#863
def encoding; end
end
# The error thrown when the parser encounters illegal CSV formatting.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#852
class CSV::MalformedCSVError < ::RuntimeError
# @return [MalformedCSVError] a new instance of MalformedCSVError
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#855
def initialize(message, line_number); end
# Returns the value of attribute line_number.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#853
def line_number; end
# Returns the value of attribute line_number.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#853
def lineno; end
end
# Note: Don't use this class directly. This is an internal class.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#11
class CSV::Parser
# @return [Parser] a new instance of Parser
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#348
def initialize(input, options); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#356
def column_separator; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#368
def field_size_limit; end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#388
def header_row?; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#384
def headers; end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#400
def liberal_parsing?; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#408
def line; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#404
def lineno; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#372
def max_field_size; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#412
def parse(&block); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#364
def quote_character; end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#392
def return_headers?; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#360
def row_separator; end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#396
def skip_blanks?; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#376
def skip_lines; end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#380
def unconverted_fields?; end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#447
def use_headers?; end
private
# This method injects an instance variable <tt>unconverted_fields</tt> into
# +row+ and an accessor method for +row+ called unconverted_fields(). The
# variable is set to the contents of +fields+.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#1294
def add_unconverted_fields(row, fields); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#806
def adjust_headers(headers, quoted_fields); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#881
def build_scanner; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#728
def detect_row_separator(sample, cr, lf); end
# @yield [row]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#1265
def emit_row(row, quoted_fields = T.unsafe(nil), &block); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#1250
def ignore_broken_line; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#758
def last_line; end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#823
def may_quoted?; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#1205
def parse_column_end; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#1105
def parse_column_value; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#792
def parse_headers(row); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#945
def parse_no_quote(&block); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#974
def parse_quotable_loose(&block); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#1035
def parse_quotable_robust(&block); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#1163
def parse_quoted_column_value; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#1219
def parse_row_end; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#1135
def parse_unquoted_column_value; end
# A set of tasks to prepare the file in order to parse it
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#453
def prepare; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#508
def prepare_backslash; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#766
def prepare_header; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#752
def prepare_line; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#812
def prepare_parser; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#492
def prepare_quote_character; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#648
def prepare_quoted; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#580
def prepare_separators; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#523
def prepare_skip_lines; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#540
def prepare_strip; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#675
def prepare_unquoted; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#468
def prepare_variable; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#688
def resolve_row_separator(separator); end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#925
def skip_line?(line); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#908
def skip_needless_lines; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#1256
def start_row; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#1232
def strip_value(value); end
# @raise [MalformedCSVError]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#937
def validate_field_size(field); end
# This method verifies that there are no (obvious) ambiguities with the
# provided +col_sep+ and +strip+ parsing options. For example, if +col_sep+
# and +strip+ were both equal to +\t+, then there would be no clear way to
# parse the input.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#630
def validate_strip_and_col_sep_options; end
class << self
# Convenient method to check whether the give input reached EOF
# or not.
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#25
def eof?(input); end
end
end
# CSV::InputsScanner receives IO inputs, encoding and the chunk_size.
# It also controls the life cycle of the object with its methods +keep_start+,
# +keep_end+, +keep_back+, +keep_drop+.
#
# CSV::InputsScanner.scan() tries to match with pattern at the current position.
# If there's a match, the scanner advances the "scan pointer" and returns the matched string.
# Otherwise, the scanner returns nil.
#
# CSV::InputsScanner.rest() returns the "rest" of the string (i.e. everything after the scan pointer).
# If there is no more data (eos? = true), it returns "".
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#99
class CSV::Parser::InputsScanner
# @return [InputsScanner] a new instance of InputsScanner
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#100
def initialize(inputs, encoding, row_separator, chunk_size: T.unsafe(nil)); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#270
def check(pattern); end
# @yield [buffer]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#110
def each_line(row_separator); end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#183
def eos?; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#210
def keep_back; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#249
def keep_drop; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#194
def keep_end; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#187
def keep_start; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#266
def rest; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#156
def scan(pattern); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#167
def scan_all(pattern); end
private
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#279
def adjust_last_keep; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#307
def read_chunk; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#275
def trace(*args); end
end
# Raised when encoding is invalid.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#35
class CSV::Parser::InvalidEncoding < ::StandardError; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#855
CSV::Parser::SCANNER_TEST = T.let(T.unsafe(nil), FalseClass)
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#577
CSV::Parser::STRING_SCANNER_SCAN_ACCEPT_STRING = T.let(T.unsafe(nil), TrueClass)
# CSV::Scanner receives a CSV output, scans it and return the content.
# It also controls the life cycle of the object with its methods +keep_start+,
# +keep_end+, +keep_back+, +keep_drop+.
#
# Uses StringScanner (the official strscan gem). Strscan provides lexical
# scanning operations on a String. We inherit its object and take advantage
# on the methods. For more information, please visit:
# https://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.6.1/libdoc/strscan/rdoc/StringScanner.html
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#52
class CSV::Parser::Scanner < ::StringScanner
# @return [Scanner] a new instance of Scanner
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#55
def initialize(*args); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#60
def each_line(row_separator); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#78
def keep_back; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#82
def keep_drop; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#73
def keep_end; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#69
def keep_start; end
def scan_all(_arg0); end
end
# Raised when unexpected case is happen.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#39
class CSV::Parser::UnexpectedError < ::StandardError; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#837
class CSV::Parser::UnoptimizedStringIO
# @return [UnoptimizedStringIO] a new instance of UnoptimizedStringIO
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#838
def initialize(string); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#846
def each_line(*args, &block); end
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#850
def eof?; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/parser.rb#842
def gets(*args); end
end
# = \CSV::Row
# A \CSV::Row instance represents a \CSV table row.
# (see {class CSV}[../CSV.html]).
#
# The instance may have:
# - Fields: each is an object, not necessarily a \String.
# - Headers: each serves a key, and also need not be a \String.
#
# === Instance Methods
#
# \CSV::Row has three groups of instance methods:
# - Its own internally defined instance methods.
# - Methods included by module Enumerable.
# - Methods delegated to class Array.:
# * Array#empty?
# * Array#length
# * Array#size
#
# == Creating a \CSV::Row Instance
#
# Commonly, a new \CSV::Row instance is created by parsing \CSV source
# that has headers:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.each {|row| p row }
# Output:
# #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">
# #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">
#
# You can also create a row directly. See ::new.
#
# == Headers
#
# Like a \CSV::Table, a \CSV::Row has headers.
#
# A \CSV::Row that was created by parsing \CSV source
# inherits its headers from the table:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table.first
# row.headers # => ["Name", "Value"]
#
# You can also create a new row with headers;
# like the keys in a \Hash, the headers need not be Strings:
# row = CSV::Row.new([:name, :value], ['foo', 0])
# row.headers # => [:name, :value]
#
# The new row retains its headers even if added to a table
# that has headers:
# table << row # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:5>
# row.headers # => [:name, :value]
# row[:name] # => "foo"
# row['Name'] # => nil
#
#
#
# == Accessing Fields
#
# You may access a field in a \CSV::Row with either its \Integer index
# (\Array-style) or its header (\Hash-style).
#
# Fetch a field using method #[]:
# row = CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['foo', 0])
# row[1] # => 0
# row['Value'] # => 0
#
# Set a field using method #[]=:
# row = CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['foo', 0])
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":0>
# row[0] = 'bar'
# row['Value'] = 1
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":1>
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#80
class CSV::Row
include ::Enumerable
extend ::Forwardable
# :call-seq:
# CSV::Row.new(headers, fields, header_row = false) -> csv_row
#
# Returns the new \CSV::Row instance constructed from
# arguments +headers+ and +fields+; both should be Arrays;
# note that the fields need not be Strings:
# row = CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['foo', 0])
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":0>
#
# If the \Array lengths are different, the shorter is +nil+-filled:
# row = CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value', 'Date', 'Size'], ['foo', 0])
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":0 "Date":nil "Size":nil>
#
# Each \CSV::Row object is either a <i>field row</i> or a <i>header row</i>;
# by default, a new row is a field row; for the row created above:
# row.field_row? # => true
# row.header_row? # => false
#
# If the optional argument +header_row+ is given as +true+,
# the created row is a header row:
# row = CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['foo', 0], header_row = true)
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":0>
# row.field_row? # => false
# row.header_row? # => true
#
# @return [Row] a new instance of Row
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#105
def initialize(headers, fields, header_row = T.unsafe(nil)); end
# :call-seq:
# row << [header, value] -> self
# row << hash -> self
# row << value -> self
#
# Adds a field to +self+; returns +self+:
#
# If the argument is a 2-element \Array <tt>[header, value]</tt>,
# a field is added with the given +header+ and +value+:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row << ['NAME', 'Bat']
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"Foo" "Name":"Bar" "Name":"Baz" "NAME":"Bat">
#
# If the argument is a \Hash, each <tt>key-value</tt> pair is added
# as a field with header +key+ and value +value+.
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row << {NAME: 'Bat', name: 'Bam'}
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"Foo" "Name":"Bar" "Name":"Baz" NAME:"Bat" name:"Bam">
#
# Otherwise, the given +value+ is added as a field with no header.
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row << 'Bag'
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"Foo" "Name":"Bar" "Name":"Baz" nil:"Bag">
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#389
def <<(arg); end
# :call-seq:
# row == other -> true or false
#
# Returns +true+ if +other+ is a /CSV::Row that has the same
# fields (headers and values) in the same order as +self+;
# otherwise returns +false+:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# other_row = table[0]
# row == other_row # => true
# other_row = table[1]
# row == other_row # => false
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#633
def ==(other); end
# :call-seq:
# field(index) -> value
# field(header) -> value
# field(header, offset) -> value
#
# Returns the field value for the given +index+ or +header+.
#
# ---
#
# Fetch field value by \Integer index:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.field(0) # => "foo"
# row.field(1) # => "bar"
#
# Counts backward from the last column if +index+ is negative:
# row.field(-1) # => "0"
# row.field(-2) # => "foo"
#
# Returns +nil+ if +index+ is out of range:
# row.field(2) # => nil
# row.field(-3) # => nil
#
# ---
#
# Fetch field value by header (first found):
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.field('Name') # => "Foo"
#
# Fetch field value by header, ignoring +offset+ leading fields:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.field('Name', 2) # => "Baz"
#
# Returns +nil+ if the header does not exist.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#203
def [](header_or_index, minimum_index = T.unsafe(nil)); end
# :call-seq:
# row[index] = value -> value
# row[header, offset] = value -> value
# row[header] = value -> value
#
# Assigns the field value for the given +index+ or +header+;
# returns +value+.
#
# ---
#
# Assign field value by \Integer index:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row[0] = 'Bat'
# row[1] = 3
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"Bat" "Value":3>
#
# Counts backward from the last column if +index+ is negative:
# row[-1] = 4
# row[-2] = 'Bam'
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"Bam" "Value":4>
#
# Extends the row with <tt>nil:nil</tt> if positive +index+ is not in the row:
# row[4] = 5
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bad" "Value":4 nil:nil nil:nil nil:5>
#
# Raises IndexError if negative +index+ is too small (too far from zero).
#
# ---
#
# Assign field value by header (first found):
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row['Name'] = 'Bat'
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"Bat" "Name":"Bar" "Name":"Baz">
#
# Assign field value by header, ignoring +offset+ leading fields:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row['Name', 2] = 4
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"Foo" "Name":"Bar" "Name":4>
#
# Append new field by (new) header:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row['New'] = 6
# row# => #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0" "New":6>
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#339
def []=(*args); end
# :call-seq:
# row.deconstruct -> array
#
# Returns the new \Array suitable for pattern matching containing the values
# of the row.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#682
def deconstruct; end
# :call-seq:
# row.deconstruct_keys(keys) -> hash
#
# Returns the new \Hash suitable for pattern matching containing only the
# keys specified as an argument.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#667
def deconstruct_keys(keys); end
# :call-seq:
# delete(index) -> [header, value] or nil
# delete(header) -> [header, value] or empty_array
# delete(header, offset) -> [header, value] or empty_array
#
# Removes a specified field from +self+; returns the 2-element \Array
# <tt>[header, value]</tt> if the field exists.
#
# If an \Integer argument +index+ is given,
# removes and returns the field at offset +index+,
# or returns +nil+ if the field does not exist:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.delete(1) # => ["Name", "Bar"]
# row.delete(50) # => nil
#
# Otherwise, if the single argument +header+ is given,
# removes and returns the first-found field with the given header,
# of returns a new empty \Array if the field does not exist:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.delete('Name') # => ["Name", "Foo"]
# row.delete('NAME') # => []
#
# If argument +header+ and \Integer argument +offset+ are given,
# removes and returns the first-found field with the given header
# whose +index+ is at least as large as +offset+:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.delete('Name', 1) # => ["Name", "Bar"]
# row.delete('NAME', 1) # => []
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#451
def delete(header_or_index, minimum_index = T.unsafe(nil)); end
# :call-seq:
# row.delete_if {|header, value| ... } -> self
#
# Removes fields from +self+ as selected by the block; returns +self+.
#
# Removes each field for which the block returns a truthy value:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.delete_if {|header, value| value.start_with?('B') } # => true
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"Foo">
# row.delete_if {|header, value| header.start_with?('B') } # => false
#
# If no block is given, returns a new Enumerator:
# row.delete_if # => #<Enumerator: #<CSV::Row "Name":"Foo">:delete_if>
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#476
def delete_if(&block); end
# :call-seq:
# row.dig(index_or_header, *identifiers) -> object
#
# Finds and returns the object in nested object that is specified
# by +index_or_header+ and +specifiers+.
#
# The nested objects may be instances of various classes.
# See {Dig Methods}[rdoc-ref:dig_methods.rdoc].
#
# Examples:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.dig(1) # => "0"
# row.dig('Value') # => "0"
# row.dig(5) # => nil
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#715
def dig(index_or_header, *indexes); end
# :call-seq:
# row.each {|header, value| ... } -> self
#
# Calls the block with each header-value pair; returns +self+:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.each {|header, value| p [header, value] }
# Output:
# ["Name", "Foo"]
# ["Name", "Bar"]
# ["Name", "Baz"]
#
# If no block is given, returns a new Enumerator:
# row.each # => #<Enumerator: #<CSV::Row "Name":"Foo" "Name":"Bar" "Name":"Baz">:each>
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#610
def each(&block); end
# :call-seq:
# row.each {|header, value| ... } -> self
#
# Calls the block with each header-value pair; returns +self+:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.each {|header, value| p [header, value] }
# Output:
# ["Name", "Foo"]
# ["Name", "Bar"]
# ["Name", "Baz"]
#
# If no block is given, returns a new Enumerator:
# row.each # => #<Enumerator: #<CSV::Row "Name":"Foo" "Name":"Bar" "Name":"Baz">:each>
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#610
def each_pair(&block); end
# :call-seq:
# fetch(header) -> value
# fetch(header, default) -> value
# fetch(header) {|row| ... } -> value
#
# Returns the field value as specified by +header+.
#
# ---
#
# With the single argument +header+, returns the field value
# for that header (first found):
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.fetch('Name') # => "Foo"
#
# Raises exception +KeyError+ if the header does not exist.
#
# ---
#
# With arguments +header+ and +default+ given,
# returns the field value for the header (first found)
# if the header exists, otherwise returns +default+:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.fetch('Name', '') # => "Foo"
# row.fetch(:nosuch, '') # => ""
#
# ---
#
# With argument +header+ and a block given,
# returns the field value for the header (first found)
# if the header exists; otherwise calls the block
# and returns its return value:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.fetch('Name') {|header| fail 'Cannot happen' } # => "Foo"
# row.fetch(:nosuch) {|header| "Header '#{header} not found'" } # => "Header 'nosuch not found'"
#
# @raise [ArgumentError]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#258
def fetch(header, *varargs); end
# :call-seq:
# field(index) -> value
# field(header) -> value
# field(header, offset) -> value
#
# Returns the field value for the given +index+ or +header+.
#
# ---
#
# Fetch field value by \Integer index:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.field(0) # => "foo"
# row.field(1) # => "bar"
#
# Counts backward from the last column if +index+ is negative:
# row.field(-1) # => "0"
# row.field(-2) # => "foo"
#
# Returns +nil+ if +index+ is out of range:
# row.field(2) # => nil
# row.field(-3) # => nil
#
# ---
#
# Fetch field value by header (first found):
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.field('Name') # => "Foo"
#
# Fetch field value by header, ignoring +offset+ leading fields:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.field('Name', 2) # => "Baz"
#
# Returns +nil+ if the header does not exist.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#203
def field(header_or_index, minimum_index = T.unsafe(nil)); end
# :call-seq:
# row.field?(value) -> true or false
#
# Returns +true+ if +value+ is a field in this row, +false+ otherwise:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.field?('Bar') # => true
# row.field?('BAR') # => false
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#589
def field?(data); end
# :call-seq:
# row.field_row? -> true or false
#
# Returns +true+ if this is a field row, +false+ otherwise.
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#148
def field_row?; end
# :call-seq:
# self.fields(*specifiers) -> array_of_fields
#
# Returns field values per the given +specifiers+, which may be any mixture of:
# - \Integer index.
# - \Range of \Integer indexes.
# - 2-element \Array containing a header and offset.
# - Header.
# - \Range of headers.
#
# For +specifier+ in one of the first four cases above,
# returns the result of <tt>self.field(specifier)</tt>; see #field.
#
# Although there may be any number of +specifiers+,
# the examples here will illustrate one at a time.
#
# When the specifier is an \Integer +index+,
# returns <tt>self.field(index)</tt>L
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.fields(1) # => ["Bar"]
#
# When the specifier is a \Range of \Integers +range+,
# returns <tt>self.field(range)</tt>:
# row.fields(1..2) # => ["Bar", "Baz"]
#
# When the specifier is a 2-element \Array +array+,
# returns <tt>self.field(array)</tt>L
# row.fields('Name', 1) # => ["Foo", "Bar"]
#
# When the specifier is a header +header+,
# returns <tt>self.field(header)</tt>L
# row.fields('Name') # => ["Foo"]
#
# When the specifier is a \Range of headers +range+,
# forms a new \Range +new_range+ from the indexes of
# <tt>range.start</tt> and <tt>range.end</tt>,
# and returns <tt>self.field(new_range)</tt>:
# source = "Name,NAME,name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.fields('Name'..'NAME') # => ["Foo", "Bar"]
#
# Returns all fields if no argument given:
# row.fields # => ["Foo", "Bar", "Baz"]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#530
def fields(*headers_and_or_indices); end
# :call-seq:
# row.has_key?(header) -> true or false
#
# Returns +true+ if there is a field with the given +header+,
# +false+ otherwise.
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#279
def has_key?(header); end
# :call-seq:
# row.has_key?(header) -> true or false
#
# Returns +true+ if there is a field with the given +header+,
# +false+ otherwise.
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#279
def header?(header); end
# :call-seq:
# row.header_row? -> true or false
#
# Returns +true+ if this is a header row, +false+ otherwise.
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#140
def header_row?; end
# :call-seq:
# row.headers -> array_of_headers
#
# Returns the headers for this row:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table.first
# row.headers # => ["Name", "Value"]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#160
def headers; end
# :call-seq:
# row.has_key?(header) -> true or false
#
# Returns +true+ if there is a field with the given +header+,
# +false+ otherwise.
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#279
def include?(header); end
# :call-seq:
# index(header) -> index
# index(header, offset) -> index
#
# Returns the index for the given header, if it exists;
# otherwise returns +nil+.
#
# With the single argument +header+, returns the index
# of the first-found field with the given +header+:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.index('Name') # => 0
# row.index('NAME') # => nil
#
# With arguments +header+ and +offset+,
# returns the index of the first-found field with given +header+,
# but ignoring the first +offset+ fields:
# row.index('Name', 1) # => 1
# row.index('Name', 3) # => nil
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#573
def index(header, minimum_index = T.unsafe(nil)); end
# :call-seq:
# row.inspect -> string
#
# Returns an ASCII-compatible \String showing:
# - Class \CSV::Row.
# - Header-value pairs.
# Example:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.inspect # => "#<CSV::Row \"Name\":\"foo\" \"Value\":\"0\">"
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#740
def inspect; end
# :call-seq:
# row.has_key?(header) -> true or false
#
# Returns +true+ if there is a field with the given +header+,
# +false+ otherwise.
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#279
def key?(header); end
# :call-seq:
# row.has_key?(header) -> true or false
#
# Returns +true+ if there is a field with the given +header+,
# +false+ otherwise.
#
# @return [Boolean]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#279
def member?(header); end
# :call-seq:
# row.push(*values) -> self
#
# Appends each of the given +values+ to +self+ as a field; returns +self+:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.push('Bat', 'Bam')
# row # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"Foo" "Name":"Bar" "Name":"Baz" nil:"Bat" nil:"Bam">
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#410
def push(*args); end
# :call-seq:
# row.to_csv -> csv_string
#
# Returns the row as a \CSV String. Headers are not included:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.to_csv # => "foo,0\n"
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#694
def to_csv(**options); end
# :call-seq:
# row.to_h -> hash
#
# Returns the new \Hash formed by adding each header-value pair in +self+
# as a key-value pair in the \Hash.
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.to_h # => {"Name"=>"foo", "Value"=>"0"}
#
# Header order is preserved, but repeated headers are ignored:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.to_h # => {"Name"=>"Foo"}
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#653
def to_h; end
# :call-seq:
# row.to_h -> hash
#
# Returns the new \Hash formed by adding each header-value pair in +self+
# as a key-value pair in the \Hash.
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.to_h # => {"Name"=>"foo", "Value"=>"0"}
#
# Header order is preserved, but repeated headers are ignored:
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.to_h # => {"Name"=>"Foo"}
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#653
def to_hash; end
# :call-seq:
# row.to_csv -> csv_string
#
# Returns the row as a \CSV String. Headers are not included:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.to_csv # => "foo,0\n"
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#694
def to_s(**options); end
# :call-seq:
# self.fields(*specifiers) -> array_of_fields
#
# Returns field values per the given +specifiers+, which may be any mixture of:
# - \Integer index.
# - \Range of \Integer indexes.
# - 2-element \Array containing a header and offset.
# - Header.
# - \Range of headers.
#
# For +specifier+ in one of the first four cases above,
# returns the result of <tt>self.field(specifier)</tt>; see #field.
#
# Although there may be any number of +specifiers+,
# the examples here will illustrate one at a time.
#
# When the specifier is an \Integer +index+,
# returns <tt>self.field(index)</tt>L
# source = "Name,Name,Name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.fields(1) # => ["Bar"]
#
# When the specifier is a \Range of \Integers +range+,
# returns <tt>self.field(range)</tt>:
# row.fields(1..2) # => ["Bar", "Baz"]
#
# When the specifier is a 2-element \Array +array+,
# returns <tt>self.field(array)</tt>L
# row.fields('Name', 1) # => ["Foo", "Bar"]
#
# When the specifier is a header +header+,
# returns <tt>self.field(header)</tt>L
# row.fields('Name') # => ["Foo"]
#
# When the specifier is a \Range of headers +range+,
# forms a new \Range +new_range+ from the indexes of
# <tt>range.start</tt> and <tt>range.end</tt>,
# and returns <tt>self.field(new_range)</tt>:
# source = "Name,NAME,name\nFoo,Bar,Baz\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# row = table[0]
# row.fields('Name'..'NAME') # => ["Foo", "Bar"]
#
# Returns all fields if no argument given:
# row.fields # => ["Foo", "Bar", "Baz"]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#530
def values_at(*headers_and_or_indices); end
protected
# Internal data format used to compare equality.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#118
def row; end
private
# :call-seq:
# row.initialize_copy(other_row) -> self
#
# Calls superclass method.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/row.rb#130
def initialize_copy(other); end
end
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2132
class CSV::TSV < ::CSV
# @return [TSV] a new instance of TSV
#
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#2133
def initialize(data, **options); end
end
# = \CSV::Table
# A \CSV::Table instance represents \CSV data.
# (see {class CSV}[../CSV.html]).
#
# The instance may have:
# - Rows: each is a Table::Row object.
# - Headers: names for the columns.
#
# === Instance Methods
#
# \CSV::Table has three groups of instance methods:
# - Its own internally defined instance methods.
# - Methods included by module Enumerable.
# - Methods delegated to class Array.:
# * Array#empty?
# * Array#length
# * Array#size
#
# == Creating a \CSV::Table Instance
#
# Commonly, a new \CSV::Table instance is created by parsing \CSV source
# using headers:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.class # => CSV::Table
#
# You can also create an instance directly. See ::new.
#
# == Headers
#
# If a table has headers, the headers serve as labels for the columns of data.
# Each header serves as the label for its column.
#
# The headers for a \CSV::Table object are stored as an \Array of Strings.
#
# Commonly, headers are defined in the first row of \CSV source:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.headers # => ["Name", "Value"]
#
# If no headers are defined, the \Array is empty:
# table = CSV::Table.new([])
# table.headers # => []
#
# == Access Modes
#
# \CSV::Table provides three modes for accessing table data:
# - \Row mode.
# - Column mode.
# - Mixed mode (the default for a new table).
#
# The access mode for a\CSV::Table instance affects the behavior
# of some of its instance methods:
# - #[]
# - #[]=
# - #delete
# - #delete_if
# - #each
# - #values_at
#
# === \Row Mode
#
# Set a table to row mode with method #by_row!:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.by_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:row row_count:4>
#
# Specify a single row by an \Integer index:
# # Get a row.
# table[1] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# # Set a row, then get it.
# table[1] = CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['bam', 3])
# table[1] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bam" "Value":3>
#
# Specify a sequence of rows by a \Range:
# # Get rows.
# table[1..2] # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"bam" "Value":3>, #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">]
# # Set rows, then get them.
# table[1..2] = [
# CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['bat', 4]),
# CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['bad', 5]),
# ]
# table[1..2] # => [["Name", #<CSV::Row "Name":"bat" "Value":4>], ["Value", #<CSV::Row "Name":"bad" "Value":5>]]
#
# === Column Mode
#
# Set a table to column mode with method #by_col!:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.by_col! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col row_count:4>
#
# Specify a column by an \Integer index:
# # Get a column.
# table[0]
# # Set a column, then get it.
# table[0] = ['FOO', 'BAR', 'BAZ']
# table[0] # => ["FOO", "BAR", "BAZ"]
#
# Specify a column by its \String header:
# # Get a column.
# table['Name'] # => ["FOO", "BAR", "BAZ"]
# # Set a column, then get it.
# table['Name'] = ['Foo', 'Bar', 'Baz']
# table['Name'] # => ["Foo", "Bar", "Baz"]
#
# === Mixed Mode
#
# In mixed mode, you can refer to either rows or columns:
# - An \Integer index refers to a row.
# - A \Range index refers to multiple rows.
# - A \String index refers to a column.
#
# Set a table to mixed mode with method #by_col_or_row!:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.by_col_or_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
#
# Specify a single row by an \Integer index:
# # Get a row.
# table[1] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# # Set a row, then get it.
# table[1] = CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['bam', 3])
# table[1] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bam" "Value":3>
#
# Specify a sequence of rows by a \Range:
# # Get rows.
# table[1..2] # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"bam" "Value":3>, #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">]
# # Set rows, then get them.
# table[1] = CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['bat', 4])
# table[2] = CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['bad', 5])
# table[1..2] # => [["Name", #<CSV::Row "Name":"bat" "Value":4>], ["Value", #<CSV::Row "Name":"bad" "Value":5>]]
#
# Specify a column by its \String header:
# # Get a column.
# table['Name'] # => ["foo", "bat", "bad"]
# # Set a column, then get it.
# table['Name'] = ['Foo', 'Bar', 'Baz']
# table['Name'] # => ["Foo", "Bar", "Baz"]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#144
class CSV::Table
include ::Enumerable
extend ::Forwardable
# :call-seq:
# CSV::Table.new(array_of_rows, headers = nil) -> csv_table
#
# Returns a new \CSV::Table object.
#
# - Argument +array_of_rows+ must be an \Array of CSV::Row objects.
# - Argument +headers+, if given, may be an \Array of Strings.
#
# ---
#
# Create an empty \CSV::Table object:
# table = CSV::Table.new([])
# table # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:1>
#
# Create a non-empty \CSV::Table object:
# rows = [
# CSV::Row.new([], []),
# CSV::Row.new([], []),
# CSV::Row.new([], []),
# ]
# table = CSV::Table.new(rows)
# table # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
#
# ---
#
# If argument +headers+ is an \Array of Strings,
# those Strings become the table's headers:
# table = CSV::Table.new([], headers: ['Name', 'Age'])
# table.headers # => ["Name", "Age"]
#
# If argument +headers+ is not given and the table has rows,
# the headers are taken from the first row:
# rows = [
# CSV::Row.new(['Foo', 'Bar'], []),
# CSV::Row.new(['foo', 'bar'], []),
# CSV::Row.new(['FOO', 'BAR'], []),
# ]
# table = CSV::Table.new(rows)
# table.headers # => ["Foo", "Bar"]
#
# If argument +headers+ is not given and the table is empty (has no rows),
# the headers are also empty:
# table = CSV::Table.new([])
# table.headers # => []
#
# ---
#
# Raises an exception if argument +array_of_rows+ is not an \Array object:
# # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `first' for :foo:Symbol):
# CSV::Table.new(:foo)
#
# Raises an exception if an element of +array_of_rows+ is not a \CSV::Table object:
# # Raises NoMethodError (undefined method `headers' for :foo:Symbol):
# CSV::Table.new([:foo])
#
# @return [Table] a new instance of Table
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#199
def initialize(array_of_rows, headers: T.unsafe(nil)); end
# :call-seq:
# table << row_or_array -> self
#
# If +row_or_array+ is a \CSV::Row object,
# it is appended to the table:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table << CSV::Row.new(table.headers, ['bat', 3])
# table[3] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bat" "Value":3>
#
# If +row_or_array+ is an \Array, it is used to create a new
# \CSV::Row object which is then appended to the table:
# table << ['bam', 4]
# table[4] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bam" "Value":4>
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#762
def <<(row_or_array); end
# :call-seq:
# table == other_table -> true or false
#
# Returns +true+ if all each row of +self+ <tt>==</tt>
# the corresponding row of +other_table+, otherwise, +false+.
#
# The access mode does no affect the result.
#
# Equal tables:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# other_table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table == other_table # => true
#
# Different row count:
# other_table.delete(2)
# table == other_table # => false
#
# Different last row:
# other_table << ['bat', 3]
# table == other_table # => false
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#965
def ==(other); end
# :call-seq:
# table[n] -> row or column_data
# table[range] -> array_of_rows or array_of_column_data
# table[header] -> array_of_column_data
#
# Returns data from the table; does not modify the table.
#
# ---
#
# Fetch a \Row by Its \Integer Index::
# - Form: <tt>table[n]</tt>, +n+ an integer.
# - Access mode: <tt>:row</tt> or <tt>:col_or_row</tt>.
# - Return value: _nth_ row of the table, if that row exists;
# otherwise +nil+.
#
# Returns the _nth_ row of the table if that row exists:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.by_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:row row_count:4>
# table[1] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# table.by_col_or_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
# table[1] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
#
# Counts backward from the last row if +n+ is negative:
# table[-1] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">
#
# Returns +nil+ if +n+ is too large or too small:
# table[4] # => nil
# table[-4] # => nil
#
# Raises an exception if the access mode is <tt>:row</tt>
# and +n+ is not an \Integer:
# table.by_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:row row_count:4>
# # Raises TypeError (no implicit conversion of String into Integer):
# table['Name']
#
# ---
#
# Fetch a Column by Its \Integer Index::
# - Form: <tt>table[n]</tt>, +n+ an \Integer.
# - Access mode: <tt>:col</tt>.
# - Return value: _nth_ column of the table, if that column exists;
# otherwise an \Array of +nil+ fields of length <tt>self.size</tt>.
#
# Returns the _nth_ column of the table if that column exists:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.by_col! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col row_count:4>
# table[1] # => ["0", "1", "2"]
#
# Counts backward from the last column if +n+ is negative:
# table[-2] # => ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
#
# Returns an \Array of +nil+ fields if +n+ is too large or too small:
# table[4] # => [nil, nil, nil]
# table[-4] # => [nil, nil, nil]
#
# ---
#
# Fetch Rows by \Range::
# - Form: <tt>table[range]</tt>, +range+ a \Range object.
# - Access mode: <tt>:row</tt> or <tt>:col_or_row</tt>.
# - Return value: rows from the table, beginning at row <tt>range.start</tt>,
# if those rows exists.
#
# Returns rows from the table, beginning at row <tt>range.first</tt>,
# if those rows exist:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.by_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:row row_count:4>
# rows = table[1..2] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# rows # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">, #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">]
# table.by_col_or_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
# rows = table[1..2] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# rows # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">, #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">]
#
# If there are too few rows, returns all from <tt>range.start</tt> to the end:
# rows = table[1..50] # => #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# rows # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">, #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">]
#
# Special case: if <tt>range.start == table.size</tt>, returns an empty \Array:
# table[table.size..50] # => []
#
# If <tt>range.end</tt> is negative, calculates the ending index from the end:
# rows = table[0..-1]
# rows # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">, #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">, #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">]
#
# If <tt>range.start</tt> is negative, calculates the starting index from the end:
# rows = table[-1..2]
# rows # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">]
#
# If <tt>range.start</tt> is larger than <tt>table.size</tt>, returns +nil+:
# table[4..4] # => nil
#
# ---
#
# Fetch Columns by \Range::
# - Form: <tt>table[range]</tt>, +range+ a \Range object.
# - Access mode: <tt>:col</tt>.
# - Return value: column data from the table, beginning at column <tt>range.start</tt>,
# if those columns exist.
#
# Returns column values from the table, if the column exists;
# the values are arranged by row:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.by_col!
# table[0..1] # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# Special case: if <tt>range.start == headers.size</tt>,
# returns an \Array (size: <tt>table.size</tt>) of empty \Arrays:
# table[table.headers.size..50] # => [[], [], []]
#
# If <tt>range.end</tt> is negative, calculates the ending index from the end:
# table[0..-1] # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# If <tt>range.start</tt> is negative, calculates the starting index from the end:
# table[-2..2] # => [["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# If <tt>range.start</tt> is larger than <tt>table.size</tt>,
# returns an \Array of +nil+ values:
# table[4..4] # => [nil, nil, nil]
#
# ---
#
# Fetch a Column by Its \String Header::
# - Form: <tt>table[header]</tt>, +header+ a \String header.
# - Access mode: <tt>:col</tt> or <tt>:col_or_row</tt>
# - Return value: column data from the table, if that +header+ exists.
#
# Returns column values from the table, if the column exists:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.by_col! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col row_count:4>
# table['Name'] # => ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
# table.by_col_or_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
# col = table['Name']
# col # => ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
#
# Modifying the returned column values does not modify the table:
# col[0] = 'bat'
# col # => ["bat", "bar", "baz"]
# table['Name'] # => ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
#
# Returns an \Array of +nil+ values if there is no such column:
# table['Nosuch'] # => [nil, nil, nil]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#514
def [](index_or_header); end
# :call-seq:
# table[n] = row -> row
# table[n] = field_or_array_of_fields -> field_or_array_of_fields
# table[header] = field_or_array_of_fields -> field_or_array_of_fields
#
# Puts data onto the table.
#
# ---
#
# Set a \Row by Its \Integer Index::
# - Form: <tt>table[n] = row</tt>, +n+ an \Integer,
# +row+ a \CSV::Row instance or an \Array of fields.
# - Access mode: <tt>:row</tt> or <tt>:col_or_row</tt>.
# - Return value: +row+.
#
# If the row exists, it is replaced:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# new_row = CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['bat', 3])
# table.by_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:row row_count:4>
# return_value = table[0] = new_row
# return_value.equal?(new_row) # => true # Returned the row
# table[0].to_h # => {"Name"=>"bat", "Value"=>3}
#
# With access mode <tt>:col_or_row</tt>:
# table.by_col_or_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>
# table[0] = CSV::Row.new(['Name', 'Value'], ['bam', 4])
# table[0].to_h # => {"Name"=>"bam", "Value"=>4}
#
# With an \Array instead of a \CSV::Row, inherits headers from the table:
# array = ['bad', 5]
# return_value = table[0] = array
# return_value.equal?(array) # => true # Returned the array
# table[0].to_h # => {"Name"=>"bad", "Value"=>5}
#
# If the row does not exist, extends the table by adding rows:
# assigns rows with +nil+ as needed:
# table.size # => 3
# table[5] = ['bag', 6]
# table.size # => 6
# table[3] # => nil
# table[4]# => nil
# table[5].to_h # => {"Name"=>"bag", "Value"=>6}
#
# Note that the +nil+ rows are actually +nil+, not a row of +nil+ fields.
#
# ---
#
# Set a Column by Its \Integer Index::
# - Form: <tt>table[n] = array_of_fields</tt>, +n+ an \Integer,
# +array_of_fields+ an \Array of \String fields.
# - Access mode: <tt>:col</tt>.
# - Return value: +array_of_fields+.
#
# If the column exists, it is replaced:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# new_col = [3, 4, 5]
# table.by_col! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col row_count:4>
# return_value = table[1] = new_col
# return_value.equal?(new_col) # => true # Returned the column
# table[1] # => [3, 4, 5]
# # The rows, as revised:
# table.by_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:row row_count:4>
# table[0].to_h # => {"Name"=>"foo", "Value"=>3}
# table[1].to_h # => {"Name"=>"bar", "Value"=>4}
# table[2].to_h # => {"Name"=>"baz", "Value"=>5}
# table.by_col! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col row_count:4>
#
# If there are too few values, fills with +nil+ values:
# table[1] = [0]
# table[1] # => [0, nil, nil]
#
# If there are too many values, ignores the extra values:
# table[1] = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
# table[1] # => [0, 1, 2]
#
# If a single value is given, replaces all fields in the column with that value:
# table[1] = 'bat'
# table[1] # => ["bat", "bat", "bat"]
#
# ---
#
# Set a Column by Its \String Header::
# - Form: <tt>table[header] = field_or_array_of_fields</tt>,
# +header+ a \String header, +field_or_array_of_fields+ a field value
# or an \Array of \String fields.
# - Access mode: <tt>:col</tt> or <tt>:col_or_row</tt>.
# - Return value: +field_or_array_of_fields+.
#
# If the column exists, it is replaced:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# new_col = [3, 4, 5]
# table.by_col! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col row_count:4>
# return_value = table['Value'] = new_col
# return_value.equal?(new_col) # => true # Returned the column
# table['Value'] # => [3, 4, 5]
# # The rows, as revised:
# table.by_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:row row_count:4>
# table[0].to_h # => {"Name"=>"foo", "Value"=>3}
# table[1].to_h # => {"Name"=>"bar", "Value"=>4}
# table[2].to_h # => {"Name"=>"baz", "Value"=>5}
# table.by_col! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col row_count:4>
#
# If there are too few values, fills with +nil+ values:
# table['Value'] = [0]
# table['Value'] # => [0, nil, nil]
#
# If there are too many values, ignores the extra values:
# table['Value'] = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
# table['Value'] # => [0, 1, 2]
#
# If the column does not exist, extends the table by adding columns:
# table['Note'] = ['x', 'y', 'z']
# table['Note'] # => ["x", "y", "z"]
# # The rows, as revised:
# table.by_row!
# table[0].to_h # => {"Name"=>"foo", "Value"=>0, "Note"=>"x"}
# table[1].to_h # => {"Name"=>"bar", "Value"=>1, "Note"=>"y"}
# table[2].to_h # => {"Name"=>"baz", "Value"=>2, "Note"=>"z"}
# table.by_col!
#
# If a single value is given, replaces all fields in the column with that value:
# table['Value'] = 'bat'
# table['Value'] # => ["bat", "bat", "bat"]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#649
def []=(index_or_header, value); end
# :call-seq:
# table.by_col -> table_dup
#
# Returns a duplicate of +self+, in column mode
# (see {Column Mode}[#class-CSV::Table-label-Column+Mode]):
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.mode # => :col_or_row
# dup_table = table.by_col
# dup_table.mode # => :col
# dup_table.equal?(table) # => false # It's a dup
#
# This may be used to chain method calls without changing the mode
# (but also will affect performance and memory usage):
# dup_table.by_col['Name']
#
# Also note that changes to the duplicate table will not affect the original.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#242
def by_col; end
# :call-seq:
# table.by_col! -> self
#
# Sets the mode for +self+ to column mode
# (see {Column Mode}[#class-CSV::Table-label-Column+Mode]); returns +self+:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.mode # => :col_or_row
# table1 = table.by_col!
# table.mode # => :col
# table1.equal?(table) # => true # Returned self
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#257
def by_col!; end
# :call-seq:
# table.by_col_or_row -> table_dup
#
# Returns a duplicate of +self+, in mixed mode
# (see {Mixed Mode}[#class-CSV::Table-label-Mixed+Mode]):
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true).by_col!
# table.mode # => :col
# dup_table = table.by_col_or_row
# dup_table.mode # => :col_or_row
# dup_table.equal?(table) # => false # It's a dup
#
# This may be used to chain method calls without changing the mode
# (but also will affect performance and memory usage):
# dup_table.by_col_or_row['Name']
#
# Also note that changes to the duplicate table will not affect the original.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#280
def by_col_or_row; end
# :call-seq:
# table.by_col_or_row! -> self
#
# Sets the mode for +self+ to mixed mode
# (see {Mixed Mode}[#class-CSV::Table-label-Mixed+Mode]); returns +self+:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true).by_col!
# table.mode # => :col
# table1 = table.by_col_or_row!
# table.mode # => :col_or_row
# table1.equal?(table) # => true # Returned self
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#295
def by_col_or_row!; end
# :call-seq:
# table.by_row -> table_dup
#
# Returns a duplicate of +self+, in row mode
# (see {Row Mode}[#class-CSV::Table-label-Row+Mode]):
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.mode # => :col_or_row
# dup_table = table.by_row
# dup_table.mode # => :row
# dup_table.equal?(table) # => false # It's a dup
#
# This may be used to chain method calls without changing the mode
# (but also will affect performance and memory usage):
# dup_table.by_row[1]
#
# Also note that changes to the duplicate table will not affect the original.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#318
def by_row; end
# :call-seq:
# table.by_row! -> self
#
# Sets the mode for +self+ to row mode
# (see {Row Mode}[#class-CSV::Table-label-Row+Mode]); returns +self+:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.mode # => :col_or_row
# table1 = table.by_row!
# table.mode # => :row
# table1.equal?(table) # => true # Returned self
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#333
def by_row!; end
# :call-seq:
# table.delete(*indexes) -> deleted_values
# table.delete(*headers) -> deleted_values
#
# If the access mode is <tt>:row</tt> or <tt>:col_or_row</tt>,
# and each argument is either an \Integer or a \Range,
# returns deleted rows.
# Otherwise, returns deleted columns data.
#
# In either case, the returned values are in the order
# specified by the arguments. Arguments may be repeated.
#
# ---
#
# Returns rows as an \Array of \CSV::Row objects.
#
# One index:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# deleted_values = table.delete(0)
# deleted_values # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">]
#
# Two indexes:
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# deleted_values = table.delete(2, 0)
# deleted_values # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">, #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">]
#
# ---
#
# Returns columns data as column Arrays.
#
# One header:
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# deleted_values = table.delete('Name')
# deleted_values # => ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
#
# Two headers:
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# deleted_values = table.delete('Value', 'Name')
# deleted_values # => [["0", "1", "2"], ["foo", "bar", "baz"]]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#834
def delete(*indexes_or_headers); end
# :call-seq:
# table.delete_if {|row_or_column| ... } -> self
#
# Removes rows or columns for which the block returns a truthy value;
# returns +self+.
#
# Removes rows when the access mode is <tt>:row</tt> or <tt>:col_or_row</tt>;
# calls the block with each \CSV::Row object:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.by_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:row row_count:4>
# table.size # => 3
# table.delete_if {|row| row['Name'].start_with?('b') }
# table.size # => 1
#
# Removes columns when the access mode is <tt>:col</tt>;
# calls the block with each column as a 2-element array
# containing the header and an \Array of column fields:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.by_col! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col row_count:4>
# table.headers.size # => 2
# table.delete_if {|column_data| column_data[1].include?('2') }
# table.headers.size # => 1
#
# Returns a new \Enumerator if no block is given:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.delete_if # => #<Enumerator: #<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>:delete_if>
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#887
def delete_if(&block); end
# Extracts the nested value specified by the sequence of +index+ or +header+ objects by calling dig at each step,
# returning nil if any intermediate step is nil.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#1021
def dig(index_or_header, *index_or_headers); end
# :call-seq:
# table.each {|row_or_column| ... ) -> self
#
# Calls the block with each row or column; returns +self+.
#
# When the access mode is <tt>:row</tt> or <tt>:col_or_row</tt>,
# calls the block with each \CSV::Row object:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.by_row! # => #<CSV::Table mode:row row_count:4>
# table.each {|row| p row }
# Output:
# #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">
# #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">
# #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">
#
# When the access mode is <tt>:col</tt>,
# calls the block with each column as a 2-element array
# containing the header and an \Array of column fields:
# table.by_col! # => #<CSV::Table mode:col row_count:4>
# table.each {|column_data| p column_data }
# Output:
# ["Name", ["foo", "bar", "baz"]]
# ["Value", ["0", "1", "2"]]
#
# Returns a new \Enumerator if no block is given:
# table.each # => #<Enumerator: #<CSV::Table mode:col row_count:4>:each>
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#930
def each(&block); end
# :call-seq:
# table.headers -> array_of_headers
#
# Returns a new \Array containing the \String headers for the table.
#
# If the table is not empty, returns the headers from the first row:
# rows = [
# CSV::Row.new(['Foo', 'Bar'], []),
# CSV::Row.new(['FOO', 'BAR'], []),
# CSV::Row.new(['foo', 'bar'], []),
# ]
# table = CSV::Table.new(rows)
# table.headers # => ["Foo", "Bar"]
# table.delete(0)
# table.headers # => ["FOO", "BAR"]
# table.delete(0)
# table.headers # => ["foo", "bar"]
#
# If the table is empty, returns a copy of the headers in the table itself:
# table.delete(0)
# table.headers # => ["Foo", "Bar"]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#360
def headers; end
# :call-seq:
# table.inspect => string
#
# Returns a <tt>US-ASCII</tt>-encoded \String showing table:
# - Class: <tt>CSV::Table</tt>.
# - Access mode: <tt>:row</tt>, <tt>:col</tt>, or <tt>:col_or_row</tt>.
# - Size: Row count, including the header row.
#
# Example:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.inspect # => "#<CSV::Table mode:col_or_row row_count:4>\nName,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#1048
def inspect; end
# The current access mode for indexing and iteration.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#214
def mode; end
# :call-seq:
# table.push(*rows_or_arrays) -> self
#
# A shortcut for appending multiple rows. Equivalent to:
# rows.each {|row| self << row }
#
# Each argument may be either a \CSV::Row object or an \Array:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# rows = [
# CSV::Row.new(table.headers, ['bat', 3]),
# ['bam', 4]
# ]
# table.push(*rows)
# table[3..4] # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"bat" "Value":3>, #<CSV::Row "Name":"bam" "Value":4>]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#788
def push(*rows); end
# :call-seq:
# table.to_a -> array_of_arrays
#
# Returns the table as an \Array of \Arrays;
# the headers are in the first row:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.to_a # => [["Name", "Value"], ["foo", "0"], ["bar", "1"], ["baz", "2"]]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#978
def to_a; end
# :call-seq:
# table.to_csv(**options) -> csv_string
#
# Returns the table as \CSV string.
# See {Options for Generating}[../CSV.html#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Generating].
#
# Defaults option +write_headers+ to +true+:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.to_csv # => "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# Omits the headers if option +write_headers+ is given as +false+
# (see {Option +write_headers+}[../CSV.html#class-CSV-label-Option+write_headers]):
# table.to_csv(write_headers: false) # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# Limit rows if option +limit+ is given like +2+:
# table.to_csv(limit: 2) # => "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\n"
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#1004
def to_csv(write_headers: T.unsafe(nil), limit: T.unsafe(nil), **options); end
# :call-seq:
# table.to_csv(**options) -> csv_string
#
# Returns the table as \CSV string.
# See {Options for Generating}[../CSV.html#class-CSV-label-Options+for+Generating].
#
# Defaults option +write_headers+ to +true+:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.to_csv # => "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# Omits the headers if option +write_headers+ is given as +false+
# (see {Option +write_headers+}[../CSV.html#class-CSV-label-Option+write_headers]):
# table.to_csv(write_headers: false) # => "foo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
#
# Limit rows if option +limit+ is given like +2+:
# table.to_csv(limit: 2) # => "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\n"
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#1004
def to_s(write_headers: T.unsafe(nil), limit: T.unsafe(nil), **options); end
# :call-seq:
# table.values_at(*indexes) -> array_of_rows
# table.values_at(*headers) -> array_of_columns_data
#
# If the access mode is <tt>:row</tt> or <tt>:col_or_row</tt>,
# and each argument is either an \Integer or a \Range,
# returns rows.
# Otherwise, returns columns data.
#
# In either case, the returned values are in the order
# specified by the arguments. Arguments may be repeated.
#
# ---
#
# Returns rows as an \Array of \CSV::Row objects.
#
# No argument:
# source = "Name,Value\nfoo,0\nbar,1\nbaz,2\n"
# table = CSV.parse(source, headers: true)
# table.values_at # => []
#
# One index:
# values = table.values_at(0)
# values # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">]
#
# Two indexes:
# values = table.values_at(2, 0)
# values # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">, #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">]
#
# One \Range:
# values = table.values_at(1..2)
# values # => [#<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">, #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">]
#
# \Ranges and indexes:
# values = table.values_at(0..1, 1..2, 0, 2)
# pp values
# Output:
# [#<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">,
# #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">,
# #<CSV::Row "Name":"bar" "Value":"1">,
# #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">,
# #<CSV::Row "Name":"foo" "Value":"0">,
# #<CSV::Row "Name":"baz" "Value":"2">]
#
# ---
#
# Returns columns data as row Arrays,
# each consisting of the specified columns data for that row:
# values = table.values_at('Name')
# values # => [["foo"], ["bar"], ["baz"]]
# values = table.values_at('Value', 'Name')
# values # => [["0", "foo"], ["1", "bar"], ["2", "baz"]]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#734
def values_at(*indices_or_headers); end
protected
# Internal data format used to compare equality.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/table.rb#217
def table; end
end
# Note: Don't use this class directly. This is an internal class.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#8
class CSV::Writer
# @return [Writer] a new instance of Writer
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#16
def initialize(output, options); end
# Adds a new row
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#31
def <<(row); end
# Returns the value of attribute headers.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#14
def headers; end
# A CSV::Writer receives an output, prepares the header, format and output.
# It allows us to write new rows in the object and rewind it.
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#13
def lineno; end
# Winds back to the beginning
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#63
def rewind; end
private
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#69
def prepare; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#105
def prepare_force_quotes_fields(force_quotes); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#132
def prepare_format; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#77
def prepare_header; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#162
def prepare_output; end
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#189
def quote(field, i); end
# source://csv//lib/csv/writer.rb#180
def quote_field(field); end
end
class Object < ::BasicObject
include ::Kernel
include ::PP::ObjectMixin
private
# source://csv//lib/csv.rb#3011
def CSV(*args, **options, &block); end
end
# source://csv//lib/csv/core_ext/string.rb#1
class String
include ::Comparable
# Equivalent to CSV::parse_line(self, options)
#
# "CSV,data".parse_csv
# #=> ["CSV", "data"]
#
# source://csv//lib/csv/core_ext/string.rb#6
def parse_csv(**options); end
end