Research
Security News
Malicious npm Packages Inject SSH Backdoors via Typosquatted Libraries
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
convert-csv-to-json
Advanced tools
This project is not dependent on others packages or libraries.
Follow me, and consider starring the project to show your :heart: and support.
Converts csv files to JSON files with Node.js.
Give an input file like:
first_name | last_name | gender | age | zip | registered | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Constantin | Langsdon | clangsdon0@hc360.com | Male | 96 | 123 | true |
Norah | Raison | nraison1@wired.com | Female | 32 | false |
e.g. :
first_name;last_name;email;gender;age;zip;registered
Constantin;Langsdon;clangsdon0@hc360.com;Male;96;123;true
Norah;Raison;nraison1@wired.com;Female;32;;false
will generate:
[
{
"first_name": "Constantin",
"last_name": "Langsdon",
"email": "clangsdon0@hc360.com",
"gender": "Male",
"age": "96",
"zip": "123",
"registered": "true"
},
{
"first_name": "Norah",
"last_name": "Raison",
"email": "nraison1@wired.com",
"gender": "Female",
"age": "32",
"zip": "",
"registered": "false"
}
]
This package is compatible with and .
NPM (see Installing Npm).
Go to NPM package convert-csv-to-json.
Install package in your package.json
$ npm install convert-csv-to-json --save
Install package on your machine
$ npm install -g convert-csv-to-json
let csvToJson = require('convert-csv-to-json');
let fileInputName = 'myInputFile.csv';
let fileOutputName = 'myOutputFile.json';
csvToJson.generateJsonFileFromCsv(fileInputName,fileOutputName);
let csvToJson = require('convert-csv-to-json');
let json = csvToJson.getJsonFromCsv("myInputFile.csv");
for(let i=0; i<json.length;i++){
console.log(json[i]);
}
firstName;lastName;email;gender;age;birth;sons
Constantin;Langsdon;clangsdon0@hc360.com;Male;96;10.02.1965;*diego,marek,dries*
Given the above CSV example, to generate a JSON Object with properties that contains sub Array, like the property sons
with the values diego,marek,dries you have to call the function parseSubArray(delimiter, separator)
.
To generate the JSON Object with sub array from the above CSV example:
csvToJson.parseSubArray('*',',')
.getJsonFromCsv('myInputFile.csv');
The result will be:
[
{
"firstName": "Constantin",
"lastName": "Langsdon",
"email": "clangsdon0@hc360.com",
"gender": "Male",
"age": "96",
"birth": "10.02.1965",
"sons": ["diego","marek","dries"]
}
]
A field delimiter is needed to split the parsed values. As default the field delimiter is the semicolon (;), this means that during the parsing when a semicolon (;) is matched a new JSON entry is created.
In case your CSV file has defined another field delimiter you have to call the function fieldDelimiter(myDelimiter)
and pass it as parameter the field delimiter.
E.g. if your field delimiter is the comma , then:
csvToJson.fieldDelimiter(',')
.getJsonFromCsv(fileInputName);
To be able to parse correctly fields wrapped in quote, like the last_name in the first row in the following example:
first_name | last_name | |
---|---|---|
Constantin | "Langsdon,Nandson,Gangson" | clangsdon0@hc360.com |
you need to activate the support quoted fields feature:
csvToJson.supportQuotedField(true)
.getJsonFromCsv(fileInputName);
The result will be:
[
{
"firstName": "Constantin",
"lastName": "Langsdon,Nandson,Gangson",
"email": "clangsdon0@hc360.com"
}
]
If the header is not on the first line you can define the header index like:
csvToJson.indexHeader(3)
.getJsonFromCsv(fileInputName);
Empty rows are ignored and not parsed.
If you want that a number will be printed as a Number type, and values true or false is printed as a boolean Type, use:
csvToJson.formatValueByType()
.getJsonFromCsv(fileInputName);
For example:
[
{
"first_name": "Constantin",
"last_name": "Langsdon",
"email": "clangsdon0@hc360.com",
"gender": "Male",
"age": 96,
"zip": 123,
"registered": true
},
{
"first_name": "Norah",
"last_name": "Raison",
"email": "nraison1@wired.com",
"gender": "Female",
"age": 32,
"zip": "",
"registered": false
}
]
The property age is printed as
"age": 32
instead of
"age": "32"
The property registered is printed as
"registered": true
instead of
"registered": "true"
You can read and decode files with the following encoding:
csvToJson.utf8Encoding()
.getJsonFromCsv(fileInputName);
csvToJson.ucs2Encoding()
.getJsonFromCsv(fileInputName);
csvToJson.utf16leEncoding()
.getJsonFromCsv(fileInputName);
csvToJson.latin1Encoding()
.getJsonFromCsv(fileInputName);
csvToJson.asciiEncoding()
.getJsonFromCsv(fileInputName);
csvToJson.base64Encoding()
.getJsonFromCsv(fileInputName);
csvToJson.hexEncoding()
.getJsonFromCsv(fileInputName);
The exposed API is implemented with the Method Chaining Pattern, which means that multiple methods can be chained, e.g.:
let csvToJson = require('convert-csv-to-json');
csvToJson.fieldDelimiter(',')
.formatValueByType()
.parseSubArray("*",',')
.supportQuotedField(true)
.getJsonFromCsv('myInputFile.csv');
npm install
npm test
npm run test-debug
This repository uses the GitHub Action iuccio/npm-semantic-publish-action@latest to publish the npm packeges. Pushing on the master branch, depending on the git message, an new version will always be released. If the commit message contains the keyword:
CSVtoJSON is licensed under the GNU General Public License v3.0 License.
Just if you want to support this repository:
FAQs
Convert CSV to JSON
We found that convert-csv-to-json demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
Security News
MITRE's 2024 CWE Top 25 highlights critical software vulnerabilities like XSS, SQL Injection, and CSRF, reflecting shifts due to a refined ranking methodology.
Security News
In this segment of the Risky Business podcast, Feross Aboukhadijeh and Patrick Gray discuss the challenges of tracking malware discovered in open source softare.