What is json-2-csv?
The json-2-csv npm package is a utility for converting JSON data to CSV format and vice versa. It is useful for data transformation tasks, especially when dealing with data interchange between systems that use different formats.
What are json-2-csv's main functionalities?
Convert JSON to CSV
This feature allows you to convert an array of JSON objects into a CSV string. The code sample demonstrates how to use the json2csv function to transform JSON data into CSV format.
const json2csv = require('json-2-csv');
const json = [
{ name: 'John', age: 30, city: 'New York' },
{ name: 'Anna', age: 22, city: 'London' },
{ name: 'Mike', age: 32, city: 'Chicago' }
];
json2csv.json2csv(json, (err, csv) => {
if (err) {
throw err;
}
console.log(csv);
});
Convert CSV to JSON
This feature allows you to convert a CSV string into an array of JSON objects. The code sample demonstrates how to use the csv2json function to transform CSV data into JSON format.
const json2csv = require('json-2-csv');
const csv = 'name,age,city\nJohn,30,New York\nAnna,22,London\nMike,32,Chicago';
json2csv.csv2json(csv, (err, json) => {
if (err) {
throw err;
}
console.log(json);
});
Custom Delimiters
This feature allows you to specify custom delimiters for fields and arrays when converting JSON to CSV. The code sample demonstrates how to use the json2csv function with custom delimiter options.
const json2csv = require('json-2-csv');
const json = [
{ name: 'John', age: 30, city: 'New York' },
{ name: 'Anna', age: 22, city: 'London' },
{ name: 'Mike', age: 32, city: 'Chicago' }
];
const options = {
delimiter: {
field: ';',
array: '|'
}
};
json2csv.json2csv(json, (err, csv) => {
if (err) {
throw err;
}
console.log(csv);
}, options);
Other packages similar to json-2-csv
csv-parser
The csv-parser package is a streaming CSV parser that converts CSV data into JSON objects. It is highly efficient for processing large CSV files. Unlike json-2-csv, which provides both JSON to CSV and CSV to JSON conversion, csv-parser focuses solely on parsing CSV to JSON.
papaparse
The papaparse package is a powerful CSV parser that can handle large files and supports web workers for asynchronous parsing. It offers both CSV to JSON and JSON to CSV conversion, similar to json-2-csv, but with additional features like streaming and chunking for large datasets.
fast-csv
The fast-csv package is a comprehensive library for parsing and formatting CSV data. It supports both reading from and writing to CSV files, similar to json-2-csv. However, fast-csv is designed for high performance and can handle large datasets efficiently.
json-2-csv
Convert JSON to CSV or CSV to JSON
This node module will convert an array of JSON documents to a CSV string.
Column headings will be automatically generated based on the keys of the JSON documents. Nested documents will have a '.' appended between the keys.
It is also capable of converting CSV of the same form back into the original array of JSON documents.
The columns headings will be used as the JSON document keys. All lines must have the same exact number of CSV values.
Installation
$ npm install json-2-csv
CLI:
$ npm install @mrodrig/json-2-csv-cli
Upgrading?
Upgrading to v3 from v2? Check out the upgrade guide.
Usage
let converter = require('json-2-csv');
or
import { json2csv } from 'json-2-csv';
Looking for examples? Check out the Wiki: json-2-csv Wiki
API
converter.json2csv(array, callback, options)
array
- An array of JSON documents to be converted to CSV.callback
- A function of the form function (err, csv)
;
- This function will receive any errors and/or the string of CSV generated.
options
- (Optional) A JSON document specifying any of the following key value pairs:
checkSchemaDifferences
- Boolean - Should all documents have the same schema?
- Default:
false
- Note: An error will be thrown if some documents have differing schemas when this is set to
true
.
delimiter
- Document - Specifies the different types of delimiters
field
- String - Field Delimiter.
wrap
- String - Wrap values in the delimiter of choice (e.g. wrap values in quotes).
eol
- String - End of Line Delimiter.
emptyFieldValue
- Any - Value that, if specified, will be substituted in for field values that are undefined
, null
, or an empty string.
excelBOM
- Boolean - Should a unicode character be prepended to allow Excel to open a UTF-8 encoded file with non-ASCII characters present.excludeKeys
- Array - Specify the keys that should be excluded from the output.
- Default:
[]
- Note: When used with
unwindArrays
, arrays present at excluded key paths will not be unwound.
expandArrayObjects
- Boolean - Should objects in array values be deep-converted to CSV?
[
{
"specifications": [
{ "features": [...] },
{ "mileage": "5000" }
]
}
]
true
uses the following keys:
['specifications.features', 'specifications.mileage']
false
uses the following keys:
- Note: This may result in CSV output that does not map back exactly to the original JSON. See #102 for more information.
keys
- Array - Specify the keys that should be converted.
- Default: These will be auto-detected from your data by default.
- Keys can either be specified as a String representing the key path that should be converted, or as an Object with the
field
property specifying the path. When specifying keys as an Object, you can also optionally specify a title
which will be used for that column in the header. The list specified can contain a combination of Objects and Strings.
[ 'key1', 'key2', ... ]
[ { field: 'key1', title: 'Key 1' }, { field: 'key2' }, 'key3', ... ]
- Key Paths - If you are converting a nested object (ie. {info : {name: 'Mike'}}), then set this to ['info.name']
parseValue
- Function - Specify how values should be converted into CSV format. This function is provided a single field value at a time and must return a String
. The built-in parsing method is provided as the second argument for cases where default parsing is preferred.
- Default: A built-in method is used to parse out a variety of different value types to well-known formats.
- Note: Using this option may override other options, including
useDateIso8601Format
and useLocaleFormat
.
prependHeader
- Boolean - Should the auto-generated header be prepended as the first line in the CSV?
sortHeader
- Boolean or Function - Should the header keys be sorted in alphabetical order? or pass a function to use a custom sorting function
trimFieldValues
- Boolean - Should the field values be trimmed?
trimHeaderFields
- Boolean - Should the header fields be trimmed?
unwindArrays
- Boolean - Should array values be "unwound" such that there is one line per value in the array?
[
{
"_id": {"$oid": "5cf7ca3616c91100018844af"},
"data": {"category": "Computers", "options": [{"name": "MacBook Pro 15"}, {"name": "MacBook Air 13"}]}
},
{
"_id": {"$oid": "5cf7ca3616c91100018844bf"},
"data": {"category": "Cars", "options": [{"name": "Supercharger"}, {"name": "Turbocharger"}]}
}
]
true
will unwind the JSON to four objects, and therefore four lines of CSV values:
_id.$oid,data.category,data.options.name
5cf7ca3616c91100018844af,Computers,MacBook Pro 15
5cf7ca3616c91100018844af,Computers,MacBook Air 13
5cf7ca3616c91100018844bf,Cars,Supercharger
5cf7ca3616c91100018844bf,Cars,Turbocharger
false
will leave the values unwound and will convert the array as-is (when this option is used without expandArrayObjects):
_id.$oid,data.category,data.options
5cf7ca3616c91100018844af,Computers,"[{""name"":""MacBook Pro 15""},{""name"":""MacBook Air 13""}]"
5cf7ca3616c91100018844bf,Cars,"[{""name"":""Supercharger""},{""name"":""Turbocharger""}]"
- Note: This may result in CSV output that does not map back exactly to the original JSON.
useDateIso8601Format
- Boolean - Should date values be converted to an ISO8601 date string?
- Default:
false
- Note: If selected, values will be converted using
toISOString()
rather than toString()
or toLocaleString()
depending on the other options provided.
useLocaleFormat
- Boolean - Should values be converted to a locale specific string?
- Default:
false
- Note: If selected, values will be converted using
toLocaleString()
rather than toString()
wrapBooleans
- Boolean - Should boolean values be wrapped in wrap delimiters to prevent Excel from converting them to Excel's TRUE/FALSE Boolean values.
preventCsvInjection
- Boolean - Should CSV injection be prevented by left trimming these characters: Equals (=), Plus (+), Minus (-), At (@), Tab (0x09), Carriage return (0x0D).
For examples, please refer to the json2csv API Documentation (Link)
Promisified Version: converter.json2csvAsync(array, options)
Available in version 2.2.0
, this functionality makes use of promises from the bluebird
module.
converter.csv2json(csv, callback, options)
csv
- A string of CSVcallback
- A function of the form function (err, array)
; This function will receive any errors and/or the array of JSON documents generated.options
- (Optional) A JSON document specifying any of the following key value pairs:
delimiter
- Document - Specifies the different types of delimiters
field
- String - Field Delimiter.
wrap
- String - The character that field values are wrapped in.
eol
- String - End of Line Delimiter.
excelBOM
- Boolean - Does the CSV contain a unicode character prepended in order to allow Excel to open a UTF-8 encoded file with non-ASCII characters present?
headerFields
- Array - Specify the field names (as strings) in place of a header line in the CSV itself.
- Default: Parses the header fields directly from the CSV string
- If you want to generate a nested object (ie.
{info : {name: 'Mike'}}
), then use .
characters in the string to denote a nested field, like ['info.name'] - If your CSV has a header line included, then don't specify the option to utilize the default values that will be parsed from the CSV.
keys
- Array - Specify the keys (as strings) that should be converted.
- Default:
null
- If you have a nested object (ie.
{info : {name: 'Mike'}}
), then set this to ['info.name']
- If you want all keys to be converted, then specify
null
or don't specify the option to utilize the default.
parseValue
- Function - Specify how String
representations of field values should be parsed when converting back to JSON. This function is provided a single String
and can return any value.
- Default:
JSON.parse
- An attempt is made to convert the String back to its original value using JSON.parse
.
trimHeaderFields
- Boolean - Should the header fields be trimmed?
trimFieldValues
- Boolean - Should the field values be trimmed?
For examples, please refer to the csv2json API Documentation (Link)
Promisified Version: csv2jsonAsync(csv, options)
Available in version 2.2.0
, this functionality makes use of promises from the bluebird
module.
CLI
Note: As of 3.5.8
, the command line interface functionality has been pulled out to a separate package. Please be sure to
install the @mrodrig/json-2-csv-cli
NPM package if you wish to use the CLI functionality shown below:
$ npm install @mrodrig/json-2-csv-cli
json2csv
Usage: json2csv <jsonFile> [options]
Options:
-V, --version output the version number
-o, --output [output] Path of output file. If not provided, then stdout will be used
-f, --field <delimiter> Optional field delimiter
-w, --wrap <delimiter> Optional wrap delimiter
-e, --eol <delimiter> Optional end of line delimiter
-b, --excel-bom Excel Byte Order Mark character prepended to CSV
-W, --without-header Withhold the prepended header
-s, --sort-header Sort the header fields
-H, --trim-header Trim header fields
-F, --trim-fields Trim field values
-S, --check-schema Check for schema differences
-E, --empty-field-value <value> Empty field value
-A, --expand-array-objects Expand array objects
-k, --keys [keys] Keys of documents to convert to CSV
-h, --help output usage information
csv2json
Usage: csv2json <csvFile> [options]
Options:
-V, --version output the version number
-c, --csv <csv> Path of json file to be converted
-o, --output [output] Path of output file. If not provided, then stdout will be used
-f, --field <delimiter> Optional field delimiter
-w, --wrap <delimiter> Optional wrap delimiter
-e, --eol <delimiter> Optional end of line delimiter
-b, --excel-bom Excel Byte Order Mark character prepended to CSV
-H, --trim-header Trim header fields
-F, --trim-fields Trim field values
-k, --keys [keys] Keys of documents to convert to CSV
-h, --help output usage information
Tests
$ npm test
To see test coverage, please run:
$ npm run coverage
Current Coverage is:
Statements : 100% ( 286/286 )
Branches : 100% ( 166/166 )
Functions : 100% ( 73/73 )
Lines : 100% ( 280/280 )
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Please find the updated list (relocated to the Wiki) here: Frequently Asked Questions (Link)
Features
- Header Generation (per document keys)
- Allows for conversion of specific keys in both json2csv and csv2json via the options.keys parameter (as of 1.1.2)
- Document schema verification functionality (field order is irrelevant) (as of 1.1.0)
- Supports sub-documents natively
- Supports arrays as document values for both json2csv and csv2json
- Custom ordering of columns (see F.A.Q. for more information)
- Ability to re-generate the JSON documents that were used to generate the CSV (including nested documents)
- Allows for custom field delimiters, end of line delimiters, etc.
- Wrapped value support for json2csv and csv2json (as of 1.3.0)
- Support for multiple different schemas (as of 1.4.0)
- Promisified versions of the functions are now available by default: json2csvAsync, csv2jsonAsync (as of 2.2.0)
- RFC 4180 Compliance (as of 3.0.0)
- CLI functionality (as of 3.0.0)
csv2json test.csv -o output.json
- and
json2csv test.json -o output.csv -W -k arrayOfStrings -o output.csv
- Empty field value option (as of 3.1.0)
- TypeScript typings included (as of 3.4.0) - thanks to @GabrielCastro!