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The json2csv npm package is a powerful tool for converting JSON data to CSV format. It is widely used for data transformation and export tasks, making it easier to handle JSON data in a tabular format.
Convert JSON to CSV
This feature allows you to convert a JSON array into a CSV string. The code sample demonstrates how to use the `parse` function from the json2csv package to transform a JSON array into CSV format.
const { parse } = require('json2csv');
const json = [{ "name": "John", "age": 30 }, { "name": "Jane", "age": 25 }];
const csv = parse(json);
console.log(csv);
Customizing CSV Fields
This feature allows you to specify which fields to include in the CSV output. The code sample shows how to define a list of fields and pass them as options to the `parse` function.
const { parse } = require('json2csv');
const json = [{ "name": "John", "age": 30 }, { "name": "Jane", "age": 25 }];
const fields = ['name', 'age'];
const opts = { fields };
const csv = parse(json, opts);
console.log(csv);
Handling Nested JSON Objects
This feature allows you to handle nested JSON objects and flatten them into CSV format. The code sample demonstrates how to specify nested fields in the options to correctly map them to CSV columns.
const { parse } = require('json2csv');
const json = [{ "name": "John", "address": { "city": "New York", "state": "NY" } }, { "name": "Jane", "address": { "city": "San Francisco", "state": "CA" } }];
const fields = ['name', 'address.city', 'address.state'];
const opts = { fields };
const csv = parse(json, opts);
console.log(csv);
The csv-writer package provides a simple and flexible way to write CSV files. It supports writing both objects and arrays to CSV, and allows for customization of headers and field delimiters. Compared to json2csv, csv-writer focuses more on writing CSV files rather than converting JSON to CSV strings.
The fast-csv package is a comprehensive library for parsing and formatting CSV files. It offers high performance and a wide range of features, including support for streaming and handling large datasets. While json2csv is primarily focused on converting JSON to CSV, fast-csv provides more extensive functionality for working with CSV data in general.
The papaparse package is a powerful CSV parser that can handle large files and supports various configurations for parsing and formatting. It is known for its speed and reliability. Unlike json2csv, which is mainly used for converting JSON to CSV, papaparse excels at parsing CSV files into JSON and other formats.
Converts json into csv with column titles and proper line endings.
Can be used as a module and from the command line.
See the CHANGELOG for details about the latest release.
# Global so it can be call from anywhere
$ npm install -g json2csv
# or as a dependency of a project
$ npm install json2csv --save
json2csv
can be called from the command line if installed globally (using the -g
flag).
Usage: json2csv [options]
Options:
-V, --version output the version number
-i, --input <input> Path and name of the incoming json file. If not provided, will read from stdin.
-o, --output [output] Path and name of the resulting csv file. Defaults to stdout.
-n, --ndjson Treat the input as NewLine-Delimited JSON.
-s, --no-streaming Process the whole JSON array in memory instead of doing it line by line.
-f, --fields <fields> Specify the fields to convert.
-c, --fields-config <path> Specify a file with a fields configuration as a JSON array.
-u, --unwind <paths> Creates multiple rows from a single JSON document similar to MongoDB unwind.
-B, --unwind-blank When unwinding, blank out instead of repeating data.
-F, --flatten Flatten nested objects.
-S, --flatten-separator <separator> Flattened keys separator.
-v, --default-value [defaultValue] Specify a default value other than empty string.
-q, --quote [value] Specify an alternate quote value.
-Q, --double-quote [value] Specify a value to replace double quote in strings.
-d, --delimiter [delimiter] Specify a delimiter other than the default comma to use.
-e, --eol [value] Specify an End-of-Line value for separating rows.
-E, --excel-strings Converts string data into normalized Excel style data.
-H, --no-header Disable the column name header.
-a, --include-empty-rows Includes empty rows in the resulting CSV output.
-b, --with-bom Includes BOM character at the beginning of the csv.
-p, --pretty Use only when printing to console. Logs output in pretty tables.
-h, --help output usage information
An input file -i
and fields -f
are required. If no output -o
is specified the result is logged to the console.
Use -p
to show the result in a beautiful table inside the console.
$ json2csv -i input.json -f carModel,price,color
carModel,price,color
"Audi",10000,"blue"
"BMW",15000,"red"
"Mercedes",20000,"yellow"
"Porsche",30000,"green"
$ json2csv -i input.json -f carModel,price,color -p
$ json2csv -i input.json -f carModel,price,color -o out.csv
$ cat out.csv
carModel,price,color
"Audi",10000,"blue"
"BMW",15000,"red"
"Mercedes",20000,"yellow"
"Porsche",30000,"green"
Same result will be obtained using passing the fields as a file.
$ json2csv -i input.json -l fieldList.txt -o out.csv
where the file fieldList.txt
contains
carModel
price
color
$ json2csv -f price
[{"price":1000},{"price":2000}]
Hit Enter and afterwards CTRL + D to end reading from stdin. The terminal should show
price
1000
2000
Sometimes you want to add some additional rows with the same columns. This is how you can do that.
# Initial creation of csv with headings
$ json2csv -i test.json -f name,version > test.csv
# Append additional rows
$ json2csv -i test.json -f name,version --no-header >> test.csv
json2csv
can also be use programatically from you javascript codebase.
The programatic APIs take a configuration object very equivalent to the CLI options.
fields
- Array of Objects/Strings. Defaults to toplevel JSON attributes. See example below.ndjson
- Only effective on the streaming API. Indicates that data coming through the stream is NDJSON.unwind
- Array of Strings, creates multiple rows from a single JSON document similar to MongoDB's $unwindunwindBlank
- Boolean, unwind using blank values instead of repeating data.flatten
- Boolean, flattens nested JSON using flat. Defaults to false
.flattenSeparator
- String, separator to use between nested JSON keys when flatten
option enabled. Defaults to .
if not specified.defaultValue
- String, default value to use when missing data. Defaults to <empty>
if not specified. (Overridden by fields[].default
)quote
- String, quote around cell values and column names. Defaults to "
if not specified.doubleQuote
- String, the value to replace double quote in strings. Defaults to 2xquotes
(for example ""
) if not specified.delimiter
- String, delimiter of columns. Defaults to ,
if not specified.eol
- String, overrides the default OS line ending (i.e. \n
on Unix and \r\n
on Windows).excelStrings
- Boolean, converts string data into normalized Excel style data.header
- Boolean, determines whether or not CSV file will contain a title column. Defaults to true
if not specified.includeEmptyRows
- Boolean, includes empty rows. Defaults to false
.withBOM
- Boolean, with BOM character. Defaults to false
.json2csv
can also be use programatically as a synchronous converter using its parse
method.
const Json2csvParser = require('json2csv').Parser;
const fields = ['field1', 'field2', 'field3'];
const opts = { fields };
try {
const parser = new Json2csvParser(opts);
const csv = parser.parse(myData);
console.log(csv);
} catch (err) {
console.error(err);
}
you can also use the convenience method parse
const json2csv = require('json2csv').parse;
const fields = ['field1', 'field2', 'field3'];
const opts = { fields };
try {
const csv = json2csv(myData, opts);
console.log(csv);
} catch (err) {
console.error(err);
}
The parse method is really good but has the downside of loading the entire JSON array in memory. This might not be optimal or even possible for large JSON files.
For such cases json2csv offers a stream transform so pipe your json content into it and it will output it.
One very important difference between the transform and the parser is that the json objects are processed one by one. In practice, this means that only the fields in the first object of the array are considered and fields in other other objects that were not present in the first one are just ignored. To avoid this. It's advisable to ensure that all the objects contain exactly the same fields or provide the list of fields using the fields
option.
const fs = require('fs');
const Json2csvTransform = require('json2csv').Transform;
const fields = ['field1', 'field2', 'field3'];
const opts = { fields };
const transformOpts = { highWaterMark: 16384, encoding: 'utf-8' };
const input = fs.createReadStream(inputPath, { encoding: 'utf8' });
const output = fs.createWriteStream(outputPath, { encoding: 'utf8' });
const json2csv = new Json2csvTransform(opts, transformOpts);
const processor = input.pipe(json2csv).pipe(output);
// You can also listen for events on the conversion and see how the header or the lines are coming out.
json2csv
.on('header', header => console.log(header))
.on('line', line => console.log(line))
.on('error', err => console.log(err));
fields
option{
fields: [
// Supports label -> simple path
{
label: 'some label', // (optional, column will be labeled 'path.to.something' if not defined)
value: 'path.to.something', // data.path.to.something
default: 'NULL' // default if value is not found (optional, overrides `defaultValue` for column)
},
// Supports label -> derived value
{
label: 'some label', // Supports duplicate labels (required, else your column will be labeled [function])
value: (row, field) => row.path1 + row.path2, // field = { label, default }
default: 'NULL', // default if value function returns null or undefined
stringify: true // If value is function use this flag to signal if resulting string will be quoted (stringified) or not (optional, default: true)
},
// Support pathname -> pathvalue
'simplepath', // equivalent to {value:'simplepath'}
'path.to.value' // also equivalent to {value:'path.to.value'}
]
}
const Json2csvParser = require('json2csv').Parser;
const fields = ['car', 'price', 'color'];
const myCars = [
{
"car": "Audi",
"price": 40000,
"color": "blue"
}, {
"car": "BMW",
"price": 35000,
"color": "black"
}, {
"car": "Porsche",
"price": 60000,
"color": "green"
}
];
const json2csvParser = new Json2csvParser({ fields });
const csv = json2csvParser.parse(myCars);
console.log(csv);
will output to console
car, price, color
"Audi", 40000, "blue"
"BMW", 35000, "black"
"Porsche", 60000, "green"
Similarly to mongoexport you can choose which fields to export.
const Json2csvParser = require('json2csv').Parser;
const fields = ['car', 'color'];
const json2csvParser = new Json2csvParser({ fields });
const csv = json2csvParser.parse(myCars);
console.log(csv);
Results in
car, color
"Audi", "blue"
"BMW", "black"
"Porsche", "green"
You can choose custom column names for the exported file.
const Json2csvParser = require('json2csv').Parser;
const fields = [{
label: 'Car Name',
value: 'car'
},{
label: 'Price USD',
value: 'price'
}];
const json2csvParser = new Json2csvParser({ fields });
const csv = json2csvParser.parse(myCars);
console.log(csv);
You can also specify nested properties using dot notation.
const Json2csvParser = require('json2csv').Parser;
const fields = ['car.make', 'car.model', 'price', 'color'];
const myCars = [
{
"car": {"make": "Audi", "model": "A3"},
"price": 40000,
"color": "blue"
}, {
"car": {"make": "BMW", "model": "F20"},
"price": 35000,
"color": "black"
}, {
"car": {"make": "Porsche", "model": "9PA AF1"},
"price": 60000,
"color": "green"
}
];
const json2csvParser = new Json2csvParser({ fields });
const csv = json2csvParser.parse(myCars);
console.log(csv);
will output to console
car.make, car.model, price, color
"Audi", "A3", 40000, "blue"
"BMW", "F20", 35000, "black"
"Porsche", "9PA AF1", 60000, "green"
Use a custom delimiter to create tsv files using the delimiter option:
const Json2csvParser = require('json2csv').Parser;
const fields = ['car', 'price', 'color'];
const json2csvParser = new Json2csvParser({ fields, delimiter: '\t' });
const tsv = json2csvParser.parse(myCars);
console.log(tsv);
Will output:
car price color
"Audi" 10000 "blue"
"BMW" 15000 "red"
"Mercedes" 20000 "yellow"
"Porsche" 30000 "green"
If no delimiter is specified, the default ,
is used
You can choose custom quotation marks.
const Json2csvParser = require('json2csv').Parser;
const fields = [{
label: 'Car Name',
value: 'car'
},{
label: 'Price USD',
value: 'price'
}];
const json2csvParser = new Json2csvParser({ fields, quote: '' });
const csv = json2csvParser.parse(myCars);
console.log(csv);
Results in
Car Name, Price USD
Audi, 10000
BMW, 15000
Porsche, 30000
You can unwind arrays similar to MongoDB's $unwind operation using the unwind
option.
const Json2csvParser = require('json2csv').Parser;
const fields = ['carModel', 'price', 'colors'];
const myCars = [
{
"carModel": "Audi",
"price": 0,
"colors": ["blue","green","yellow"]
}, {
"carModel": "BMW",
"price": 15000,
"colors": ["red","blue"]
}, {
"carModel": "Mercedes",
"price": 20000,
"colors": "yellow"
}, {
"carModel": "Porsche",
"price": 30000,
"colors": ["green","teal","aqua"]
}
];
const json2csvParser = new Json2csvParser({ fields, unwind: 'colors' });
const csv = json2csvParser.parse(myCars);
console.log(csv);
will output to console
"carModel","price","colors"
"Audi",0,"blue"
"Audi",0,"green"
"Audi",0,"yellow"
"BMW",15000,"red"
"BMW",15000,"blue"
"Mercedes",20000,"yellow"
"Porsche",30000,"green"
"Porsche",30000,"teal"
"Porsche",30000,"aqua"
You can also unwind arrays multiple times or with nested objects.
const Json2csvParser = require('json2csv').Parser;
const fields = ['carModel', 'price', 'items.name', 'items.color', 'items.items.position', 'items.items.color'];
const myCars = [
{
"carModel": "BMW",
"price": 15000,
"items": [
{
"name": "airbag",
"color": "white"
}, {
"name": "dashboard",
"color": "black"
}
]
}, {
"carModel": "Porsche",
"price": 30000,
"items": [
{
"name": "airbag",
"items": [
{
"position": "left",
"color": "white"
}, {
"position": "right",
"color": "gray"
}
]
}, {
"name": "dashboard",
"items": [
{
"position": "left",
"color": "gray"
}, {
"position": "right",
"color": "black"
}
]
}
]
}
];
const json2csvParser = new Json2csvParser({ fields, unwind: ['items', 'items.items'] });
const csv = json2csvParser.parse(myCars);
console.log(csv);
will output to console
"carModel","price","items.name","items.color","items.items.position","items.items.color"
"BMW",15000,"airbag","white",,
"BMW",15000,"dashboard","black",,
"Porsche",30000,"airbag",,"left","white"
"Porsche",30000,"airbag",,"right","gray"
"Porsche",30000,"dashboard",,"left","gray"
"Porsche",30000,"dashboard",,"right","black"
You can also unwind arrays blanking the repeated fields.
const Json2csvParser = require('json2csv').Parser;
const fields = ['carModel', 'price', 'items.name', 'items.color', 'items.items.position', 'items.items.color'];
const myCars = [
{
"carModel": "BMW",
"price": 15000,
"items": [
{
"name": "airbag",
"color": "white"
}, {
"name": "dashboard",
"color": "black"
}
]
}, {
"carModel": "Porsche",
"price": 30000,
"items": [
{
"name": "airbag",
"items": [
{
"position": "left",
"color": "white"
}, {
"position": "right",
"color": "gray"
}
]
}, {
"name": "dashboard",
"items": [
{
"position": "left",
"color": "gray"
}, {
"position": "right",
"color": "black"
}
]
}
]
}
];
const json2csvParser = new Json2csvParser({ fields, unwind: ['items', 'items.items'], unwindBlank: true });
const csv = json2csvParser.parse(myCars);
console.log(csv);
will output to console
"carModel","price","items.name","items.color","items.items.position","items.items.color"
"BMW",15000,"airbag","white",,
,,"dashboard","black",,
"Porsche",30000,"airbag",,"left","white"
,,,,"right","gray"
,,"dashboard",,"left","gray"
,,,,"right","black"
What in 3.X used to be
const json2csv = require('json2csv');
const csv = json2csv({ data: myData, fields: myFields, unwindPath: paths, ... });
can be replaced by
const Json2csvParser = require('json2csv').Parser;
const json2csvParser = new Json2csvParser({ fields: myFields, unwind: paths, ... });
const csv = json2csvParser.parse(myData);
or the convenience method
const json2csv = require('json2csv');
const csv = json2csv.parse(myData, { fields: myFields, unwind: paths, ... });
Please note that many of the configuration parameters have been slightly renamed. Please check one by one that all your parameters are correct. You can se the documentation for json2csv 3.11.5 here.
When developing, it's necessary to run webpack
to prepare the built script. This can be done easily with npm run build
.
If webpack
is not already available from the command line, use npm install -g webpack
.
Run the folowing command to check the code style.
$ npm run lint
Run the following command to run the tests and return coverage
$ npm run test-with-coverage
After you clone the repository you just need to install the required packages for development by runnning following command under json2csv dir.
$ npm install
Before making any pull request please ensure sure that your code is formatted, test are passing and test coverage haven't decreased. (See Testing)
See LICENSE.md.
FAQs
Convert JSON to CSV
The npm package json2csv receives a total of 926,787 weekly downloads. As such, json2csv popularity was classified as popular.
We found that json2csv demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
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