commit | 8717eaab2cf92b1e831a8f4d3d9ebde2c6896fcc | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Joel Galenson <[email protected]> | Mon Aug 30 21:30:10 2021 +0000 |
committer | Automerger Merge Worker <[email protected]> | Mon Aug 30 21:30:10 2021 +0000 |
tree | 22008ab6b0531bff75512bed07df50b0bedc3532 | |
parent | c51caa81673593e9d3f7cb6ff715eadfc6601a8c [diff] | |
parent | 87b8b2d448bf82f0108a7a4c64a7a997bb75c70a [diff] |
Update TEST_MAPPING am: 1d21be45e4 am: 02c73c0962 am: 87b8b2d448 Original change: https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/external/rust/crates/csv-core/+/1813841 Change-Id: Id08412e5dfc2a93c33d0870eb19bef6d1dfe9eaf
A fast CSV reader and write for use in a no_std
context. This crate will never use the Rust standard library.
Dual-licensed under MIT or the UNLICENSE.
Add this to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies] csv-core = "0.1.6"
This crate by default links with libc
, which is done via the libc
feature. Disabling this feature will drop csv-core
's dependency on libc
.
This example shows how to count the number of fields and records in CSV data.
use csv_core::{Reader, ReadFieldResult}; let data = " foo,bar,baz a,b,c xxx,yyy,zzz "; let mut rdr = Reader::new(); let mut bytes = data.as_bytes(); let mut count_fields = 0; let mut count_records = 0; loop { // We skip handling the output since we don't need it for counting. let (result, nin, _) = rdr.read_field(bytes, &mut [0; 1024]); bytes = &bytes[nin..]; match result { ReadFieldResult::InputEmpty => {}, ReadFieldResult::OutputFull => panic!("field too large"), ReadFieldResult::Field { record_end } => { count_fields += 1; if record_end { count_records += 1; } } ReadFieldResult::End => break, } } assert_eq!(3, count_records); assert_eq!(9, count_fields);
This example shows how to use the Writer
API to write valid CSV data. Proper quoting is handled automatically.
use csv_core::Writer; // This is where we'll write out CSV data. let mut out = &mut [0; 1024]; // The number of bytes we've written to `out`. let mut nout = 0; // Create a CSV writer with a default configuration. let mut wtr = Writer::new(); // Write a single field. Note that we ignore the `WriteResult` and the number // of input bytes consumed since we're doing this by hand. let (_, _, n) = wtr.field(&b"foo"[..], &mut out[nout..]); nout += n; // Write a delimiter and then another field that requires quotes. let (_, n) = wtr.delimiter(&mut out[nout..]); nout += n; let (_, _, n) = wtr.field(&b"bar,baz"[..], &mut out[nout..]); nout += n; let (_, n) = wtr.terminator(&mut out[nout..]); nout += n; // Now write another record. let (_, _, n) = wtr.field(&b"a \"b\" c"[..], &mut out[nout..]); nout += n; let (_, n) = wtr.delimiter(&mut out[nout..]); nout += n; let (_, _, n) = wtr.field(&b"quux"[..], &mut out[nout..]); nout += n; // We must always call finish once done writing. // This ensures that any closing quotes are written. let (_, n) = wtr.finish(&mut out[nout..]); nout += n; assert_eq!(&out[..nout], &b"\ foo,\"bar,baz\" \"a \"\"b\"\" c\",quux"[..]);