cpython/Lib/csv.py
Benjamin Peterson 4ac9ce4f9a Merged revisions 74779-74786,74793,74795,74811,74860-74861,74863,74876,74886,74896,74901,74903,74908,74912,74930,74933,74943,74946,74952-74955,75015,75019,75032,75068,75076,75095,75098,75102,75129,75139,75230 via svnmerge from
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

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  r74779 | michael.foord | 2009-09-13 11:13:36 -0500 (Sun, 13 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Change to tutorial wording for reading text / binary files on Windows. Issue #6301.
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  r74780 | michael.foord | 2009-09-13 11:40:02 -0500 (Sun, 13 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Objects that compare equal automatically pass or fail assertAlmostEqual and assertNotAlmostEqual tests on unittest.TestCase. Issue 6567.
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  r74781 | michael.foord | 2009-09-13 11:46:19 -0500 (Sun, 13 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Note that sys._getframe is not guaranteed to exist in all implementations of Python, and a corresponding note in inspect.currentframe. Issue 6712.
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  r74782 | michael.foord | 2009-09-13 12:07:46 -0500 (Sun, 13 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Tutorial tweaks. Issue 6849.
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  r74783 | michael.foord | 2009-09-13 12:28:35 -0500 (Sun, 13 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  unittest.TestLoader.loadTestsFromName honors the loader suiteClass attribute. Issue 6866.
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  r74784 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-13 13:15:07 -0500 (Sun, 13 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Typo fix.
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  r74785 | michael.foord | 2009-09-13 14:07:03 -0500 (Sun, 13 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Test discovery in unittest will only attempt to import modules that are importable; i.e. their names are valid Python identifiers. If an import fails during discovery this will be recorded as an error and test discovery will continue. Issue 6568.
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  r74786 | michael.foord | 2009-09-13 14:08:18 -0500 (Sun, 13 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Remove an extraneous space in unittest documentation.
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  r74793 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-14 09:50:47 -0500 (Mon, 14 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  #6908: fix association of hashlib hash attributes.
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  r74795 | benjamin.peterson | 2009-09-14 22:36:26 -0500 (Mon, 14 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Py_SetPythonHome uses static storage #6913
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  r74811 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-15 15:26:59 -0500 (Tue, 15 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Add Armin Ronacher.
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  r74860 | benjamin.peterson | 2009-09-16 21:46:54 -0500 (Wed, 16 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  kill bare except
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  r74861 | benjamin.peterson | 2009-09-16 22:18:28 -0500 (Wed, 16 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  pep 8 defaults
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  r74863 | benjamin.peterson | 2009-09-16 22:27:33 -0500 (Wed, 16 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  rationalize a bit
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  r74876 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-17 11:15:53 -0500 (Thu, 17 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  #6932: remove paragraph that advises relying on __del__ being called.
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  r74886 | benjamin.peterson | 2009-09-17 16:33:46 -0500 (Thu, 17 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  use macros
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  r74896 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-18 02:22:41 -0500 (Fri, 18 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  #6936: for interactive use, quit() is just fine.
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  r74901 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-18 04:14:52 -0500 (Fri, 18 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  #6905: use better exception messages in inspect when the argument is of the wrong type.
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  r74903 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-18 04:18:27 -0500 (Fri, 18 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  #6938: "ident" is always a string, so use a format code which works.
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  r74908 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-18 08:57:11 -0500 (Fri, 18 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Use str.format() to fix beginner's mistake with %-style string formatting.
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  r74912 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-18 11:19:56 -0500 (Fri, 18 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Optimize optimization and fix method name in docstring.
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  r74930 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-18 16:21:41 -0500 (Fri, 18 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  #6925: rewrite docs for locals() and vars() a bit.
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  r74933 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-18 16:35:59 -0500 (Fri, 18 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  #6930: clarify description about byteorder handling in UTF decoder routines.
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  r74943 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-19 02:35:07 -0500 (Sat, 19 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  #6944: the argument to PyArg_ParseTuple should be a tuple, otherwise a SystemError is set.  Also clean up another usage of PyArg_ParseTuple.
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  r74946 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-19 03:43:16 -0500 (Sat, 19 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Update bug tracker reference.
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  r74952 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-19 05:42:34 -0500 (Sat, 19 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  #6946: fix duplicate index entries for datetime classes.
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  r74953 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-19 07:04:16 -0500 (Sat, 19 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Fix references to threading.enumerate().
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  r74954 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-19 08:13:56 -0500 (Sat, 19 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Add Doug.
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  r74955 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-19 08:20:49 -0500 (Sat, 19 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Add Mark Summerfield.
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  r75015 | georg.brandl | 2009-09-22 05:55:08 -0500 (Tue, 22 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Fix encoding name.
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  r75019 | vinay.sajip | 2009-09-22 12:23:41 -0500 (Tue, 22 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Fixed a typo, and added sections on optimization and using arbitrary objects as messages.
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  r75032 | benjamin.peterson | 2009-09-22 17:15:28 -0500 (Tue, 22 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  fix typos/rephrase
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  r75068 | benjamin.peterson | 2009-09-25 21:57:59 -0500 (Fri, 25 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  comment out ugly xxx
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  r75076 | vinay.sajip | 2009-09-26 09:53:32 -0500 (Sat, 26 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Tidied up name of parameter in StreamHandler
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  r75095 | michael.foord | 2009-09-27 14:15:41 -0500 (Sun, 27 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Test creation moved from TestProgram.parseArgs to TestProgram.createTests exclusively. Issue 6956.
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  r75098 | michael.foord | 2009-09-27 15:08:23 -0500 (Sun, 27 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Documentation improvement for load_tests protocol in unittest. Issue 6515.
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  r75102 | skip.montanaro | 2009-09-27 21:12:27 -0500 (Sun, 27 Sep 2009) | 3 lines

  Patch from Thomas Barr so that csv.Sniffer will set doublequote property.
  Closes issue 6606.
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  r75129 | vinay.sajip | 2009-09-29 02:08:54 -0500 (Tue, 29 Sep 2009) | 1 line

  Issue #7014: logging: Improved IronPython 2.6 compatibility.
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  r75139 | raymond.hettinger | 2009-09-29 13:53:24 -0500 (Tue, 29 Sep 2009) | 3 lines

  Issue 7008: Better document str.title and show how to work around the apostrophe problem.
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  r75230 | benjamin.peterson | 2009-10-04 08:38:38 -0500 (Sun, 04 Oct 2009) | 1 line

  test logging
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2009-10-04 14:49:41 +00:00

435 lines
15 KiB
Python

"""
csv.py - read/write/investigate CSV files
"""
import re
from _csv import Error, __version__, writer, reader, register_dialect, \
unregister_dialect, get_dialect, list_dialects, \
field_size_limit, \
QUOTE_MINIMAL, QUOTE_ALL, QUOTE_NONNUMERIC, QUOTE_NONE, \
__doc__
from _csv import Dialect as _Dialect
from io import StringIO
__all__ = [ "QUOTE_MINIMAL", "QUOTE_ALL", "QUOTE_NONNUMERIC", "QUOTE_NONE",
"Error", "Dialect", "__doc__", "excel", "excel_tab",
"field_size_limit", "reader", "writer",
"register_dialect", "get_dialect", "list_dialects", "Sniffer",
"unregister_dialect", "__version__", "DictReader", "DictWriter" ]
class Dialect:
"""Describe an Excel dialect.
This must be subclassed (see csv.excel). Valid attributes are:
delimiter, quotechar, escapechar, doublequote, skipinitialspace,
lineterminator, quoting.
"""
_name = ""
_valid = False
# placeholders
delimiter = None
quotechar = None
escapechar = None
doublequote = None
skipinitialspace = None
lineterminator = None
quoting = None
def __init__(self):
if self.__class__ != Dialect:
self._valid = True
self._validate()
def _validate(self):
try:
_Dialect(self)
except TypeError as e:
# We do this for compatibility with py2.3
raise Error(str(e))
class excel(Dialect):
"""Describe the usual properties of Excel-generated CSV files."""
delimiter = ','
quotechar = '"'
doublequote = True
skipinitialspace = False
lineterminator = '\r\n'
quoting = QUOTE_MINIMAL
register_dialect("excel", excel)
class excel_tab(excel):
"""Describe the usual properties of Excel-generated TAB-delimited files."""
delimiter = '\t'
register_dialect("excel-tab", excel_tab)
class DictReader:
def __init__(self, f, fieldnames=None, restkey=None, restval=None,
dialect="excel", *args, **kwds):
self._fieldnames = fieldnames # list of keys for the dict
self.restkey = restkey # key to catch long rows
self.restval = restval # default value for short rows
self.reader = reader(f, dialect, *args, **kwds)
self.dialect = dialect
self.line_num = 0
def __iter__(self):
return self
@property
def fieldnames(self):
if self._fieldnames is None:
try:
self._fieldnames = next(self.reader)
except StopIteration:
pass
self.line_num = self.reader.line_num
return self._fieldnames
@fieldnames.setter
def fieldnames(self, value):
self._fieldnames = value
def __next__(self):
if self.line_num == 0:
# Used only for its side effect.
self.fieldnames
row = next(self.reader)
self.line_num = self.reader.line_num
# unlike the basic reader, we prefer not to return blanks,
# because we will typically wind up with a dict full of None
# values
while row == []:
row = next(self.reader)
d = dict(zip(self.fieldnames, row))
lf = len(self.fieldnames)
lr = len(row)
if lf < lr:
d[self.restkey] = row[lf:]
elif lf > lr:
for key in self.fieldnames[lr:]:
d[key] = self.restval
return d
class DictWriter:
def __init__(self, f, fieldnames, restval="", extrasaction="raise",
dialect="excel", *args, **kwds):
self.fieldnames = fieldnames # list of keys for the dict
self.restval = restval # for writing short dicts
if extrasaction.lower() not in ("raise", "ignore"):
raise ValueError("extrasaction (%s) must be 'raise' or 'ignore'"
% extrasaction)
self.extrasaction = extrasaction
self.writer = writer(f, dialect, *args, **kwds)
def _dict_to_list(self, rowdict):
if self.extrasaction == "raise":
wrong_fields = [k for k in rowdict if k not in self.fieldnames]
if wrong_fields:
raise ValueError("dict contains fields not in fieldnames: "
+ ", ".join(wrong_fields))
return [rowdict.get(key, self.restval) for key in self.fieldnames]
def writerow(self, rowdict):
return self.writer.writerow(self._dict_to_list(rowdict))
def writerows(self, rowdicts):
rows = []
for rowdict in rowdicts:
rows.append(self._dict_to_list(rowdict))
return self.writer.writerows(rows)
# Guard Sniffer's type checking against builds that exclude complex()
try:
complex
except NameError:
complex = float
class Sniffer:
'''
"Sniffs" the format of a CSV file (i.e. delimiter, quotechar)
Returns a Dialect object.
'''
def __init__(self):
# in case there is more than one possible delimiter
self.preferred = [',', '\t', ';', ' ', ':']
def sniff(self, sample, delimiters=None):
"""
Returns a dialect (or None) corresponding to the sample
"""
quotechar, doublequote, delimiter, skipinitialspace = \
self._guess_quote_and_delimiter(sample, delimiters)
if not delimiter:
delimiter, skipinitialspace = self._guess_delimiter(sample,
delimiters)
if not delimiter:
raise Error("Could not determine delimiter")
class dialect(Dialect):
_name = "sniffed"
lineterminator = '\r\n'
quoting = QUOTE_MINIMAL
# escapechar = ''
dialect.doublequote = doublequote
dialect.delimiter = delimiter
# _csv.reader won't accept a quotechar of ''
dialect.quotechar = quotechar or '"'
dialect.skipinitialspace = skipinitialspace
return dialect
def _guess_quote_and_delimiter(self, data, delimiters):
"""
Looks for text enclosed between two identical quotes
(the probable quotechar) which are preceded and followed
by the same character (the probable delimiter).
For example:
,'some text',
The quote with the most wins, same with the delimiter.
If there is no quotechar the delimiter can't be determined
this way.
"""
matches = []
for restr in ('(?P<delim>[^\w\n"\'])(?P<space> ?)(?P<quote>["\']).*?(?P=quote)(?P=delim)', # ,".*?",
'(?:^|\n)(?P<quote>["\']).*?(?P=quote)(?P<delim>[^\w\n"\'])(?P<space> ?)', # ".*?",
'(?P<delim>>[^\w\n"\'])(?P<space> ?)(?P<quote>["\']).*?(?P=quote)(?:$|\n)', # ,".*?"
'(?:^|\n)(?P<quote>["\']).*?(?P=quote)(?:$|\n)'): # ".*?" (no delim, no space)
regexp = re.compile(restr, re.DOTALL | re.MULTILINE)
matches = regexp.findall(data)
if matches:
break
if not matches:
# (quotechar, doublequote, delimiter, skipinitialspace)
return ('', False, None, 0)
quotes = {}
delims = {}
spaces = 0
for m in matches:
n = regexp.groupindex['quote'] - 1
key = m[n]
if key:
quotes[key] = quotes.get(key, 0) + 1
try:
n = regexp.groupindex['delim'] - 1
key = m[n]
except KeyError:
continue
if key and (delimiters is None or key in delimiters):
delims[key] = delims.get(key, 0) + 1
try:
n = regexp.groupindex['space'] - 1
except KeyError:
continue
if m[n]:
spaces += 1
quotechar = max(quotes, key=quotes.get)
if delims:
delim = max(delims, key=delims.get)
skipinitialspace = delims[delim] == spaces
if delim == '\n': # most likely a file with a single column
delim = ''
else:
# there is *no* delimiter, it's a single column of quoted data
delim = ''
skipinitialspace = 0
# if we see an extra quote between delimiters, we've got a
# double quoted format
dq_regexp = re.compile(r"((%(delim)s)|^)\W*%(quote)s[^%(delim)s\n]*%(quote)s[^%(delim)s\n]*%(quote)s\W*((%(delim)s)|$)" % \
{'delim':delim, 'quote':quotechar}, re.MULTILINE)
if dq_regexp.search(data):
doublequote = True
else:
doublequote = False
return (quotechar, doublequote, delim, skipinitialspace)
def _guess_delimiter(self, data, delimiters):
"""
The delimiter /should/ occur the same number of times on
each row. However, due to malformed data, it may not. We don't want
an all or nothing approach, so we allow for small variations in this
number.
1) build a table of the frequency of each character on every line.
2) build a table of freqencies of this frequency (meta-frequency?),
e.g. 'x occurred 5 times in 10 rows, 6 times in 1000 rows,
7 times in 2 rows'
3) use the mode of the meta-frequency to determine the /expected/
frequency for that character
4) find out how often the character actually meets that goal
5) the character that best meets its goal is the delimiter
For performance reasons, the data is evaluated in chunks, so it can
try and evaluate the smallest portion of the data possible, evaluating
additional chunks as necessary.
"""
data = list(filter(None, data.split('\n')))
ascii = [chr(c) for c in range(127)] # 7-bit ASCII
# build frequency tables
chunkLength = min(10, len(data))
iteration = 0
charFrequency = {}
modes = {}
delims = {}
start, end = 0, min(chunkLength, len(data))
while start < len(data):
iteration += 1
for line in data[start:end]:
for char in ascii:
metaFrequency = charFrequency.get(char, {})
# must count even if frequency is 0
freq = line.count(char)
# value is the mode
metaFrequency[freq] = metaFrequency.get(freq, 0) + 1
charFrequency[char] = metaFrequency
for char in charFrequency.keys():
items = list(charFrequency[char].items())
if len(items) == 1 and items[0][0] == 0:
continue
# get the mode of the frequencies
if len(items) > 1:
modes[char] = max(items, key=lambda x: x[1])
# adjust the mode - subtract the sum of all
# other frequencies
items.remove(modes[char])
modes[char] = (modes[char][0], modes[char][1]
- sum(item[1] for item in items))
else:
modes[char] = items[0]
# build a list of possible delimiters
modeList = modes.items()
total = float(chunkLength * iteration)
# (rows of consistent data) / (number of rows) = 100%
consistency = 1.0
# minimum consistency threshold
threshold = 0.9
while len(delims) == 0 and consistency >= threshold:
for k, v in modeList:
if v[0] > 0 and v[1] > 0:
if ((v[1]/total) >= consistency and
(delimiters is None or k in delimiters)):
delims[k] = v
consistency -= 0.01
if len(delims) == 1:
delim = list(delims.keys())[0]
skipinitialspace = (data[0].count(delim) ==
data[0].count("%c " % delim))
return (delim, skipinitialspace)
# analyze another chunkLength lines
start = end
end += chunkLength
if not delims:
return ('', 0)
# if there's more than one, fall back to a 'preferred' list
if len(delims) > 1:
for d in self.preferred:
if d in delims.keys():
skipinitialspace = (data[0].count(d) ==
data[0].count("%c " % d))
return (d, skipinitialspace)
# nothing else indicates a preference, pick the character that
# dominates(?)
items = [(v,k) for (k,v) in delims.items()]
items.sort()
delim = items[-1][1]
skipinitialspace = (data[0].count(delim) ==
data[0].count("%c " % delim))
return (delim, skipinitialspace)
def has_header(self, sample):
# Creates a dictionary of types of data in each column. If any
# column is of a single type (say, integers), *except* for the first
# row, then the first row is presumed to be labels. If the type
# can't be determined, it is assumed to be a string in which case
# the length of the string is the determining factor: if all of the
# rows except for the first are the same length, it's a header.
# Finally, a 'vote' is taken at the end for each column, adding or
# subtracting from the likelihood of the first row being a header.
rdr = reader(StringIO(sample), self.sniff(sample))
header = next(rdr) # assume first row is header
columns = len(header)
columnTypes = {}
for i in range(columns): columnTypes[i] = None
checked = 0
for row in rdr:
# arbitrary number of rows to check, to keep it sane
if checked > 20:
break
checked += 1
if len(row) != columns:
continue # skip rows that have irregular number of columns
for col in list(columnTypes.keys()):
for thisType in [int, float, complex]:
try:
thisType(row[col])
break
except (ValueError, OverflowError):
pass
else:
# fallback to length of string
thisType = len(row[col])
if thisType != columnTypes[col]:
if columnTypes[col] is None: # add new column type
columnTypes[col] = thisType
else:
# type is inconsistent, remove column from
# consideration
del columnTypes[col]
# finally, compare results against first row and "vote"
# on whether it's a header
hasHeader = 0
for col, colType in columnTypes.items():
if type(colType) == type(0): # it's a length
if len(header[col]) != colType:
hasHeader += 1
else:
hasHeader -= 1
else: # attempt typecast
try:
colType(header[col])
except (ValueError, TypeError):
hasHeader += 1
else:
hasHeader -= 1
return hasHeader > 0