npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

finboxio-json2csv

v3.7.10

Published

Convert JSON to CSV

Downloads

2

Readme

json2csv

Converts json into csv with column titles and proper line endings. Can be used as a module and from the command line.

npm version Build Status Coverage Status Dependency Status

See the CHANGELOG for details about the latest release.

How to use

Install

$ npm install json2csv --save

Include the module and run or use it from the Command Line. It's also possible to include json2csv as a global using an HTML script tag, though it's normally recommended that modules are used.

var json2csv = require('json2csv');
var fields = ['field1', 'field2', 'field3'];

try {
  var result = json2csv({ data: myData, fields: fields });
  console.log(result);
} catch (err) {
  // Errors are thrown for bad options, or if the data is empty and no fields are provided.
  // Be sure to provide fields if it is possible that your data array will be empty.
  console.error(err);
}

Features

  • Uses proper line endings on various operating systems
  • Handles double quotes
  • Allows custom column selection
  • Allows specifying nested properties
  • Reads column selection from file
  • Pretty writing to stdout
  • Supports optional custom delimiters
  • Supports optional custom eol value
  • Supports optional custom quotation marks
  • Not create CSV column title by passing hasCSVColumnTitle: false, into params.
  • If field is not exist in object then the field value in CSV will be empty.
  • Preserve new lines in values. Should be used with \r\n line endings for full compatibility with Excel.

Use as a module

Available Options

  • options - Required; Options hash.
    • data - Required; Array of JSON objects.
    • fields - Array of Objects/Strings. Defaults to toplevel JSON attributes. See example below.
    • fieldNames Array of Strings, names for the fields at the same indexes. Must be the same length as fields array. (Optional. Maintained for backwards compatibility. Use fields config object for more features)
    • del - String, delimiter of columns. Defaults to , if not specified.
    • defaultValue - String, default value to use when missing data. Defaults to <empty> if not specified. (Overridden by fields[].default)
    • quotes - String, quotes around cell values and column names. Defaults to " if not specified.
    • doubleQuotes - String, the value to replace double quotes in strings. Defaults to 2xquotes (for example "") if not specified.
    • hasCSVColumnTitle - Boolean, determines whether or not CSV file will contain a title column. Defaults to true if not specified.
    • eol - String, it gets added to each row of data. Defaults to `` if not specified.
    • newLine - String, overrides the default OS line ending (i.e. \n on Unix and \r\n on Windows).
    • flatten - Boolean, flattens nested JSON using flat. Defaults to false.
    • unwindPath - String, creates multiple rows from a single JSON document similar to MongoDB's $unwind
    • excelStrings - Boolean, converts string data into normalized Excel style data.
    • includeEmptyRows - Boolean, includes empty rows. Defaults to false.
    • preserveNewLinesInValues - Boolean, preserve \r and \n in values. Defaults to false.
  • callback - function (error, csvString) {}. If provided, will callback asynchronously. Only supported for compatibility reasons.

Example 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: function(row, field, data) {
        // field = { label, default }
        // data = full data object
        return row.path1 + row.path2;
      },
      default: 'NULL' // default if value function returns null or undefined
    },

    // Support pathname -> pathvalue
    'simplepath' // equivalent to {value:'simplepath'}
    'path.to.value' // also equivalent to {label:'path.to.value', value:'path.to.value'}
  ]
}

Example 1

var json2csv = require('json2csv');
var fs = require('fs');
var fields = ['car', 'price', 'color'];
var myCars = [
  {
    "car": "Audi",
    "price": 40000,
    "color": "blue"
  }, {
    "car": "BMW",
    "price": 35000,
    "color": "black"
  }, {
    "car": "Porsche",
    "price": 60000,
    "color": "green"
  }
];
var csv = json2csv({ data: myCars, fields: fields });

fs.writeFile('file.csv', csv, function(err) {
  if (err) throw err;
  console.log('file saved');
});

The content of the "file.csv" should be

car, price, color
"Audi", 40000, "blue"
"BMW", 35000, "black"
"Porsche", 60000, "green"

Example 2

Similarly to mongoexport you can choose which fields to export. Note: this example uses the optional callback format.

var json2csv = require('json2csv');
var fields = ['car', 'color'];

json2csv({ data: myCars, fields: fields }, function(err, csv) {
  if (err) console.log(err);
  console.log(csv);
});

Results in

car, color
"Audi", "blue"
"BMW", "black"
"Porsche", "green"

Example 3

Use a custom delimiter to create tsv files. Add it as the value of the del property on the parameters:

var json2csv = require('json2csv');
var fields = ['car', 'price', 'color'];
var tsv = json2csv({ data: myCars, fields: fields, del: '\t' });

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

Example 4

You can choose custom column names for the exported file.

var json2csv = require('json2csv');
var fields = ['car', 'price'];
var fieldNames = ['Car Name', 'Price USD'];
var csv = json2csv({ data: myCars, fields: fields, fieldNames: fieldNames });

console.log(csv);

Example 5

You can choose custom quotation marks.

var json2csv = require('json2csv');
var fields = ['car', 'price'];
var fieldNames = ['Car Name', 'Price USD'];
var opts = {
  data: myCars,
  fields: fields,
  fieldNames: fieldNames,
  quotes: ''
};
var csv = json2csv(opts);

console.log(csv);

Results in

Car Name, Price USD
Audi, 10000
BMW, 15000
Porsche, 30000

Example 6

You can also specify nested properties using dot notation.

var json2csv = require('json2csv');
var fs = require('fs');
var fields = ['car.make', 'car.model', 'price', 'color'];
var 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"
  }
];
var csv = json2csv({ data: myCars, fields: fields });

fs.writeFile('file.csv', csv, function(err) {
  if (err) throw err;
  console.log('file saved');
});

The content of the "file.csv" should be

car.make, car.model, price, color
"Audi", "A3", 40000, "blue"
"BMW", "F20", 35000, "black"
"Porsche", "9PA AF1", 60000, "green"

Example 7

You can unwind arrays similar to MongoDB's $unwind operation using the unwindPath option.

var json2csv = require('json2csv');
var fs = require('fs');
var fields = ['carModel', 'price', 'colors'];
var 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"]
  }
];
var csv = json2csv({ data: myCars, fields: fields, unwindPath: 'colors' });

fs.writeFile('file.csv', csv, function(err) {
  if (err) throw err;
  console.log('file saved');
});

The content of the "file.csv" should be

"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"

Command Line Interface

json2csv can also be called from the command line if installed with -g.

Usage: json2csv [options]

  Options:

    -h, --help                   output usage information
    -V, --version                output the version number
    -i, --input <input>          Path and name of the incoming json file.
    -o, --output [output]        Path and name of the resulting csv file. Defaults to console.
    -f, --fields <fields>        Specify the fields to convert.
    -l, --fieldList [list]       Specify a file with a list of fields to include. One field per line.
    -d, --delimiter [delimiter]  Specify a delimiter other than the default comma to use.
    -e, --eol [value]            Specify an EOL value after each row.
    -z, --newLine [value]        Specify an new line value for separating rows.
    -q, --quote [value]          Specify an alternate quote value.
    -n, --no-header              Disable the column name header
    -F, --flatten                Flatten nested objects
    -L, --ldjson                 Treat the input as Line-Delimited JSON.
    -p, --pretty                 Use only when printing to console. Logs output in pretty tables.
    -a, --include-empty-rows     Includes empty rows in the resulting CSV output.

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.

CLI examples

Input file and specify fields

$ json2csv -i input.json -f carModel,price,color
carModel,price,color
"Audi",10000,"blue"
"BMW",15000,"red"
"Mercedes",20000,"yellow"
"Porsche",30000,"green"

Input file, specify fields and use pretty logging

$ json2csv -i input.json -f carModel,price,color -p

Screenshot

Input file, specify fields and write to file

$ json2csv -i input.json -f carModel,price,color -o out.csv

Content of out.csv is

carModel,price,color
"Audi",10000,"blue"
"BMW",15000,"red"
"Mercedes",20000,"yellow"
"Porsche",30000,"green"

Input file, use field list and write to file

The file fieldList contains

carModel
price
color

Use the following command with the -l flag

$ json2csv -i input.json -l fieldList -o out.csv

Content of out.csv is

carModel,price,color
"Audi",10000,"blue"
"BMW",15000,"red"
"Mercedes",20000,"yellow"
"Porsche",30000,"green"

Read from stdin

$ 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

Appending to existing CSV

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

Include using a script tag (not recommended)

If it's not possible to work with node modules, json2csv can be declared as a global by requesting dist/json2csv.js via an HTML script tag:

<script src="node_modules/json2csv/dist/json2csv.js"></script>
<script>
  console.log(typeof json2csv === 'function'); // true
</script>

Building

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.

Testing

Run the following command to test and return coverage

$ npm test

Contributors

Install require packages for development run following command under json2csv dir.

Run

$ npm install

Could you please make sure code is formatted and test passed before submit Pull Requests?

See Testing section above.

But I want streams!

Check out my other module json2csv-stream. It transforms an incoming stream containing json data into an outgoing csv stream.

Similar Projects

License

See LICENSE.md.