195
votes

It's easy enough to read a CSV file into an array with Ruby but I can't find any good documentation on how to write an array into a CSV file. Can anyone tell me how to do this?

I'm using Ruby 1.9.2 if that matters.

6
The answer you have is great, but let me urge you to not use CSV. If you don't have tabs in your data, tab-delimited files are much easier to deal with because they don't involve so much freakin' quoting and escaping and such. If you must use CSV, of course, them's the breaks.Bill Dueber
@Bill, the CSV module neatly handles tab-delimited files as well as actual csv files. The :col_sep option lets you specify the column separator as "\t" and all's well.tamouse
here is more Info about CSV docs.ruby-lang.org/en/2.1.0/CSV.htmlveeresh yh
Using .tab files with this module is what I am doing, because opening this in Excel by accident would othrwise mess up the encoding…MrVocabulary

6 Answers

343
votes

To a file:

require 'csv'
CSV.open("myfile.csv", "w") do |csv|
  csv << ["row", "of", "CSV", "data"]
  csv << ["another", "row"]
  # ...
end

To a string:

require 'csv'
csv_string = CSV.generate do |csv|
  csv << ["row", "of", "CSV", "data"]
  csv << ["another", "row"]
  # ...
end

Here's the current documentation on CSV: http://ruby-doc.org/stdlib/libdoc/csv/rdoc/index.html

42
votes

If you have an array of arrays of data:

rows = [["a1", "a2", "a3"],["b1", "b2", "b3", "b4"], ["c1", "c2", "c3"]]

Then you can write this to a file with the following, which I think is much simpler:

require "csv"
File.write("ss.csv", rows.map(&:to_csv).join)
41
votes

I've got this down to just one line.

rows = [['a1', 'a2', 'a3'],['b1', 'b2', 'b3', 'b4'], ['c1', 'c2', 'c3'], ... ]
csv_str = rows.inject([]) { |csv, row|  csv << CSV.generate_line(row) }.join("")
#=> "a1,a2,a3\nb1,b2,b3\nc1,c2,c3\n" 

Do all of the above and save to a csv, in one line.

File.open("ss.csv", "w") {|f| f.write(rows.inject([]) { |csv, row|  csv << CSV.generate_line(row) }.join(""))}

NOTE:

To convert an active record database to csv would be something like this I think

CSV.open(fn, 'w') do |csv|
  csv << Model.column_names
  Model.where(query).each do |m|
    csv << m.attributes.values
  end
end

Hmm @tamouse, that gist is somewhat confusing to me without reading the csv source, but generically, assuming each hash in your array has the same number of k/v pairs & that the keys are always the same, in the same order (i.e. if your data is structured), this should do the deed:

rowid = 0
CSV.open(fn, 'w') do |csv|
  hsh_ary.each do |hsh|
    rowid += 1
    if rowid == 1
      csv << hsh.keys# adding header row (column labels)
    else
      csv << hsh.values
    end# of if/else inside hsh
  end# of hsh's (rows)
end# of csv open

If your data isn't structured this obviously won't work

24
votes

If anyone is interested, here are some one-liners (and a note on loss of type information in CSV):

require 'csv'

rows = [[1,2,3],[4,5]]                    # [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5]]

# To CSV string
csv = rows.map(&:to_csv).join             # "1,2,3\n4,5\n"

# ... and back, as String[][]
rows2 = csv.split("\n").map(&:parse_csv)  # [["1", "2", "3"], ["4", "5"]]

# File I/O:
filename = '/tmp/vsc.csv'

# Save to file -- answer to your question
IO.write(filename, rows.map(&:to_csv).join)

# Read from file
# rows3 = IO.read(filename).split("\n").map(&:parse_csv)
rows3 = CSV.read(filename)

rows3 == rows2   # true
rows3 == rows    # false

Note: CSV loses all type information, you can use JSON to preserve basic type information, or go to verbose (but more easily human-editable) YAML to preserve all type information -- for example, if you need date type, which would become strings in CSV & JSON.

10
votes

Building on @boulder_ruby's answer, this is what I'm looking for, assuming us_eco contains the CSV table as from my gist.

CSV.open('outfile.txt','wb', col_sep: "\t") do |csvfile|
  csvfile << us_eco.first.keys
  us_eco.each do |row|
    csvfile << row.values
  end
end

Updated the gist at https://gist.github.com/tamouse/4647196

3
votes

Struggling with this myself. This is my take:

https://gist.github.com/2639448:

require 'csv'

class CSV
  def CSV.unparse array
    CSV.generate do |csv|
      array.each { |i| csv << i }
    end
  end
end

CSV.unparse [ %w(your array), %w(goes here) ]