CsvHelper
strictyaml
CsvHelper | strictyaml | |
---|---|---|
36 | 21 | |
4,539 | 1,411 | |
- | - | |
8.7 | 1.9 | |
8 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
C# | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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CsvHelper
- CsvHelper – CSV Library for .NET
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What’s the quickest way I can log data and write it to a csv file?
I would also say either a logging framework or one of the many NuGet packages. Like CsvHelper.
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Parsing CSV?
I've been using CsvHelper for a long time and I quite like it. It's flexible and configurable enough to suit all my needs. Though the authors have unpleasant habit of introducing breaking changes (currently they are at major version 30).
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Best language for manipulating an Excel file.
It's really slow compared to (for example) csvhelper. I tried to use the built in microsoft stuff to handle a data transformation routine using excel files, turning them into csvs and using the csv library sped up the process from 3-4 minutes to about 8 seconds.
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Introducing: EasyCsv Dotnet
How might it compare to https://www.nuget.org/packages/CsvHelper/?
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The new type of SQL injection
Let me guess, you replaced a string.Split(',') with CsvHelper?
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C# . NET alternative for PowerShell Export-CSV
I use CSVHelper https://joshclose.github.io/CsvHelper/ it has a WriteRecords function that will write out your objects
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Creating a Web App using Excel
I would recommend looking at this popular library for reading / writing to csv files. https://joshclose.github.io/CsvHelper/
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Struggling with Open Source Documentation - csvhelper
This is probably a bit churlish to complain about, since it's an entirely free tool that has saved me a lot of time and effort, but I'm baffled by the documentation for CsvHelper by Josh Close.
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Saving datas with more than Excel limit of rows
https://joshclose.github.io/CsvHelper/ is a good library for creating CSVs, but you need to tell us more about who is consumer of this export and may be there is a more direct approach
strictyaml
- StrictYAML
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XML is better than YAML
NestedText already is the way I use YAML; everything is intepreted as a string. I have some trust in my YAML parser to not mangle most strings. I could use NestedText, but users would be unfamiliar with it, and IIRC the only parsers are in Python. But then I could use StrictYaml too https://github.com/crdoconnor/strictyaml
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The new type of SQL injection
you can stick to a subset of YAML syntax (e.g. strictYAML)
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DO YOU YAML?
YAML stands for "YAML Ain’t Markup Language" - this is known as a recursive acronym. YAML is often used for writing configuration files. It’s human readable, easy to understand and can be used with other programming languages. Although YAML is commonly used in many disciplines, it has received criticism on the amoutn of whitespace .yml files have, difficulty in editing, and complexity of the standard. Despite the criticism, properly using YAML ensures that you can reproduce the results of a project and makes sure that the virtual environment packages play nicely with system packages. (If you're looking for another way to share environments there are other alternatives to YAML which include StrictYAML (a type-safe YAML parser) and NestedText)
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The yaml document from hell
The example you linked provides this as an example of a YAML document that he wants his format to support.
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The YAML Document from Hell
That safe subset exists and is implemented in a number of languages. It is called strict-yaml: https://hitchdev.com/strictyaml/
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Hacker News top posts: Jul 3, 2022
StrictYAML\ (33 comments)
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Why JSON Isn’t a Good Configuration Language (2018)
To me those are in the category of "nice to have", and the problem is that every developer has different preferences for these [1] [2]. But the main features of StrictYaml, like supporting comments and less syntactic noise, I think are pretty uncontroversial, and perhaps it's worth it to get people to switch over for those alone. It doesn't need to be perfect, it just needs to be a significant enough improvement over JSON, and I'd say those two features are more than enough
[1]: https://github.com/crdoconnor/strictyaml/issues/37
[2]: https://github.com/crdoconnor/strictyaml/issues/38
What are some alternatives?
FileHelpers - The FileHelpers are a free and easy to use .NET library to read/write data from fixed length or delimited records in files, strings or streams
pyyaml - Canonical source repository for PyYAML
FluentValidation - A popular .NET validation library for building strongly-typed validation rules.
nestedtext - Human readable and writable data interchange format
RecordParser - Zero Allocation Writer/Reader Parser for .NET Core
ytt - YAML templating tool that works on YAML structure instead of text
Enums.NET - Enums.NET is a high-performance type-safe .NET enum utility library
crudini - A utility for manipulating ini files
FlatMapper - FlatMapper is a library to import and export data from and to plain text files.
yaml-rust - A pure rust YAML implementation.
Polly - Polly is a .NET resilience and transient-fault-handling library that allows developers to express policies such as Retry, Circuit Breaker, Timeout, Bulkhead Isolation, and Fallback in a fluent and thread-safe manner. From version 6.0.1, Polly targets .NET Standard 1.1 and 2.0+.
starlark-go - Starlark in Go: the Starlark configuration language, implemented in Go