miller
xsv
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miller | xsv | |
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63 | 63 | |
8,510 | 10,023 | |
- | - | |
9.1 | 0.0 | |
8 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Go | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | The Unlicense |
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miller
- Qsv: Efficient CSV CLI Toolkit
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jq 1.7 Released
jq and miller[1] are essential parts of my toolbelt, right up there with awk and vim.
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Perl first commit: a “replacement” for Awk and sed
> This works really well if your problem can be solved in one or two liners.
My personal comfort threshold is around the 100-line mark. It's even possible to write maintainable shell scripts up to 500 lines, but it mostly depends on the problem you're trying to solve, and the discipline of the programmer to follow best practices (use sane defaults, ShellCheck, etc.).
> It go bad very quickly when, say, you have two CSV files and want to join them the sql-way.
In that case we're talking about structured data, and, yeah, Perl or Python would be easier to work with. That said, depending on the complexity of the CSV, you can still go a long way with plain Bash with IFS/read(1) or tr(1) to split CSV columns. This wouldn't be very robust, but there are tools that handle CSV specifically[1], which can be composed in a shell script just fine.
So it's always a balancing act of being productive quickly with a shell script, or reaching out for a programming language once the tools aren't a good fit, or maintenance becomes an issue.
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GQL: A new SQL like query language for .git files written in Rust
That said, you may be interested in Miller (https://github.com/johnkerl/miller) which provides similar capabilities for CSV, JSON, and XML files. It doesn't use a SQL grammar, but that's just the proverbial lipstick on the thing. I'm not the author, but I have used it and I see some parallels in use cases at the very least.
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Any cli utility to create ascii/org mode tables?
worth giving Miller a shot
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I wrote this iCalendar (.ics) command-line utility to turn common calendar exports into more broadly compatible CSV files.
CSV utilities (still haven't pick a favorite one...): https://github.com/harelba/q https://github.com/BurntSushi/xsv https://github.com/wireservice/csvkit https://github.com/johnkerl/miller
- Miller: Like Awk, sed, cut, join, and sort for CSV, TSV, and tabular JSON
- Nushell.sh ls – where size > 10mb – –sort-by modified
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Tool to interact with CSV
Came here to recommend miller!
xsv
- Qsv: Efficient CSV CLI Toolkit
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Joining CSV Data Without SQL: An IP Geolocation Use Case
I have done some similar, simpler data wrangling with xsv (https://github.com/BurntSushi/xsv) and jq. It could process my 800M rows in a couple of minutes (plus the time to read it out from the database =)
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Qsv: CSVs sliced, diced and analyzed (fork of xsv)
xsv, which seems to be why qsv was created.
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I wrote this iCalendar (.ics) command-line utility to turn common calendar exports into more broadly compatible CSV files.
CSV utilities (still haven't pick a favorite one...): https://github.com/harelba/q https://github.com/BurntSushi/xsv https://github.com/wireservice/csvkit https://github.com/johnkerl/miller
- Icsp – Command-line iCalendar (.ics) to CSV parser
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ripgrep is faster than {grep, ag, git grep, ucg, pt, sift}
$ git remote -v origin [email protected]:rust-lang/rust (fetch) origin [email protected]:rust-lang/rust (push) $ git rev-parse HEAD 3b0d4813ab461ec81eab8980bb884691c97c5a35 $ time grep -ri burntsushi ./ ./src/tools/cargotest/main.rs: repo: "https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep", ./src/tools/cargotest/main.rs: repo: "https://github.com/BurntSushi/xsv", grep: ./target/debug/incremental/cargotest-2dvu4f2km9e91/s-gactj3ma2j-1b10l4z-2l60ur55ixe6n/query-cache.bin: binary file matches grep: ./target/debug/incremental/cargotest-38cpmhhbdgdyq/s-gactj3luwq-1o12vgp-t61hd8qdyp7t/query-cache.bin: binary file matches grep: ./target/debug/incremental/cargotest-17632op6djxne/s-gawuq5468i-1h69nfw-4gm0s8yhhiun/query-cache.bin: binary file matches grep: ./target/debug/incremental/cargotest-2trm4kt5yom3r/s-gawuq53qqg-bjiezj-lo0gha8ign8w/query-cache.bin: binary file matches grep: ./target/debug/deps/libregex_automata-c74a6d9fd0abd77b.rmeta: binary file matches grep: ./target/debug/deps/libsame_file-a0e0363a2985455d.rlib: binary file matches grep: ./target/debug/deps/libsame_file-a0e0363a2985455d.rmeta: binary file matches grep: ./target/debug/deps/libsame_file-7251d8d3586a319b.rmeta: binary file matches grep: ./build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-sysroot/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/libaho_corasick-999a08e2b700420d.rlib: binary file matches grep: ./build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-sysroot/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/libregex_automata-0d168be5d25b3ac5.rlib: binary file matches grep: ./build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-tools/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/libregex_automata-7d6bec0156f15da1.rlib: binary file matches grep: ./build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-tools/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/libregex_automata-7d6bec0156f15da1.rmeta: binary file matches grep: ./build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-tools/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/libaho_corasick-07dee4514b87d99b.rmeta: binary file matches grep: ./build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-tools/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/libaho_corasick-07dee4514b87d99b.rlib: binary file matches grep: ./build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-rustc/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/libaho_corasick-999a08e2b700420d.rlib: binary file matches grep: ./build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-rustc/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/libaho_corasick-999a08e2b700420d.rmeta: binary file matches grep: ./build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-rustc/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/libregex_automata-0d168be5d25b3ac5.rlib: binary file matches grep: ./build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-rustc/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/libregex_automata-0d168be5d25b3ac5.rmeta: binary file matches grep: ./build/bootstrap/debug/deps/libaho_corasick-992e1ba08ef83436.rmeta: binary file matches grep: ./build/bootstrap/debug/deps/libignore-54d41239d2761852.rmeta: binary file matches grep: ./build/bootstrap/debug/deps/libsame_file-9a5e3ddd89cfe599.rlib: binary file matches grep: ./build/bootstrap/debug/deps/libregex_automata-8e700951c9869a66.rlib: binary file matches grep: ./build/bootstrap/debug/deps/libignore-54d41239d2761852.rlib: binary file matches grep: ./build/bootstrap/debug/deps/libaho_corasick-992e1ba08ef83436.rlib: binary file matches grep: ./build/bootstrap/debug/deps/libregex_automata-8e700951c9869a66.rmeta: binary file matches grep: ./build/bootstrap/debug/deps/libsame_file-9a5e3ddd89cfe599.rmeta: binary file matches real 16.683 user 15.793 sys 0.878 maxmem 8 MB faults 0
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Any Linux admins willing to try Pygrep?
Unrelated, are you the same burntsushi that wrote xsv?
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Analyzing multi-gigabyte JSON files locally
If it could be tabular in nature, maybe convert to sqlite3 so you can make use of indexing, or CSV to make use of high-performance tools like xsv or zsv (the latter of which I'm an author).
https://github.com/BurntSushi/xsv
https://github.com/liquidaty/zsv/blob/main/docs/csv_json_sql...
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What monitoring tool do you use or recommend?
Oh and there's rad cli shit out there for CSV files too, like xsv
What are some alternatives?
visidata - A terminal spreadsheet multitool for discovering and arranging data
csvtk - A cross-platform, efficient and practical CSV/TSV toolkit in Golang
jq - Command-line JSON processor [Moved to: https://github.com/jqlang/jq]
ripgrep - ripgrep recursively searches directories for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore
dasel - Select, put and delete data from JSON, TOML, YAML, XML and CSV files with a single tool. Supports conversion between formats and can be used as a Go package.
Servo - Servo, the embeddable, independent, memory-safe, modular, parallel web rendering engine
svgcleaner - svgcleaner could help you to clean up your SVG files from the unnecessary data.
Fractalide - Reusable Reproducible Composable Software
q - q - Run SQL directly on delimited files and multi-file sqlite databases
iota - A terminal-based text editor written in Rust
yq - yq is a portable command-line YAML, JSON, XML, CSV, TOML and properties processor