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MelissaReed
Helper V
Helper V

Parsing a CSV that contains embedded commas

I have a CSV file that has embedded commas -- that is the commas are part of the "column" value:

MelissaReed_0-1670903425904.png

The text of the CSV file looks like this  -- columns containing commas are "wrapped" in double-quotes:

Service Type,Tier,Agency,Installation Address,Sub Contractor,
Cable Modem,6,Supreme,"913 South Church St, Smithfield, VA 23430",Charter 
Cable Modem,6,Supreme,"1020 Pretlow St 1st floor Franklin, VA 23851",Charter 
Cable Modem,6,Supreme,"17000 Josiah Parker Circle, Isle of Wight, VA 23397",Charter 

 

Split() does not differentiate between true delimiters vs comma-as-value.

Is there some other function I should be using to transform the CSV content to an array in a way that respects the doublequote marks (like Excel does when you open a CSV)?

 

I can't just treat it as additional columns -- different rows have different numbers of commas in their addresses.

 

2 ACCEPTED SOLUTIONS

Accepted Solutions
v-liwei-msft
Community Support
Community Support

Hi @MelissaReed 

 

The operation of split(xxx, ',') is not required when using slice.

 

Best Regards,

Levi

View solution in original post

@MelissaReed I've been playing around with this and ended up combining/re-writing a couple of the sample Office Scripts. I took the Convert CSV to Excel Table and Return Data as JSON sample scripts and now have a script that takes in CSV data and returns it as a JSON array.

 

I'm not sure how familiar you are with Office Scripts, but they offer a lot of functionality that you can't do natively within Power Automate. To create an Office Script, you need to open any Excel file in the browser and click on the Automate tab. You can then create a script that will be saved to your OneDrive Documents library in a folder called Office Scripts (the folder will be automatically created when you save your first script).

 

Below is how you would create the script that will cater for your question.

 

Open an Excel file online and click on the Automate tab, then click on New Script.

grantjenkins_0-1672891043646.png

 

In the script window that appears, give the script a name (I've named mine Return CSV Data to JSON), then paste in the script below. Finally, click on Save script. This will then allow you to select the script from Power Automate. The nice thing about this script is that it will take in any CSV data and return the JSON for you, so you can reuse it across multiple Power Automates. One caveat is that because it's stored in your OneDrive you will need to share the script file with anyone else before they can use it in Power Automate.

 

/**
 * Convert incoming CSV data and return as JSON array.
 */
function main(workbook: ExcelScript.Workbook, csv: string) {
  // Split each line into a row.
  let rows = csv.split("\r\n");
  if (csv.search(/\r\n/) > - 1) {
    rows = csv.split("\r\n");
  } 
  else if (csv.search(/\n/) > - 1) {
    rows = csv.split("\n");
  } 
  else if (csv.search(/\r/) > - 1) {
    rows = csv.split("\r");
  }

  // For each row, match the comma-separated sections.
  const csvMatchRegex = /(?:,|\n|^)("(?:(?:"")*[^"]*)*"|[^",\n]*|(?:\n|$))/g

  // Create a 2D array with one row.
  let data: string[][] = [];

  rows.forEach((value, index) => {
    if (value.length > 0) {
      let row = value.match(csvMatchRegex);

      // Check for blanks at the start of the row.
      if (row[0].charAt(0) === ',') {
        row.unshift("");
      }

      // Remove the preceding comma and any start/end quotes.
      row.forEach((cell, index) => {
        let result: string = cell.indexOf(",") === 0 ? cell.substr(1) : cell;
        result = result.indexOf("\"") === 0 ? result.substr(1) : result;
        result = result.lastIndexOf("\"") === result.length - 1 ? result.substr(0, result.length - 1) : result;

        row[index] = result;

      });

      data.push(row);
    }
  });

  // Create an array of JSON objects that match the row structure and return to Power Automate.
  return returnObjectFromValues(data);
}

// This function converts a 2D array of values into a generic JSON object.
function returnObjectFromValues(values: string[][]): TableData[] {
  let objectArray: TableData[] = [];
  let objectKeys: string[] = [];
  for (let i = 0; i < values.length; i++) {
    if (i === 0) {
      objectKeys = values[i];
      continue;
    }

    let object = {};
    for (let j = 0; j < values[i].length; j++) {
      object[objectKeys[j]] = values[i][j];
    }

    objectArray.push(object as TableData);
  }

  return objectArray;
}

interface TableData {}

 

grantjenkins_1-1672891287474.png

 

Ok, now onto the Power Automate.

 

For this example, I'm using the following CSV file (includes the sample data you provided).

grantjenkins_2-1672891391304.png

 

The full flow is below. I'll go into each of the actions.

grantjenkins_4-1672891512716.png

 

Get file content retrieves the CSV data.

grantjenkins_5-1672891529599.png

 

Run script will call the script we created by passing in the CSV data (Body from Get file content). Note that you can use any Excel file in this instance as we need an Excel file to run an Office Script This script won't modify the Excel file in any way. In this case I've just used a sample Excel file called scripts.xlsx. It will return our JSON in a property called result which we can use for the rest of our flow including Select, Create CSV table, Create HTML table, etc.

grantjenkins_6-1672891635072.png

 

If we ran the flow now, we would see our JSON data as so:

grantjenkins_7-1672891843458.png

 

Select uses the result from our Run script and extracts the properties. You can see that I've reordered the last two properties in this instance. The expressions used are below:

//From (input)
body('Run_script')?['result']

//Property Values
item()?['Service Type']
item()?['Tier']
item()?['Sub Contractor']
item()?['Agency']

grantjenkins_8-1672891978926.png

 

And the output of the Select:

grantjenkins_9-1672892022149.png


----------------------------------------------------------------------
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If you like my response, please consider giving it a Thumbs Up.


----------------------------------------------------------------------
If I've answered your question, please mark the post as Solved.
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View solution in original post

11 REPLIES 11
Amit_Sharma
Super User
Super User

Hi @MelissaReed,

Could you please show me your flow?

v-liwei-msft
Community Support
Community Support

Hi @MelissaReed 

 

Could you please tell me:

Do you want to convert the CSV file content into an array.
1. Split the CSV text with line breaks.
2.Apply to each traverses each line after division
(use skip in order to skip the first row, because the first row is the column name)
(Use Condition to determine whether the line is empty, because a blank line will appear after splitting with a newline character)
3. The first, second, third, and fifth columns do not contain commas and can be separated by commas.
4. Use indexOf and lastIndexOf to get the data in double quotes.

vliweimsft_0-1670916375479.jpeg

vliweimsft_1-1670916386340.png

skip(split(outputs('Compose_CSV'),decodeUriComponent('%0D%0A')),1)

vliweimsft_2-1670916428007.png

vliweimsft_3-1670916439970.png

 

Best Regards,

Levi

 

 

That's the problem -- I'm asking what the flow should look like to do this.

I can't just do a split(XXXXX   ',') because some of the commas are values (part of the string) and not delimiters.  Illustrated in my example above in bold.

Thanks for your reply.  Let me respond to your response line by line

Do you want to convert the CSV file content into an array.   - YES

1. Split the CSV text with line breaks.    Yes

json( uriComponentToString( 
replace( replace( 
uriComponent( 
    split( base64ToString( body('Get_file_content_using_path')?'$content'] ), 
            outputs('Newline') ) 
), '%5Cr'''), '%EF%BB%BF''') ) )

         And in my next step I filter out the blank line (you do it with an IF inside your loop) 
2.Apply to each traverses each line after division
(use skip in order to skip the first row, because the first row is the column name)  -- YES


(Use Condition to determine whether the line is empty, because a blank line will appear after splitting with a newline character) -- YES (done with a filter in earlier step)
3. The first, second, third, and fifth columns do not contain commas and can be separated by commas.

--- This is where you've lost me.   

At this point -- inside the loop "item()" looks like this: 

Cable Modem,6,Supreme,"913 South Church St, Smithfield, VA 23430",Charter Communications,6/21/2016, .....

If I do a Split(), it will return 

Cable Modem

6

Supreme

"913 South Church St

Smithfield

VA 23430"

Charter Communications

6/21/2016, ....

because of the commas within the text.    Col 4 should parse to the full address in a single cell.  That's what I can't get to.
4. Use indexOf and lastIndexOf to get the data in double quotes.

 

--- After I've already split it out by commas?   What am I missing here?

 

v-liwei-msft
Community Support
Community Support

Hi @MelissaReed 

 

The operation of split(xxx, ',') is not required when using slice.

 

Best Regards,

Levi

grantjenkins
Super User
Super User

@MelissaReed What do you want as your final output? Are you trying to convert a CSV to Excel, convert CSV to a JSON array, or something else?


----------------------------------------------------------------------
If I've answered your question, please mark the post as Solved.
If you like my response, please consider giving it a Thumbs Up.

Sorry for the delay -- holiday break.

Final output is a CSV file.

What I'm doing is reading in the data to reformat it -- put the columns in the correct order, transform some of the values.   The crazy thing is I don't even need the address information.  But the content of the column (the embedded commas)  are messing up the parsing for the columns I do need.

It just seems like such a common situation I figured someone else had already solved the problem -- either a function I didn't know about or a technique I hadn't thought of.

 

@MelissaReed I've been playing around with this and ended up combining/re-writing a couple of the sample Office Scripts. I took the Convert CSV to Excel Table and Return Data as JSON sample scripts and now have a script that takes in CSV data and returns it as a JSON array.

 

I'm not sure how familiar you are with Office Scripts, but they offer a lot of functionality that you can't do natively within Power Automate. To create an Office Script, you need to open any Excel file in the browser and click on the Automate tab. You can then create a script that will be saved to your OneDrive Documents library in a folder called Office Scripts (the folder will be automatically created when you save your first script).

 

Below is how you would create the script that will cater for your question.

 

Open an Excel file online and click on the Automate tab, then click on New Script.

grantjenkins_0-1672891043646.png

 

In the script window that appears, give the script a name (I've named mine Return CSV Data to JSON), then paste in the script below. Finally, click on Save script. This will then allow you to select the script from Power Automate. The nice thing about this script is that it will take in any CSV data and return the JSON for you, so you can reuse it across multiple Power Automates. One caveat is that because it's stored in your OneDrive you will need to share the script file with anyone else before they can use it in Power Automate.

 

/**
 * Convert incoming CSV data and return as JSON array.
 */
function main(workbook: ExcelScript.Workbook, csv: string) {
  // Split each line into a row.
  let rows = csv.split("\r\n");
  if (csv.search(/\r\n/) > - 1) {
    rows = csv.split("\r\n");
  } 
  else if (csv.search(/\n/) > - 1) {
    rows = csv.split("\n");
  } 
  else if (csv.search(/\r/) > - 1) {
    rows = csv.split("\r");
  }

  // For each row, match the comma-separated sections.
  const csvMatchRegex = /(?:,|\n|^)("(?:(?:"")*[^"]*)*"|[^",\n]*|(?:\n|$))/g

  // Create a 2D array with one row.
  let data: string[][] = [];

  rows.forEach((value, index) => {
    if (value.length > 0) {
      let row = value.match(csvMatchRegex);

      // Check for blanks at the start of the row.
      if (row[0].charAt(0) === ',') {
        row.unshift("");
      }

      // Remove the preceding comma and any start/end quotes.
      row.forEach((cell, index) => {
        let result: string = cell.indexOf(",") === 0 ? cell.substr(1) : cell;
        result = result.indexOf("\"") === 0 ? result.substr(1) : result;
        result = result.lastIndexOf("\"") === result.length - 1 ? result.substr(0, result.length - 1) : result;

        row[index] = result;

      });

      data.push(row);
    }
  });

  // Create an array of JSON objects that match the row structure and return to Power Automate.
  return returnObjectFromValues(data);
}

// This function converts a 2D array of values into a generic JSON object.
function returnObjectFromValues(values: string[][]): TableData[] {
  let objectArray: TableData[] = [];
  let objectKeys: string[] = [];
  for (let i = 0; i < values.length; i++) {
    if (i === 0) {
      objectKeys = values[i];
      continue;
    }

    let object = {};
    for (let j = 0; j < values[i].length; j++) {
      object[objectKeys[j]] = values[i][j];
    }

    objectArray.push(object as TableData);
  }

  return objectArray;
}

interface TableData {}

 

grantjenkins_1-1672891287474.png

 

Ok, now onto the Power Automate.

 

For this example, I'm using the following CSV file (includes the sample data you provided).

grantjenkins_2-1672891391304.png

 

The full flow is below. I'll go into each of the actions.

grantjenkins_4-1672891512716.png

 

Get file content retrieves the CSV data.

grantjenkins_5-1672891529599.png

 

Run script will call the script we created by passing in the CSV data (Body from Get file content). Note that you can use any Excel file in this instance as we need an Excel file to run an Office Script This script won't modify the Excel file in any way. In this case I've just used a sample Excel file called scripts.xlsx. It will return our JSON in a property called result which we can use for the rest of our flow including Select, Create CSV table, Create HTML table, etc.

grantjenkins_6-1672891635072.png

 

If we ran the flow now, we would see our JSON data as so:

grantjenkins_7-1672891843458.png

 

Select uses the result from our Run script and extracts the properties. You can see that I've reordered the last two properties in this instance. The expressions used are below:

//From (input)
body('Run_script')?['result']

//Property Values
item()?['Service Type']
item()?['Tier']
item()?['Sub Contractor']
item()?['Agency']

grantjenkins_8-1672891978926.png

 

And the output of the Select:

grantjenkins_9-1672892022149.png


----------------------------------------------------------------------
If I've answered your question, please mark the post as Solved.
If you like my response, please consider giving it a Thumbs Up.


----------------------------------------------------------------------
If I've answered your question, please mark the post as Solved.
If you like my response, please consider giving it a Thumbs Up.

Wow -- this is amazing.    Thanks so much for such a thorough explanation.   Explaining HOW to use OfficeScripts was as valuable to me as the script you shared addressing my CSV problem.

I wound up going at it a different way, but I hope to make use of this approach in some of my other work where I will likely run into some of the same issues (dealing with embedded commas).  Thanks again!

 

M.

Thank you for posting this @grantjenkins!  I've been playing with a few csv files to build a report and I couldn't figure out why it kept failing to parse through one of the files.  It ended up being a field with multiple values that were separated by commas.  D'oh!  With your script, my report is being generated without issues.  Literally an easy button for me, I can't thank you enough! 

@grantjenkins  Thanks very much for your sharing, I'm a beginner with power automate and I want convert the CSV to an excel file with the same name. May you do me a favor how I can make it based on this script. Thanks

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Welcome to TUESDAY TIPS, your weekly connection with the most insightful tips and tricks that empower both newcomers and veterans in the Power Platform Community! Every Tuesday, we bring you a curated selection of the finest advice, distilled from the resources and tools in the Community. Whether you’re a seasoned member or just getting started, Tuesday Tips are the perfect compass guiding you across the dynamic landscape of the Power Platform Community.   As our community family expands each week, we revisit our essential tools, tips, and tricks to ensure you’re well-versed in the community’s pulse. Keep an eye on the News & Announcements for your weekly Tuesday Tips—you never know what you may learn!   This Week's Tip: Private Messaging & Macros in Power Apps Community   Do you want to enhance your communication in the Community and streamline your interactions? One of the best ways to do this is to ensure you are using Private Messaging--and the ever-handy macros that are available to you as a Community member!   Our Knowledge Base article about private messaging and macros is the best place to find out more. Check it out today and discover some key tips and tricks when it comes to messages and macros:   Private Messaging: Learn how to enable private messages in your community profile and ensure you’re connected with other community membersMacros Explained: Discover the convenience of macros—prewritten text snippets that save time when posting in forums or sending private messagesCreating Macros: Follow simple steps to create your own macros for efficient communication within the Power Apps CommunityUsage Guide: Understand how to apply macros in posts and private messages, enhancing your interaction with the Community For detailed instructions and more information, visit the full page in your community today:Power Apps: Enabling Private Messaging & How to Use Macros (Power Apps)Power Automate: Enabling Private Messaging & How to Use Macros (Power Automate)  Copilot Studio: Enabling Private Messaging &How to Use Macros (Copilot Studio) Power Pages: Enabling Private Messaging & How to Use Macros (Power Pages)

Tuesday Tip: Subscriptions & Notifications

TUESDAY TIPS are our way of communicating helpful things we've learned or shared that have helped members of the Community. Whether you're just getting started or you're a seasoned pro, Tuesday Tips will help you know where to go, what to look for, and navigate your way through the ever-growing--and ever-changing--world of the Power Platform Community! We cover basics about the Community, provide a few "insider tips" to make your experience even better, and share best practices gleaned from our most active community members and Super Users.   With so many new Community members joining us each week, we'll also review a few of our "best practices" so you know just "how" the Community works, so make sure to watch the News & Announcements each week for the latest and greatest Tuesday Tips!   This Week: All About Subscriptions & Notifications We don't want you to a miss a thing in the Community! The best way to make sure you know what's going on in the News & Announcements, to blogs you follow, or forums and galleries you're interested in is to subscribe! These subscriptions ensure you receive automated messages about the most recent posts and replies. Even better, there are multiple ways you can subscribe to content and boards in the community! (Please note: if you have created an AAD (Azure Active Directory) account you won't be able to receive e-mail notifications.)   Subscribing to a Category  When you're looking at the entire category, select from the Options drop down and choose Subscribe.     You can then choose to Subscribe to all of the boards or select only the boards you want to receive notifications. When you're satisfied with your choices, click Save.     Subscribing to a Topic You can also subscribe to a single topic by clicking Subscribe from the Options drop down menu, while you are viewing the topic or in the General board overview, respectively.     Subscribing to a Label Find the labels at the bottom left of a post.From a particular post with a label, click on the label to filter by that label. This opens a window containing a list of posts with the label you have selected. Click Subscribe.     Note: You can only subscribe to a label at the board level. If you subscribe to a label named 'Copilot' at board #1, it will not automatically subscribe you to an identically named label at board #2. You will have to subscribe twice, once at each board.   Bookmarks Just like you can subscribe to topics and categories, you can also bookmark topics and boards from the same menus! Simply go to the Topic Options drop down menu to bookmark a topic or the Options drop down to bookmark a board. The difference between subscribing and bookmarking is that subscriptions provide you with notifications, whereas bookmarks provide you a static way of easily accessing your favorite boards from the My subscriptions area.   Managing & Viewing Your Subscriptions & Bookmarks To manage your subscriptions, click on your avatar and select My subscriptions from the drop-down menu.     From the Subscriptions & Notifications tab, you can manage your subscriptions, including your e-mail subscription options, your bookmarks, your notification settings, and your email notification format.     You can see a list of all your subscriptions and bookmarks and choose which ones to delete, either individually or in bulk, by checking multiple boxes.     A Note on Following Friends on Mobile Adding someone as a friend or selecting Follow in the mobile view does not allow you to subscribe to their activity feed. You will merely be able to see your friends’ biography, other personal information, or online status, and send messages more quickly by choosing who to send the message to from a list, as opposed to having to search by username.

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