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Anonymous
Not applicable

convert CSV string to table

Hi,

I have an API wich return a text, suppossed to be a csv file, in the form below :

datetime;mois;semaine;joursem;heure;vacance;Text;freQ;Scored Labels
7/15/2017 6:00:00 PM;7;28;7;18;1;29,234;67;148,2313385
10/14/2016 4:00:00 AM;10;42;6;4;0;18,922;0;-9,692166328
02/04/2017 12:00;2;5;7;12;0;9,239;0;39,99219513
05/11/2017 05:00;5;19;5;5;0;17,421;0;1,262338638
10/01/2016 13:00;10;40;7;13;0;22,333;2;-0,870968521
11/20/2016 6:00:00 AM;11;48;1;6;0;11,83;0;-13,13813114
10/18/2016 4:00:00 PM;10;43;3;16;0;20,529;42;46,49481583
2/23/2018 9:00:00 AM;2;8;6;9;0;1,231;0;1,8540411
01/05/2017 05:00;1;1;5;5;1;6,426;0;0,300328046

I don't need to save a csv file, I need to transform this to a table to save 2 specifc columns on a sharepoint list.

I tried create CSV table but, I can't make it work.

 

Thank you for your help.

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
27 REPLIES 27
tutankh
Advocate IV
Advocate IV

 

The short answer is that there is not currently a csv parsing function in Flow.  The somewhat longer answer is that depending on how reliable your csv content is, it may be possible. You'd need to write some loops to create an array of json objects that contain your data... then you could parse through the json more or less normally

CSV to JSON.png

Anonymous
Not applicable

Thanks you for your helps.

 

Can you give me an exmle of this loop ? le toos an an expemple of the code.

 

Thank you.

asmusz
Advocate II
Advocate II

All the answers on this topic are SOOOO much more complicated than it should be!

 

We have an Import-CSV command in powershell that takes CSV data and makes an object.... there should be the same thing that works just as easily in MS Flow/Logic apps.  

 

So frustrated that MS has not yet fixed this.

 

 

You can use Parse CSV action from Plumsail Documents connector. It allows you to convert CSV into an array and variables for each column. Please read this article demonstrating how it works.

 

Once you parsed CSV file you can iterate through result array and insert specific column values into SharePoint as you wanted.

This would probably work, but I don't think it's reasonable to spend over $300 a year for something that should be a base option.


@anton-khrit wrote:

You can use Parse CSV action from Plumsail Documents connector. It allows you to convert CSV into an array and variables for each column. Please read this article demonstrating how it works.

 

Once you parsed CSV file you can iterate through result array and insert specific column values into SharePoint as you wanted.


 

BryceC
Regular Visitor

I don't have access to the destination forum but need this solution....Could the solution be completely duplicated here?

I still can't believe that Microsoft has not made parsing a CSV part of the basic options/actions available in Power-Automate/Flow.  I've been advocating for this for literally years now.  C'mon MS!! This is a "standard" OOB function in almost all scripting languages, including PowerShell!  This is also one of the oldest and most common "data exchange" formats.

Anonymous
Not applicable

Hi,

I am trying to parse csv to filter it with power automate to distribute the right document to the right person, I am interested by you process, could you share the flow and not the result to really understand what action you are doing within it ?

 

Thanks !

+1

 

also curious of the solution but get hit with permission errors when accessing this link

 

https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Flow-Cookbook/Convert-CSV-data-into-json/m-p/162034#M93

pedwin
Regular Visitor

I tried viewing and getting hit as well.

 

Paulie78
Super User
Super User

I’ve done a video on it which you may find helpful:

https://youtu.be/0RqSco9Til0

Thanks, Paulie,

 

Again, the issue here is not that there is no way to coerce Flow to do what you need, it's that this functionality should be built into PowerAutomate the same way it's baked in with every iteration of PowerShell i.e. 'Import-Csv'.

 

It's unconscionable to expect businesses to have to pay a third party for a connector to do this.  

Your solution is find for small CSV's of normalized data, and is fairly identical to what others (me included) have suggested.  But what happens if you don't know your column headers? What happens when your data fields could contain your delimiter string itself? Well now you have to build all of that conditional logic into the flow.  What if, in addition, your data has a thousand, or ten thousand rows? we're talking about a monstrous time spent in a single PowerAutomate run, just to get it to parse a silly CSV that would take 10 seconds in PowerShell.

MS Needs to build this functionality into PowerAutomate.

 

ok... rant over... 🙂 

Paulie78
Super User
Super User

Nearly all of your points are totally valid. Makes me think I should do a video on using an Azure function that uses convert-csv.

 

The method I used, made use of no variables so you can use concurrency to make it much faster than the methods that use variables. You could set concurrency to 50. But 10,000 rows would still take some time.

This is exactly my point as well.  I know it "can be done" but the steps involved are just ludicrous for something that's so simple in most languages, I.E. PowerShell, Python, PHP, and I'm sure is an extremely common need.

Another issue with concurrency is that, depending on your subscription level, you're likely to get rate limited.  Again, for a simple function like parsing a csv, this seems backwards... I understand why rate limits are invoked, but with larger data sets it's unlikely that you won't get rate limited.

tutankh
Advocate IV
Advocate IV

Just in case anyone else is browsing this... There is a feature request/idea for this topic... Please vote!!

https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Power-Automate-Ideas/Text-CSV-file-get-rows/idc-p/778837#M23876

pedwin
Regular Visitor

Thanks Paulie78 - this definitely helps as my use case involves consuming multiple csv files that has fewer than 50 records. 

But I do agree with tutankh, Microsoft should provide this feature as an builtin action. 

Paulie78
Super User
Super User

@pedwin In addition to the video, I've written up the process for parsing the CSV on my blog: How to Parse CSV files with Power Automate 

You can download my flow from there and import into your environment to get you started quickly.

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