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CSV encoding and decoding in Haskell with Cassava

Encoding and decoding CSV files is a common task while building software, so as developers it’s important to find efficient ways to do it. As an example, in this tutorial, we use the Cassava library to encode and decode an Open Government CSV file.

“Is that right? Or is it left?”

Comma-separated values (CSV) files are frequently used for exchanging and converting data between spreadsheet programs and databases. Thus, CSV encoding and decoding is a common problem to solve in software development. In Haskell, we can encode and decode CSV files with the Cassava library, which is easy to use and efficient.

Even though there's no single specification for CSV files, RFC 4180 provides a common definition of the CSV format. Cassava's implementation is RFC 4180 compliant with a few extensions such as ignoring empty lines and allowing empty files.

In short, a CSV file is a set of records separated by line breaks, and a record is a set of fields separated by commas. For example:

Aarhus,http://www.odaa.dk/,International Regional
Alabama,http://open.alabama.gov/,US State

The first line of a CSV file may be a header record containing the names of the fields of the following records. For example:

Item,Link,Type
Aarhus,http://www.odaa.dk/,International Regional
Alabama,http://open.alabama.gov/,US State

These are the first three lines of an Open Government CSV file listing countries and regions with open data websites. Let's download the file and call it items.csv:

$ curl https://www.data.gov/app/uploads/2016/02/opendatasites.csv -o items.csv

In this tutorial, we'll use the Cassava library to read and write files like this one. As examples, we'll first read the items.csv file and count the number of countries with open data websites, and then write a new CSV file including only those countries.

In order to understand the data, let's take a closer look at the items.csv file. The first line is the header:

Item,Link,Type

An item is the name of an open data item, that is, the name of a country or region. A link is the URL to an item's open data website. And a type is the type of an open data item, like country or region. The rest of the lines are records with three such fields. Here are some examples:

United Kingdom,http://data.gov.uk/,International Country
United Nations,http://data.un.org/,International Regional
Uruguay,http://datos.gub.uy/,International Country
Utah,http://www.utah.gov/data/,US State
Vancouver,http://data.vancouver.ca/,International Regional

Given such a CSV file, we'd like to turn its contents into useful data representing open data items that we could use for updating a database or doing calculations. To do this, we first need custom data types to represent open data items.

Let's create an OpenData module for our solution and add two extensions:

{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
{-# LANGUAGE RecordWildCards #-}

Next, let's declare the module and add a list of explicit exports:

module OpenData
  ( Item(..)
  , ItemType(..)
  , decodeItems
  , decodeItemsFromFile
  , encodeItems
  , encodeItemsToFile
  , filterCountryItems
  , itemHeader
  , japanItem
  , japanRecord
  )
  where

And now let's import everything we need. In order to make it easier to know where things come from, we group imports by package, and use explicit imports for types and some operators, and qualified imports otherwise:

-- base
import Control.Exception (IOException)
import qualified Control.Exception as Exception
import qualified Data.Foldable as Foldable

-- bytestring
import Data.ByteString.Lazy (ByteString)
import qualified Data.ByteString.Lazy as ByteString

-- cassava
import Data.Csv
  ( DefaultOrdered(headerOrder)
  , FromField(parseField)
  , FromNamedRecord(parseNamedRecord)
  , Header
  , ToField(toField)
  , ToNamedRecord(toNamedRecord)
  , (.:)
  , (.=)
  )
import qualified Data.Csv as Cassava

-- text
import Data.Text (Text)
import qualified Data.Text.Encoding as Text

-- vector
import Data.Vector (Vector)
import qualified Data.Vector as Vector

The preamble is ready, so we can now define a data type to represent an open data item:

data Item =
  Item
    { itemName :: Text
    , itemLink :: Text
    , itemType :: ItemType
    }
  deriving (Eq, Show)

This is a record type with three fields, one for each field in the records of the CSV file. An item's type is represented by a custom data type called ItemType:

data ItemType
  = Country
  | Other Text
  deriving (Eq, Show)

Since we're only interested in countries, this type is explicit only for countries. We could, however, enumerate all possible item types if we wanted to be more precise.

Using these types, we can now have a better specification of the problem we're trying to solve. Given a CSV record like the following:

Japan,http://www.data.go.jp/,International Country

Which we can represent as a ByteString:

japanRecord :: ByteString
japanRecord =
  "Japan,http://www.data.go.jp/,International Country"

We'd like to decode a value equivalent to the following item:

japanItem :: Item
japanItem =
  Item
    { itemName = "Japan"
    , itemLink = "http://www.data.go.jp/"
    , itemType = Country
    }

(If you're adding code to an OpenData module, then don't forget to add japanRecord and japanItem. We'll use them as examples below.)

In order to decode one such record into a value of type Item, we need Item to be an instance of either FromRecord or FromNamedRecord, Cassava's type classes for decoding CSV records. We use FromRecord for CSV files with no header, and FromNamedRecord for CSV files with a header. In this case, the CSV file has a header, so let's make Item an instance of FromNamedRecord:

instance FromNamedRecord Item where
  parseNamedRecord m =
    Item
      <$> m .: "Item"
      <*> m .: "Link"
      <*> m .: "Type"

To declare an instance of FromNamedRecord, we need to implement the parseNamedRecord function, which takes a map of names to fields and returns a parser of Item. The (.:) operator is a lookup operator, so m .: "Item" means that we look up a field with name Item in the map m. If there's such a field in the map, we use it as the first argument of the Item constructor: that is, we assign it to the itemName field.

Cassava has to know how to turn each field (ByteString) into types: Text for the names and links, and ItemType for types. Just like FromNamedRecord turns a record into a custom data type, the FromField type class determines how to turn a record field into a type. Cassava knows how to turn a ByteString into a Text, but we have to tell it how to turn a ByteString into an ItemType:

instance FromField ItemType where
  parseField "International Country" =
    pure Country

  parseField otherType =
    Other <$> parseField otherType

In this case, we need to implement the parseField function, which takes a field (ByteString) and returns a parser of ItemType. If the field is "International Country", we return the Country value. In any other case, we return the Other constructor applied to a value of Text representing the item type.

At this point, we have enough functions to decode CSV records into open data items using the Cassava.decodeByName function:

Cassava.decodeByName
  :: FromNamedRecord a
  => ByteString
  -> Either String (Header, Vector a)

For a type a which is an instance of FromNamedRecord, this function takes a ByteString representing a CSV file as input, and returns a String if decoding fails, or a tuple with a header and a vector of values of type a if decoding succeeds.

We can now test our implementation using this function to decode a file with the Japan open data item:

> :{
| Cassava.decodeByName
|   "Item,Link,Type\n\
|   \Japan,http://www.data.go.jp/,International Country\n"
|   :: Either String (Header, Vector Item)
| :}
Right (["Item","Link","Type"],[Item {itemName = "Japan", itemLink = "http://www.data.go.jp/", itemType = Country}])

If you're testing the implementation, then remember to add the extensions and the imports to GHCi (or to a .ghci file):

> :set -XOverloadedStrings
> :set -XRecordWildCards
>
> import Control.Exception (IOException)
> import qualified Control.Exception as Exception
> import qualified Data.Foldable as Foldable
>
> ...

Note that we have to include a header record because we're telling Cassava to expect one such line by using the Cassava.decodeByName function. Try removing the header record and see what happens.

We can make decoding easier by defining a wrapper function to specify the type we want to decode (Item):

decodeItems
  :: ByteString
  -> Either String (Vector Item)
decodeItems =
  fmap snd . Cassava.decodeByName

After decoding, we ignore the header record using fmap snd. Let's decode the file with the Japan open data item again:

> :{
| decodeItems
|   "Item,Link,Type\n\
|   \Japan,http://www.data.go.jp/,International Country\n"
| :}
Right [Item {itemName = "Japan", itemLink = "http://www.data.go.jp/", itemType = Country}]

Now, we need a wrapper around decodeItems to first read a file and then decode its contents into a vector of items:

decodeItemsFromFile
  :: FilePath
  -> IO (Either String (Vector Item))
decodeItemsFromFile filePath =
  catchShowIO (ByteString.readFile filePath)
    >>= return . either Left decodeItems

Given a file path, we read its contents as a ByteString. This could fail if the file doesn't exist or if we don't have read permissions. If reading the file is successful, we decode the items using decodeItems. Otherwise, we return a failure using Left.

Here's the catchShowIO function, which tries to run an action and shows an IO exception if one is raised:

catchShowIO
  :: IO a
  -> IO (Either String a)
catchShowIO action =
  fmap Right action
    `Exception.catch` handleIOException
  where
    handleIOException
      :: IOException
      -> IO (Either String a)
    handleIOException =
      return . Left . show

We have all pieces together to decode the complete items.csv file. Let's try it:

> decodeItemsFromFile "items.csv"
Left "parse error (endOfInput) at Baden-W\187rttemberg,http://opendata.service-bw.de/Seiten/default.aspx,International Regional\r\nBah\144a Bl (truncated)"

OK, not quite...

It turns out that the items.csv file contains names such as Baden-Württemberg and Bahía Blanca. The FromField instance for Text assumes UTF-8, but that's not the encoding of this file.

In this case, we can fix this problem by using a function such as Text.decodeLatin1 after looking up the field with name "Item":

instance FromNamedRecord Item where
  parseNamedRecord m =
    Item
      <$> fmap Text.decodeLatin1 (m .: "Item")
      <*> m .: "Link"
      <*> m .: "Type"

Let's try again:

> decodeItemsFromFile "items.csv"
Right ...

We successfully decoded the CSV file and turned it into values of type Item. We can use these values to count the number of countries with open data websites. To do so, let's define a function to filter items:

filterCountryItems
  :: Vector Item
  -> Vector Item
filterCountryItems =
  Vector.filter isCountryItem

The isCountryItem function can be defined as follows:

isCountryItem
  :: Item
  -> Bool
isCountryItem =
  (==) Country . itemType

Now, let's create a Main module to use these functions and count the number of country items:

module Main
  ( main
  )
  where

We don't need a lot of imports:

-- open-data
import OpenData

-- base
import qualified Control.Monad as Monad
import qualified System.Exit as Exit

And we can simply decode the items.csv file and then print the length of the result of filtering the country items:

main :: IO ()
main = do
  putStrLn "Open data!"

  eitherCountryItems <-
    fmap filterCountryItems
      <$> decodeItemsFromFile "items.csv"

  case eitherCountryItems of
    Left reason ->
      Exit.die reason

    Right countryItems -> do
      putStr "Number of country items: "
      print (length countryItems)

Let's run this:

> main
Open data!
Number of country items: 53

There are 53 open data countries and we'd now like to write a CSV file containing those countries.

Let's go back to the OpenData module and add more instances. The process is similar, but we now need instances of ToNamedRecord (or ToRecord if we had no header) and ToField. Let's make Item an instance of ToNamedRecord:

instance ToNamedRecord Item where
  toNamedRecord Item{..} =
    Cassava.namedRecord
      [ "Item" .= itemName
      , "Link" .= itemLink
      , "Type" .= itemType
      ]

To do so, we need to implement the toNamedRecord function, which takes an Item and returns a named record (a map of names to fields). Here, the (.=) operator constructs named fields, that is, pairs of names and values, and the Cassava.namedRecord function turns a list of named fields into a named record.

In order to make this work, Cassava has to know how to turn each value into a field. Since we have a custom field (ItemType), we have to tell Cassava how to convert it into a CSV field:

instance ToField ItemType where
  toField Country =
    "International Country"

  toField (Other otherType) =
    toField otherType

The toField function takes an ItemType and returns a field (ByteString). If the item's type is Country, we return "International Country". If it's some other type, we return the name of the type.

We could now use the Cassava.encodeByName function to encode a list of items:

Cassava.encodeByName
  :: ToNamedRecord a
  => Header
  -> [a]
  -> ByteString

This function takes a header and a list of items, and returns a ByteString representing a CSV file with the items as records. The header is a vector of names:

itemHeader :: Header
itemHeader =
  Vector.fromList
    [ "Item"
    , "Link"
    , "Type"
    ]

Let's try encoding the Japan example from above:

> Cassava.encodeByName itemHeader [japanItem]
"Item,Link,Type\r\nJapan,http://www.data.go.jp/,\"International Country\"\r\n"

Cassava provides one more type class to specify how to order fields. We can make the Item type an instance of DefaultOrdered:

instance DefaultOrdered Item where
  headerOrder _ =
    Cassava.header
      [ "Item"
      , "Link"
      , "Type"
      ]

We only need to implement the headerOrder function, which is very similar to itemHeader. Note that we ignore the argument of this function. If we want to know the default order of fields for a record, we can check it using undefined, as follows:

> headerOrder (undefined :: Item)
["Item","Link","Type"]

If we have an instance of DefaultOrdered, we can use the Cassava.encodeDefaultOrderedByName function to decode a list of values:

encodeDefaultOrderedByName
  :: (ToNamedRecord a, DefaultOrdered a)
  => [a]
  -> ByteString

This is almost the same as Cassava.encodeByName, but without a header argument. Let's try encoding the Japan item:

> Cassava.encodeDefaultOrderedByName [japanItem]
"Item,Link,Type\r\nJapan,http://www.data.go.jp/,\"International Country\"\r\n"

To make it easier to encode items, we can define a wrapper for the Cassava.encodeDefaultOrderedByName function:

encodeItems
  :: Vector Item
  -> ByteString
encodeItems =
  Cassava.encodeDefaultOrderedByName . Foldable.toList

And we can use this function to define one that first encodes items to CSV records and then writes the result to a file:

encodeItemsToFile
  :: FilePath
  -> Vector Item
  -> IO (Either String ())
encodeItemsToFile filePath =
  catchShowIO . ByteString.writeFile filePath . encodeItems

Again, we use the catchShowIO function to handle things like not having write permissions for the given file path.

Let's add one more line to our Main module to write the country items to a file called countries.csv:

main :: IO ()
main = do
  putStrLn "Open data!"

  eitherCountryItems <-
    fmap filterCountryItems
      <$> decodeItemsFromFile "items.csv"

  case eitherCountryItems of
    Left reason ->
      Exit.die reason

    Right countryItems -> do
      putStr "Number of country items: "
      print (length countryItems)

      Monad.void (encodeItemsToFile "countries.csv" countryItems)

Let's run the main function again:

> main
Open data!
Number of country items: 53

The output is the same, but the countries are now in a countries.csv file. Here's the first part of the file:

$ head countries.csv
Item,Link,Type
"Argentina ",http://datos.argentina.gob.ar/,"International Country"
Australia,http://data.gov.au/,"International Country"
Austria,http://data.gv.at/,"International Country"
Bahrain,http://www.bahrain.bh/wps/portal/data/,"International Country"
Belgium,http://data.gov.be/,"International Country"
Brazil,http://dados.gov.br/,"International Country"
Canada,http://open.canada.ca/en,"International Country"
Chile,http://datos.gob.cl/,"International Country"
China,http://govinfo.nlc.gov.cn/,"International Country"

Finally, we can check that reading the original file and filtering the countries yields the same result as reading the countries file. Here are the filtered items:

> :{
| eitherCountryItemsA <-
|   fmap filterCountryItems
|     <$> decodeItemsFromFile "items.csv"
| :}

And here are the items from the countries file:

> eitherCountryItemsB <- decodeItemsFromFile "countries.csv"

Let's check that both results are equal:

> eitherCountryItemsA == eitherCountryItemsB
True

This is the usual workflow when dealing with CSV data in Haskell using the Cassava library. In some cases, we may need to only encode or decode data, or we may need different data types for encoding and decoding, but the process is very similar to the one described in this tutorial.

Published on: May. 31, 2016
Last updated: Aug. 06, 2024

Written by:

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Juan Pedro Villa Isaza

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