Quickly enable CSV output of your model data.
I needed to quickly export CSVs of stuff in the database. Using a view class to iterate manually would be a chore to replicate for each export method, so I figured it would be much easier to do this with a custom view class, like JsonView or XmlView.
- CakePHP 2.x (custom view files are only supported in 2.1+)
- PHP5
- Patience
[Using Composer]
View on Packagist, and copy
the JSON snippet for the latest version into your project's composer.json
. Eg, v. 1.2.0 would look like this:
{
"require": {
"josegonzalez/cakephp-csvview": "1.2.0"
}
}
Because this plugin has the type cakephp-plugin
set in it's own composer.json
, composer knows to install it inside your /Plugins
directory, rather than in the usual vendors file. It is recommended that you add /Plugins/CsvView
to your .gitignore file. (Why? read this.)
[Manual]
- Download this: http://github.com/josegonzalez/cakephp-csvview/zipball/master
- Unzip that download.
- Copy the resulting folder to
app/Plugin
- Rename the folder you just copied to
CsvView
[GIT Submodule]
In your app directory type:
git submodule add -b master git://github.com/josegonzalez/cakephp-csvview.git Plugin/CsvView
git submodule init
git submodule update
[GIT Clone]
In your Plugin
directory type:
git clone -b master git://github.com/josegonzalez/cakephp-csvview.git CsvView
In 2.0 you need to enable the plugin your app/Config/bootstrap.php
file:
CakePlugin::load('CsvView');
If you are already using CakePlugin::loadAll();
, then this is not necessary.
To export a flat array as a CSV, one could write the following code:
public function export() {
$data = array(
array('a', 'b', 'c'),
array(1, 2, 3),
array('you', 'and', 'me'),
);
$_serialize = 'data';
$this->viewClass = 'CsvView.Csv';
$this->set(compact('data', '_serialize'));
}
All variables that are to be included in the csv must be specified in the $_serialize
view variable, exactly how JsonView or XmlView work.
It is possible to have multiple variables in the csv output:
public function export() {
$data = array(array('a', 'b', 'c'));
$data_two = array(array(1, 2, 3));
$data_three = array(array('you', 'and', 'me'));
$_serialize = array('data', 'data_two', 'data_three');
$this->viewClass = 'CsvView.Csv';
$this->set(compact('data', 'data_two', 'data_three', '_serialize'));
}
If you want headers or footers in your CSV output, you can specify either a $_header
or $_footer
view variable. Both are completely optional:
public function export() {
$data = array(
array('a', 'b', 'c'),
array(1, 2, 3),
array('you', 'and', 'me'),
);
$_serialize = 'data';
$_header = array('Column 1', 'Column 2', 'Column 3');
$_footer = array('Totals', '400', '$3000');
$this->viewClass = 'CsvView.Csv';
$this->set(compact('data', '_serialize', '_header', '_footer'));
}
You can also specify the delimiter, end of line, newline, escape characters and byte order mark (BOM) sequence using
$_delimiter
, $_eol
, $_newline
, $_enclosure
and $_bom
respectively:
public function export() {
$data = array(
array('a', 'b', 'c'),
array(1, 2, 3),
array('you', 'and', 'me'),
);
$_serialize = 'data';
$_delimiter = chr(9); //tab
$_enclosure = '"';
$_newline = '\r\n';
$_eol = '~';
$_bom = true;
$this->viewClass = 'CsvView.Csv';
$this->set(compact('data', '_serialize', '_delimiter', '_enclosure', '_newline', '_eol'));
}
The defaults for these variables are:
_delimiter
:,
_enclosure
:"
_newline
:\n
_eol
:\n
_bom
: false_setSeparator
: false
The _eol
variable is the one used to generate newlines in the output.
_newline
, however, is the character that should replace the newline characters in the actual data.
It is recommended to use the string representation of the newline character to avoid rendering invalid output.
Some reader software incorrectly renders UTF-8 encoded files which do not contain byte order mark (BOM) byte sequence. The _bom
variable is the one used to add byte order mark (BOM) byte sequence beginning of the generated CSV output stream. See Wikipedia article about byte order mark
for more information.
The _setSeparator
flag can be used to set the separator explicitly in the first line of the CSV. Some readers need this in order to display the CSV correctly.
If you have complex model data, you can use the $_extract
view variable to specify the individual paths for each record. This is an array of Hash::extract()
-compatible syntax:
public function export() {
$posts = $this->Post->find('all');
$_serialize = 'posts';
$_header = array('Post ID', 'Title', 'Created');
$_extract = array('Post.id', 'Post.title', 'Post.created');
$this->viewClass = 'CsvView.Csv';
$this->set(compact('posts', '_serialize', '_header', '_extract'));
}
If your model data contains some null values or missing keys, you can use the $_null
variable, just like you'd use $_delimiter
, $_eol
, and $_enclosure
, to set how null values should be displayed in the CSV.
$_null
defaults to 'NULL'.
You can use Router::parseExtensions()
and the RequestHandlerComponent
to automatically have the CsvView class switched in as follows:
// In your routes.php file:
Router::parseExtensions('csv');
// In your controller:
public $components = array(
'RequestHandler' => array(
'viewClassMap' => array('csv' => 'CsvView.Csv')
)
);
public function export() {
$posts = $this->Post->find('all');
$_serialize = 'posts';
$_header = array('Post ID', 'Title', 'Created');
$_extract = array('Post.id', 'Post.title', 'Post.created');
$this->set(compact('posts', '_serialize', '_header', '_extract'));
}
// Access /posts/export.csv to get the data as csv
For really complex CSVs, you can also simply use your own view files. This is only supported in 2.1+. To do so, either leave $_serialize
unspecified or set it to null. The view files will be located in the csv
subdirectory of your current controller:
// View used will be in app/View/Posts/csv/export.ctp
public function export() {
$posts = $this->Post->find('all');
$_serialize = null;
$this->viewClass = 'CsvView.Csv';
$this->set(compact('posts', '_serialize');
}
By default, the downloaded file will be named after the last segment of the URL used to generate it. Eg: example.com/my_controller/my_action
would download my_action.csv
, while example.com/my_controller/my_action/first_param
would download first_param.csv
.
To set a custom file name, use the CakeResponse::download
method. The following snippet can be used to change the downloaded file from export.csv
to my_file.csv
:
public function export() {
$data = array(
array('a', 'b', 'c'),
array(1, 2, 3),
array('you', 'and', 'me'),
);
$_serialize = 'data';
$this->response->download('my_file.csv'); // <= setting the file name
$this->viewClass = 'CsvView.Csv';
$this->set(compact('data', '_serialize'));
}
The CsvView component provides a few methods to help you quickly export the results of complex Model find('all')
calls.
Note: nested belongsTo
associations are handled no problem. Others (eg. hasMany
) will be ignored (I can't see why you'd want them in a CSV export, or how you'd include them gracefully).
To use the component, include it in your Components array:
// In your controller:
public $components = array('CsvView.CsvView');
The component has the following methods:
Recursively searches $data
and returns an array of all unique Hash::extract()
-compatible paths, suitable for the $_extract variable
- $data: the results of a Model
find('all')
call. - $excludePaths (optional): an array of paths to exclude from the returned array, using
Hash::extract()
-compatible syntax. Eg.array('MyModel.column_name')
Returns an array of user-friendly colum titles, suitable for use as the $_header
, based on the paths in $extract
. Eg, the path 'City.Country.name' becomes 'Country Name'.
- $extract: an array of paths, using
Hash::extract()
-compatible syntax. - $customHeaders (optional): an array of 'path' => 'Custom Title' pairs, eg.
array('City.population' => 'No. of People')
. These custom headers, when specified, override the default generated headers.
Quickly export an the results of a Model find('all')
call in one line of code.
- $data - the results of a Model
find('all')
call. - $excludePaths (optional): Same use as in prepareExtractFromFindResults method, above
- $customHeaders (optional): Same use as in prepareHeaderFromExtract method, above
- $includeHeader (optional): if true, a $_header will be included. Defaults to true.
Example 1 - using quickExport, simplest use:
$results = $this->MyModel->find('all');
$this->CsvView->quickExport($results);
Example 2 - using quickExport, advanced use:
$results = $this->MyModel->find('all');
$excludePaths = array('City.id', 'State.id', 'State.Country.id'); // Exclude all id fields
$customHeaders = array('City.population' => 'No. of People');
$this->CsvView->quickExport($results, $excludePaths, $customHeaders);
Example 3 - NOT using quickExport:
$results = $this->MyModel->find('all');
$excludePaths = array('City.id', 'State.id', 'State.Country.id'); // Exclude all id fields
$_extract = $this->CsvView->prepareExtractFromFindResults($results, $excludePaths);
$customHeaders = array('City.population' => 'No. of People');
$_header = $this->CsvView->prepareHeaderFromExtract($_extract, $customHeaders);
$_serialize = 'results';
$this->viewClass = 'CsvView.Csv';
$this->set(compact('results' ,'_serialize', '_header', '_extract'));
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2012 Jose Diaz-Gonzalez
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.