Found 3 relevant articles
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A Comprehensive Guide to Reading CSV Files and Converting to Object Arrays in JavaScript
This article provides an in-depth exploration of various methods to read CSV files and convert them into object arrays in JavaScript, including implementations using pure JavaScript and jQuery, as well as libraries like jQuery-CSV and Papa Parse. It covers the complete process from file loading to data parsing, with rewritten code examples, analysis of pros and cons, best practices for error handling and large file processing, aiding developers in efficiently handling CSV data.
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A Comprehensive Guide to Reading Local CSV Files in JavaScript: FileReader API and Data Processing Practices
This article delves into the core techniques for reading local CSV files in client-side JavaScript, focusing on the implementation mechanisms of the FileReader API and its applications in modern web development. By comparing traditional methods such as Ajax and jQuery, it elaborates on the advantages of FileReader in terms of security and user experience. The article provides complete code examples, including file selection, asynchronous reading, data parsing, and statistical processing, and discusses error handling and performance optimization strategies. Finally, using a practical case study, it demonstrates how to extract and analyze course enrollment data from CSV files, offering practical references for front-end data processing.
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Parsing CSV Strings with Commas in JavaScript: A Comparison of Regex and State Machine Approaches
This article explores two core methods for parsing CSV strings in JavaScript: a regex-based parser for non-standard formats and a state machine implementation adhering to RFC 4180. It analyzes differences between non-standard CSV (supporting single quotes, double quotes, and escape characters) and standard RFC formats, detailing how to correctly handle fields containing commas. Complete code examples are provided, including validation regex, parsing logic, edge case handling, and a comparison of applicability and limitations of both methods.