Allows you to easily execute SQL against structured text like CSV or TSV.
Example session:
In the time since the initial release of textql, I've made some improvements as well as made the project much more modular. There've also been additional performance tweaks and added functionality, but this comes at the cost of breaking the original command-line flags and changing the install command.
Additions:
- Numeric values are automatically recognized in more cases.
- Date / Time / DateTime values are automatically recognized in reasonable formats. See Time Strings for a list for accepted formats, and how to convert from other formats.
- Added join support! Multiple files / directories can be loaded by listing them at the end of the command.
- Directories are read by reading each file inside, and this is non-recursive.
- You can list as many files / directories as you like.
- Added flag '-output-file' to save output directly to a file.
- Added flag '-output-dlm' to modify the output delimiter.
- Added "short SQL" syntax.
- For the case of a single table, the
FROM [table]
can be dropped from the query. - For simple selects, the
SELECT
keyword can be dropped from the query. - This means the v1 command
textql -sql "select * from tbl" -source some_file.csv
can be shortened totextql -sql "*" some_file.csv
- For the case of a single table, the
Changes:
- The flag '-outputHeader' was renamed to '-output-header'.
Removals:
- Dropped the ability to override table names. This makes less sense after the automatic tablename generation based on filename, joins, and shorter SQL syntax changes.
- Removed '-source', any files / paths at the end of the command are used, as well as piped-in data.
Bug fixes:
- Writing to a directory no longer fails silently.
- sqlite import will not accept stdin, breaking unix pipes. textql will happily do so.
- textql supports quote-escaped delimiters, sqlite does not.
- textql leverages the sqlite in-memory database feature as much as possible and only touches disk if asked.
- Go 1.4 or later
Latest release on Homebrew (OS X)
brew install textql
Build from source
go get -u github.com/OneCloudInc/textql/...
First build the image.
docker build -t textql .
Now use that image mounting your current directory into the container.
docker run --rm -it -v $(pwd):/tmp textql [rest_of_command]
You can add the following alias to your system to provide quick access to TextQL:
alias textql='docker run --rm -it -v $(pwd):/tmp textql '
textql [-console] [-save-to path path] [-output-file path] [-output-dlm delimter] [-output-header] [-pretty] [-quiet] [-header] [-dlm delimter] [-sql sql_statements] [path ...]
-console
After all statements are run, open SQLite3 REPL with this data
-dlm string
Input delimiter character between fields -dlm=tab for tab, -dlm=0x## to specify a character code in hex (default ",")
-header
Treat input files as having the first row as a header row
-output-dlm string
Output delimiter character between fields -output-dlm=tab for tab, -dlm=0x## to specify a character code in hex (default ",")
-output-file file
Filename to write output to, if empty no output is written (default "stdout")
-output-header
Display column names in output
-quiet
Suppress logging
-pretty
Pretty print output
-save-to file
SQLite3 db is left on disk at this file
-sql string
SQL Statement(s) to run on the data
-version
Print version and exit
Just follow the install directions at go-sqlite3-extension-functions and textql will automatically load this library.
Full function list:
- Math: acos, asin, atan, atn2, atan2, acosh, asinh, atanh, difference, degrees, radians, cos, sin, tan, cot, cosh, sinh, tanh, coth, exp, log, log10, power, sign, sqrt, square, ceil, floor, pi.
- String: replicate, charindex, leftstr, rightstr, ltrim, rtrim, trim, replace, reverse, proper, padl, padr, padc, strfilter.
- Aggregate: stdev, variance, mode, median, lower_quartile, upper_quartile
New MIT License - Copyright (c) 2015, 2016 Paul Bergeron http://pauldbergeron.com/
See LICENSE for details