I want to use the python CSV reader but I want to leave the quotes in. That is I want:
>>> s = \'\"simple|split\"|test\'
>>> reader = csv.
You're going to have to write your own parser, as the part of the module that backs parsing and quotes is in the C side of things, in particular parse_process_char
located in Modules/_csv.c
:
else if (c == dialect->quotechar &&
dialect->quoting != QUOTE_NONE) {
if (dialect->doublequote) {
/* doublequote; " represented by "" */
self->state = QUOTE_IN_QUOTED_FIELD;
}
else {
/* end of quote part of field */
self->state = IN_FIELD;
}
}
else {
/* normal character - save in field */
if (parse_add_char(self, c) < 0)
return -1;
}
That "end of quote part of field" section is what's chomping your double quote. On the other hand, you might be able to kill that else
conditional and rebuild the python source code. However that's not all that maintainable to be honest.
Edit: Sorry I meant add the bit from the last else
before self->state = IN_FIELD
so it adds the quote in.
I don't understand if you have a clear view of what you are trying to obtain.
You say "I know (...) my use case is an abuse" .
But abuse implies that exists the possibility of use.
However, in you case, there is no possible use, what you "described" is impossible because what is passed to a CSV parser must be of a valid CSV format and yours isn't.
In a CSV valid string, most of the characters are information and some characters are meta-information necessary to interpret the string to extract the information.
What you describe is that you want that characters "
should be in the information category and meta-information category altogether. It's like someone wanting to catch his/her left hand with one's left hand.....
This problem is occurring with your string because it isn't a string coming from the reading of a CSV file. It's a string written as is.
It's impossible to obtain a string like this from the reading of a CSV file, because it couldn't have been written like that in the CSV file.
If written to a CSV file, '"simple|split"|test'
could be written
"""simple|split"""|test
with doublequote
set to True, the default
or #"simple#|split#"|test
with doublequote = False, escapechar = '#'
.
If you want to extract the information like you described, you have not to create a parser, you have just to use an already existing tool:
import re
reg = re.compile('".*?"|[^|]+')
print reg.findall('yoo|"simple|split"|test|end"pos|hu')
result
['yoo', '"simple|split"', 'test', 'end"pos', 'hu']