How to write header row with csv.DictWriter?
Another way to do this would be to add before adding lines in your output, the following line :
output.writerow(dict(zip(dr.fieldnames, dr.fieldnames)))
The zip would return a list of doublet containing the same value. This list could be used to initiate a dictionary.
Edit:
In 2.7 / 3.2 there is a new writeheader()
method. Also, John Machin's answer provides a simpler method of writing the header row.
Simple example of using the writeheader()
method now available in 2.7 / 3.2:
from collections import OrderedDict
ordered_fieldnames = OrderedDict([('field1',None),('field2',None)])
with open(outfile,'wb') as fou:
dw = csv.DictWriter(fou, delimiter='\t', fieldnames=ordered_fieldnames)
dw.writeheader()
# continue on to write data
Instantiating DictWriter requires a fieldnames argument.
From the documentation:
The fieldnames parameter identifies the order in which values in the dictionary passed to the writerow() method are written to the csvfile.
Put another way: The Fieldnames argument is required because Python dicts are inherently unordered.
Below is an example of how you'd write the header and data to a file.
Note: with
statement was added in 2.6. If using 2.5: from __future__ import with_statement
with open(infile,'rb') as fin:
dr = csv.DictReader(fin, delimiter='\t')
# dr.fieldnames contains values from first row of `f`.
with open(outfile,'wb') as fou:
dw = csv.DictWriter(fou, delimiter='\t', fieldnames=dr.fieldnames)
headers = {}
for n in dw.fieldnames:
headers[n] = n
dw.writerow(headers)
for row in dr:
dw.writerow(row)
As @FM mentions in a comment, you can condense header-writing to a one-liner, e.g.:
with open(outfile,'wb') as fou:
dw = csv.DictWriter(fou, delimiter='\t', fieldnames=dr.fieldnames)
dw.writerow(dict((fn,fn) for fn in dr.fieldnames))
for row in dr:
dw.writerow(row)
A few options:
(1) Laboriously make an identity-mapping (i.e. do-nothing) dict out of your fieldnames so that csv.DictWriter can convert it back to a list and pass it to a csv.writer instance.
(2) The documentation mentions "the underlying writer
instance" ... so just use it (example at the end).
dw.writer.writerow(dw.fieldnames)
(3) Avoid the csv.Dictwriter overhead and do it yourself with csv.writer
Writing data:
w.writerow([d[k] for k in fieldnames])
or
w.writerow([d.get(k, restval) for k in fieldnames])
Instead of the extrasaction
"functionality", I'd prefer to code it myself; that way you can report ALL "extras" with the keys and values, not just the first extra key. What is a real nuisance with DictWriter is that if you've verified the keys yourself as each dict was being built, you need to remember to use extrasaction='ignore' otherwise it's going to SLOWLY (fieldnames is a list) repeat the check:
wrong_fields = [k for k in rowdict if k not in self.fieldnames]
============
>>> f = open('csvtest.csv', 'wb')
>>> import csv
>>> fns = 'foo bar zot'.split()
>>> dw = csv.DictWriter(f, fns, restval='Huh?')
# dw.writefieldnames(fns) -- no such animal
>>> dw.writerow(fns) # no such luck, it can't imagine what to do with a list
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "C:\python26\lib\csv.py", line 144, in writerow
return self.writer.writerow(self._dict_to_list(rowdict))
File "C:\python26\lib\csv.py", line 141, in _dict_to_list
return [rowdict.get(key, self.restval) for key in self.fieldnames]
AttributeError: 'list' object has no attribute 'get'
>>> dir(dw)
['__doc__', '__init__', '__module__', '_dict_to_list', 'extrasaction', 'fieldnam
es', 'restval', 'writer', 'writerow', 'writerows']
# eureka
>>> dw.writer.writerow(dw.fieldnames)
>>> dw.writerow({'foo':'oof'})
>>> f.close()
>>> open('csvtest.csv', 'rb').read()
'foo,bar,zot\r\noof,Huh?,Huh?\r\n'
>>>