Display any CSV file as a searchable, filterable, pretty HTML table

github.com

268 points by indigodaddy 2 months ago

I combined this with a simple API to update a CSV file using Deno/deno-csv library, allowing an Ansible job to easily update a CSV file via the API with Ansible URI module, and then have that same CSV file viewable/downloadable in a simple and easy/dashboardy way (with CSV-to-html-table). Copilot created the Deno/deno-csv CSV API code and then with a little back and forth I added static website functionality (to serve the CSV table), and I had a /view and a /update route. I'm just a sysadmin but I love piecing together stuff like this. Thanks Derek!

waltbosz 2 months ago

> I'm just a sysadmin but I love piecing together stuff like this.

I'm a developer and piecing stuff together is my favorite part of the job. The joy is in the design, the actual coding is just a means to an end.

I've written similar browser tools for handing tabular data. One neat thing I've learned is if you copy and paste from Excel into an html `textarea`, you get the data as tab delimited text. Add a `paste` event handler to the `textarea` then parse the data in code.

szszrk 2 months ago

I know PowerShell is surrounded with polarized opinions, but that's one of the things it's amazing for. Import-Csv with Out-GridView gives nice results and it can be just a one-liner wrote from memory.

Just a reminder that it's possible and often built into our work environments, while we pretend it's not there.

  • jayd16 2 months ago

    Pwsh is actually pretty good.

    My hottest of takes...Powershell is the easiest way to write consistent scripts across the big three OSes.

  • bblb 2 months ago

    PowerShell is the first thing I install on my Linux workstation/jump host because of those built-in Import/Export/Convertto goodies. Import-Excel module works on Linux too. Too bad the Invoke-WebRequest uses basic parsing only, it used to parse the actual DOM with JS and all, but I guess that was a security issue.

    • majkinetor 2 months ago

      Nah, that required IE which isn't available on Linux.

    • porridgeraisin 2 months ago

      Does it write UTF16 on linux too? That's my biggest gripe with powershell redirections and Out-File's on windows.

      • greenmartian 2 months ago

        In `pwsh` (that's the xplat version of powershell, v7+), default encoding for Out-File is `utf8noBOM`.

    • MstWntd 2 months ago

      install tabview?..

  • tailspin2019 2 months ago

    I have a simultaneous respect for the power and capabilities of PowerShell while also for some reason harbouring a very strong loathing of it. I just viscerally dislike it. Maybe it’s the syntax… or perhaps just some latent decades-old Windows admin trauma…

    • szszrk 2 months ago

      I guess there is consensus that powershell is good. Unix people may still find in cumbersome. For windows-primary people maybe it came too late? For a longer while it wasn't even integral part of Windows.

      But honestly often when I talk to people they don't know the basics of cmd.exe, even if they worked with it for years. Like... surprised that it has pipes :) And apparently it's been there since DOS 2.0 (early 1980's).

      • tailspin2019 2 months ago

        Good point about it coming too late. I grew up using Windows pre-powershell and then had switched to Macs by the time Powershell got a lot of improvements and became a lot more worthy of attention!

  • rahimnathwani 2 months ago

    I don't use Windows as my daily driver, so I had no idea Import-Csv existed until last week, when I pasted a shell command that I had run on my Mac, and asked it to write something that would work for Windows (for my colleague).

    I hadn't understood how different Powershell is, compared with cmd.exe of old.

    • razakel 2 months ago

      They should really have called it PowerScript. It's the full blown .NET ecosystem.

34f34f3 2 months ago

Alternatively, feed your spreadsheet file (CSV, XLS, whatever) to Google Sheets and then select File > Download > Web Page (.html) – especially when you have a ton of formatting (font, colors, borders, whatnot)... the result looks great!

  • nathell 2 months ago

    Alternatively, use visidata (https://www.visidata.org/) in the terminal. Supports xls/xlsx too! One of my favourite tools for terminal data exploration (along with jq, fx, and jet).

  • ThrowawayTestr 2 months ago

    Does that do the Excel thing where it crushes all the numbers to exponents?

  • bryanhogan 2 months ago

    But does this include options for sorting and filtering?

ederderek 2 months ago

hey all - I'm the creator of this tool. very cool to see a project I wrote 10 years ago get some recognition. Sorry about the jQuery. Pull Requests welcome!

  • o1nder 2 months ago

    Loved the tool. Modified it so you can drag and drop CSV files in the browser instead of having to pull and run locally, and of course credited you. Hosted on Github Pages here (https://thomasinch.github.io/csv-to-html-table/), but made it a single index.html so it can be downloaded and used offline. Cheers!

indigodaddy 2 months ago

I combined this with a simple API to update a CSV file using Deno/deno-csv library, allowing an Ansible job to easily update a CSV file via the API with Ansible URI module, and then have that same CSV file viewable/downloadable in a simple and easy/dashboardy way (with CSV-to-html-table). Copilot created the Deno/deno-csv CSV API code and then with a little back and forth I added static website functionality (to serve the CSV table), and I had a /view and a /update route. I'm just a sysadmin but I love piecing together stuff like this. Thanks Derek!

RUnconcerned 2 months ago

This is neat. I had a recent need to do something similar, but ended up using Grist CSV Viewer[1], which I think is a bit more feature complete. I had ChatGPT create an HTML file that would let me paste the CSV instead of loading a specific file and it worked pretty well while being more convenient than loading the CSV into Google Sheets or whatever.

[1] https://www.getgrist.com/csv-viewer/

  • hilti 2 months ago

    Thank you for sharing this! I‘m using pivottable.js but I noticed that it‘s sometimes hard to understand by my colleagues. Will Grist definitely give try.

1vuio0pswjnm7 2 months ago

I use sqlite3 for this task because I use a text-only browser to read HTML. It has no Javascript engine. The HTML tables prooduced by sqlite3 do not require Javascript.

  • schwartzworld 2 months ago

    That was my thought. Sqlite3+datasets works great for this

hk1337 2 months ago

I kind of want to fork it and work out the jQuery dependency.

*EDIT* Would probably be easier to start a new one and maybe use PapaParse to parse the CSV.

  • catapart 2 months ago

    My first thought too. Though, I'll probably write it as a custom element so that I can pass a csv path to it via an attribute. Seems like a really handy thing to have, and I'm already working on a similar type of thing for pdfs. Definitely in the 'everything is a nail' phase of building a library of custom elements.

    • hk1337 2 months ago

      I was thinking just a table element with data attributes and maybe a class name.

      • catapart 2 months ago

        For sure! I was just thinking of wrapping that table with an element so I don't have to call "load" or "init" or whatever from a separate script. I'm a big fan of html that works well and tables are pretty awesome for tabular data.

mattsouth 2 months ago

Nice. Its interesting to me that searching and filtering isnt something that http://csvbase.com has.

  • indigodaddy 2 months ago

    I looked at that too for my use case. It was super cool, but I needed something to utilize a CSV that I did not have to initially upload through webui, and also wanted it to be downloadable, so this hit those checkboxes for me.

strunz 2 months ago

Love this idea, wish I could pipe a CSV right to the tool though!

  • stevenpetryk 2 months ago

    Could be easy enough to make a CLI tool that opens a browser to an HTML file in /tmp

promiseofbeans 2 months ago

How does this handle CSV's with no headers, or data that's offset from the top? (e.g. a row for title and subtitle, before the table headers & data)

  • mokanfar 2 months ago

    That is classified as an edge use-case. Realistically speaking I don't think the point of this hastily whipped up demo was to be a replacement for google sheets.

    • Bimos 2 months ago

      Yeah but since it claims "any CSV file", and CSV files are widely known to be variate, I didn't expect it fails to work on edge use-cases.

    • hk1337 2 months ago

      I was thinking of it as competition for GitHub’s CSV reader in repositories.

  • brothrock 2 months ago

    Great question. If it can’t skip lines, I’m out.

    • nxpnsv 2 months ago

      or like contribute...

cbeach 2 months ago

Datasette (open source project by @simonw, 10K stars on GitHub) excels at this: https://datasette.io/

Plugins like datasette-extract (AI powered data extraction) are amazing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g3NtJatmQR0

  • indigodaddy 2 months ago

    Datasette isn't really comparable to this. This is just about a simple, clean, webview of a CSV. Datasette isn't exactly that, and for sure not out of the box like that nor as simple to plug and play for this exact use case. Datasette is obviously awesome and very powerful, it's just a different tool and don't think it overlaps much with most use cases of this particular project.

sn0n 2 months ago

This is amazing!! I finally have an excuse to use spreadsheets again! I've been avoiding them for years, Legitimately.

  • dddw 2 months ago

    What did you use instead?

neilv 2 months ago

Obligatory suggestion to developers who use this: Don't copy&paste reuse that custom formatting code from the demo for arbitrary CSV, since the code inserts arbitrary strings into both HTML attribute value and CDATA contexts, without escaping special characters.

    return "<a href='" + link + "' target='_blank'>" + link + "</a>";
  • rafaelgoncalves 2 months ago

    the creator even acknowledged the risk in the sample... but i do not understand why not create a more secure sample first time? since people will absolutely copy to test.

pphysch 2 months ago

I was wondering why this wasn't expressed as a webcomponent, then saw it's a decade old. Nice.

  • vasvir 2 months ago

    Ha I didn't notice the date but I did notice that was based on datatables.net a very cool library.

65 2 months ago

Pretty cool. I'm wondering how large of a CSV you could feasibly load with this. I always have to manually open CSVs in text editors if they're too large for Excel, so if this is a better UI for it that can handle large files I will definitely use this.

  • indigodaddy 2 months ago

    Perhaps setting paging to true would improve the handling of a very large CSV

bryanhogan 2 months ago

I was actually looking for something like this! It seems to be a bit old though, does it work well? Also I can't seem to filter columns?

Are there other tools like it?

Got a collection of larger CSV files that I wanted to include on a Astro Starlight project of mine.

nashashmi 2 months ago

Custom formatting should be called js column wrapper.

I thought custom formatting would be changing colors and widths text wrappings.

And maybe add a head wrapper?

magesh_magi1 2 months ago

Ha, I'm working on a similar utility with some extra features also enabling WASM that might help in case of larger files.

davidcollantes 2 months ago

If the author is here, I would love a JSON to pretty HTML table too (with all the features this one has)!

joseangel_sc 2 months ago

i’m gonna test this on a 52k rows document, very curious if it can handle that

  • indigodaddy 2 months ago

    Perhaps turn paging on in the config for a very large CSV?

    • hermitcrab 2 months ago

      52k rows is a large CSV? BWAHAHAHA. I guess it is all relative.

indigodaddy 2 months ago

Dang, I'm not the author, so do not think this should be a show HN, at least not with me remaining as the submitter. I did not submit it as such, and then later an admin edited it to a show HN, and put my comment (that I added for context later for how I made use of the tool) as the description. That blurb currently as the description should probably be returned to a plain comment. All I did was stumble upon Derek's repo when I was looking for something to stitch together for a particular use-case.

  • tomhow 2 months ago

    OK, that was my screwup, I'm sorry.

    I saw your comment and didn't quite clock that you're not the author. Sorry about that. We've reversed the changes to make it a normal post again.

    • indigodaddy 2 months ago

      As nurettin said, I think I (unintentionally) made it too easy to connote that I might have been the author. I should have been more clear about it.

  • nurettin 2 months ago

    The confusion arises from your paragraph explaining what you made, then linking to a repo that contains the component you used. Why don't you show the thing that you made? An Ansible job sounds interesting.

  • gnabgib 2 months ago

    [flagged]

    • dang 2 months ago

      Just in case it's unclear: when we see someone submitting their own work, we often put Show HN in the title. But occasionally we misidentify the submitter as the author and do this incorrectly. That's what happened here. It's fixed now!

    • indigodaddy 2 months ago

      Eh? I'm not Derek.

      • squigz 2 months ago

        [flagged]

        • indigodaddy 2 months ago

          I didn't submit it as a show HN, and that description was originally just a comment that I had added some time later (an admin changed it to show HN and moved my comment to be the description)

datax2 2 months ago

Not for nothing, you could do this with Streamlit and 30 seconds of vibe coding.

you can also use Kanaries if you are looking for some more detailed "Tableau" like analytics platform.

  • indigodaddy 2 months ago

    Why would you want to vibe code a whole python server setup when someone already made this that you can just plug and play? Id understand if you need a lot of different features, but to me this is neat and ticks a lot of boxes.