Ruby read CSV file as UTF-8 and/or convert ASCII-8Bit encoding to UTF-8

RubyStringEncodingCsvUtf 8

Ruby Problem Overview


I'm using ruby 1.9.2

I'm trying to parse a CSV file that contains some French words (e.g. spécifié) and place the contents in a MySQL database.

When I read the lines from the CSV file,

file_contents = CSV.read("csvfile.csv", col_sep: "$")

The elements come back as Strings that are ASCII-8BIT encoded (spécifié becomes sp\xE9cifi\xE9), and strings like "spécifié" are then NOT properly saved into my MySQL database.

Yehuda Katz says that ASCII-8BIT is really "binary" data meaning that CSV has no idea how to read the appropriate encoding.

So, if I try to make CSV force the encoding like this:

file_contents = CSV.read("csvfile.csv", col_sep: "$", encoding: "UTF-8")

I get the following error

ArgumentError: invalid byte sequence in UTF-8: 

If I go back to my original ASCII-8BIT encoded Strings and examine the String that my CSV read as ASCII-8BIT, it looks like this "Non sp\xE9cifi\xE9" instead of "Non spécifié".

I can't convert "Non sp\xE9cifi\xE9" to "Non spécifié" by doing this "Non sp\xE9cifi\xE9".encode("UTF-8")

because I get this error:

Encoding::UndefinedConversionError: "\xE9" from ASCII-8BIT to UTF-8,

which Katz indicated would happen because ASCII-8BIT isn't really a proper String "encoding".

Questions:

  1. Can I get CSV to read my file in the appropriate encoding? If so, how?
  2. How do I convert an ASCII-8BIT string to UTF-8 for proper storage in MySQL?

Ruby Solutions


Solution 1 - Ruby

deceze is right, that is ISO8859-1 (AKA Latin-1) encoded text. Try this:

file_contents = CSV.read("csvfile.csv", col_sep: "$", encoding: "ISO8859-1")

And if that doesn't work, you can use Iconv to fix up the individual strings with something like this:

require 'iconv'
utf8_string = Iconv.iconv('utf-8', 'iso8859-1', latin1_string).first

If latin1_string is "Non sp\xE9cifi\xE9", then utf8_string will be "Non spécifié". Also, Iconv.iconv can unmangle whole arrays at a time:

utf8_strings = Iconv.iconv('utf-8', 'iso8859-1', *latin1_strings)

With newer Rubies, you can do things like this:

utf8_string = latin1_string.force_encoding('iso-8859-1').encode('utf-8')

where latin1_string thinks it is in ASCII-8BIT but is really in ISO-8859-1.

Solution 2 - Ruby

With ruby >= 1.9 you can use

file_contents = CSV.read("csvfile.csv", col_sep: "$", encoding: "ISO8859-1:utf-8")

The ISO8859-1:utf-8 is meaning: The csv-file is ISO8859-1 - encoded, but convert the content to utf-8

If you prefer a more verbose code, you can use:

file_contents = CSV.read("csvfile.csv", col_sep: "$", 
    external_encoding: "ISO8859-1", 
    internal_encoding: "utf-8"
  )

Solution 3 - Ruby

I have been dealing with this issue for a while and not any of the other solutions worked for me.

The thing that made the trick was to store the conflictive string in a binary File, then read the File normally and using this string to feed the CSV module:

tempfile = Tempfile.new("conflictive_string")
tempfile.binmode
tempfile.write(conflictive_string)
tempfile.close
cleaned_string = File.read(tempfile.path)
File.delete(tempfile.path)
csv = CSV.new(cleaned_string)

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
Questionuser141146View Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - Rubymu is too shortView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - RubyknutView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - RubyfguillenView Answer on Stackoverflow