The transform command evaluates an expression for each row of the given CSV file
and use the result to edit a target column that can optionally be renamed.
For instance, given the following CSV file:
name,surname
john,davis
mary,sue
The following command:
$ xan transform surname 'upper(surname)'
Will produce the following result:
name,surname
john,DAVIS
mary,SUE
Note that the given expression will be given the target column as its implicit
value, which means that the latter command can also be written as:
$ xan transform surname 'upper'
For a quick review of the capabilities of the script language, use
the --cheatsheet flag.
If you want to list available functions, use the --functions flag.
Usage:
xan transform [options] <column> <expression> [<input>]
xan transform --cheatsheet
xan transform --functions
xan transform --help
transform options:
-r, --rename <name> New name for the transformed column.
-p, --parallel Whether to use parallelization to speed up computations.
Will automatically select a suitable number of threads to use
based on your number of cores. Use -t, --threads if you want to
indicate the number of threads yourself.
-t, --threads <threads> Parellize computations using this many threads. Use -p, --parallel
if you want the number of threads to be automatically chosen instead.
-E, --errors <policy> What to do with evaluation errors. One of:
- "panic": exit on first error
- "report": add a column containing error
- "ignore": coerce result for row to null
- "log": print error to stderr
[default: panic].
--error-column <name> Name of the column containing errors if
"-E/--errors" is set to "report".
[default: xan_error].
Common options:
-h, --help Display this message
-o, --output <file> Write output to <file> instead of stdout.
-n, --no-headers When set, the first row will not be evaled
as headers.
-d, --delimiter <arg> The field delimiter for reading CSV data.
Must be a single character.