This command-line utility converts CSV files to HTML tables and complete HTML documents. It can use the first row of the CSV file as the header of the table, and does so by default.
The original Python version of csv2html is preserved in the branch python.
Prebuilt Linux and Windows binaries are available. They are attached to releases on the "Releases" page.
csv2html requires Rust 1.74 or later to build.
cargo install csv2htmlFollow the instructions to build a static Linux binary of csv2html from the source code on recent Debian and Ubuntu.
1. Install Rustup. Through Rustup, add the stable musl libc target for your CPU.
rustup target add x86_64-unknown-linux-musl2. Install the build and test dependencies.
sudo apt install build-essential musl-tools
cargo install just3. Clone this repository. Build the binary.
git clone https://github.com/dbohdan/csv2html
cd csv2html
just test
just release-linuxFollow the instructions to build a 32-bit Windows binary of csv2html on recent Debian and Ubuntu.
1. Install Rustup. Through Rustup, add the i686 GNU ABI Windows target.
rustup target add i686-pc-windows-gnu2. Install the build dependencies.
sudo apt install build-essential mingw-w64
cargo install just3. Configure Cargo for cross-compilation.
Add the following in ~/.cargo/config.
[target.i686-pc-windows-gnu]
linker = "/usr/bin/i686-w64-mingw32-gcc"4. Clone this repository. Build the binary.
git clone https://github.com/dbohdan/csv2html
cd csv2html
just release-windowsConvert CSV files to HTML tables
Usage: csv2html [OPTIONS] [input]
Arguments:
[input] Input file
Options:
-o, --output <OUTPUT> Output file
-t, --title <TITLE> HTML document title
-d, --delimiter <DELIM> Field delimiter character for CSV (',' by default)
-s, --start <N> Skip the first N-1 rows; start at row N
-r, --renumber Replace the first column with row numbers
-n, --no-header Do not use the first row of the input as the header
-c, --complete-document Output a complete HTML document instead of only a
table
--table <ATTRS> HTML attributes for the tag <table> (e.g., --table
'foo="bar" baz' results in the output <table foo="bar" baz>...</table>); it is
up to the user to ensure the result is valid HTML
--tr <ATTRS> Attributes for <tr>
--th <ATTRS> Attributes for <th>
--td <ATTRS> Attributes for <td>
-h, --help Print help
-V, --version Print version
This command reads data from test/test.csv and writes an HTML table to test.html:
csv2html -o test.html tests/test.csvThe following command takes semicolon-delimited data from pub.csv, starting with row 267.
It replaces the first column of the table with the row number starting at 1 (except in the header row, which is not changed).
The output is redirected to the file pub.html.
csv2html pub.csv -d \; -r -s 267 > pub.htmlThe same as above, but the output is a full HTML document instead of just the markup for the table:
csv2html pub.csv -d \; -r -s 267 -c > pub.htmlIf the input file is tab-delimited, use \t as the deliminter argument.
# POSIX.
csv2html --delimiter '\t' tests/test.tsvrem Windows.
csv2html-win32.exe --delimiter \t tests/test.tsv\t is the only backslash escape sequence that is implemented.
Three-clause ("new" or "revised") BSD.
See the file LICENSE.