I am inserting data from a CSV file to a MySQL database, and one of the columns should contain the SOUNDEX representation of a string.
For example, I have the first name as a column in the CSV and the database should contain its SOUNDEX.
I am using tMap between the file delimited and MySQL output, so the operation should be there. Something like SOUNDEX(row1.FIRST_NAME).
Details: Talend Open Studio, MySQL database
You can use Apache Commons Codec to do this. First load the library using tLibraryLoad:
Then use:
new org.apache.commons.codec.language.Soundex().encode("<string>")
I have a requirement to read the value form a PDF file and save the result in a db.
I have converted Pdf to text .
Now the text data looks like this:
Test Name Results Units Bio. Ref. Interval
LIPID PROFILE, BASIC, SERUM
Cholesterol Total 166.00 mg/dL <200.00
Triglycerides 118.00 mg/dL <150.00
My requirement is to read the table data from the Pdf file and save in the MySQL database as it is.
use java io to read the text file and jdbc to safe the information in the mysql via sql.
I am using MySQL for my database and working with Spring.
For export functionality, I am generating a report(excel sheet). In that I have a field called "Created On". I am putting the data i get from database into that field which is in DATETIME format.
like this:
'2016-05-22 17:06:55'
But what I would like to have in my report need to be like this: '05-22-2016 05:06:55 PM'
Thanks in advance.
Use date_format;
select date_format('2016-05-22 17:06:55', '%m-%d-%Y %h:%i:%s %p')
SQLFiddle DEMO HERE
I'm working on a system where the users need to be able to upload an excel file to the server, then the system needs to process the excel file to load data into the XMPie uProduce system.
I already have it working to load CSV files into the system. I can confirm that the excel files have been uploaded to the server successfully. However, when my program then tries to access the excel file in order to read the data, it gets this error:
The Microsoft Jet database engine could not find the object 'Sheet1'. Make sure the object exists and that you spell its name and the path name correctly.
I am setting the filter as:
select * from [Sheet1]
I have also tried it as:
select * from [filename.xls]
Neither have worked. Does anyone have any suggestions what the SQL filter should be for pulling data from a database?
Try this..
Writing an Excel query is as similar as writing a query in any other traditional data storage like SQL Server, Oracle, etc. However there are a few differences. First, you have to specify your sheet name instead of your table name. Next, you have to give starting and end cell references. Watch my following code carefully:
SELECT * FROM [users$A1:F500]
Here users is the spread sheet name.
When specifying Excel sheet names in an SQL query via ADO or similar, you have to put a $ symbol at the end of the sheet name. Try:
SELECT * FROM [Sheet1$]
More info here
Is there a open source file based (NOT in-memory based) JDBC driver for CSV files? My CSV are dynamically generated from the UI according to the user selections and each user will have a different CSV file. I'm doing this to reduce database hits, since the information is contained in the CSV file. I only need to perform SELECT operations.
HSQLDB allows for indexed searches if we specify an index, but I won't be able to provide an unique column that can be used as an index, hence it does SQL operations in memory.
Edit:
I've tried CSVJDBC but that doesn't support simple operations like order by and group by. It is still unclear whether it reads from file or loads into memory.
I've tried xlSQL, but that again relies on HSQLDB and only works with Excel and not CSV. Plus its not in development or support anymore.
H2, but that only reads CSV. Doesn't support SQL.
You can solve this problem using the H2 database.
The following groovy script demonstrates:
Loading data into the database
Running a "GROUP BY" and "ORDER BY" sql query
Note: H2 supports in-memory databases, so you have the choice of persisting the data or not.
// Create the database
def sql = Sql.newInstance("jdbc:h2:db/csv", "user", "pass", "org.h2.Driver")
// Load CSV file
sql.execute("CREATE TABLE data (id INT PRIMARY KEY, message VARCHAR(255), score INT) AS SELECT * FROM CSVREAD('data.csv')")
// Print results
def result = sql.firstRow("SELECT message, score, count(*) FROM data GROUP BY message, score ORDER BY score")
assert result[0] == "hello world"
assert result[1] == 0
assert result[2] == 5
// Cleanup
sql.close()
Sample CSV data:
0,hello world,0
1,hello world,1
2,hello world,0
3,hello world,1
4,hello world,0
5,hello world,1
6,hello world,0
7,hello world,1
8,hello world,0
9,hello world,1
10,hello world,0
If you check the sourceforge project csvjdbc please report your expierences. the documentation says it is useful for importing CSV files.
Project page
This was discussed on Superuser https://superuser.com/questions/7169/querying-a-csv-file.
You can use the Text Tables feature of hsqldb: http://hsqldb.org/doc/2.0/guide/texttables-chapt.html
csvsql/gcsvsql are also possible solutions (but there is no JDBC driver, you will have to run a command line program for your query).
sqlite is another solution but you have to import the CSV file into a database before you can query it.
Alternatively, there is commercial software such as http://www.csv-jdbc.com/ which will do what you want.
To do anything with a file you have to load it into memory at some point. What you could do is just open the file and read it line by line, discarding the previous line as you read in a new one. Only downside to this approach is its linearity. Have you thought about using something like memcache on a server where you use Key-Value stores in memory you can query instead of dumping to a CSV file?
You can use either specialized JDBC driver, like CsvJdbc (http://csvjdbc.sourceforge.net) or you may chose to configure a database engine such as mySQL to treat your CSV as a table and then manipulate your CSV through standard JDBC driver.
The trade-off here - available SQL features vs performance.
Direct access to CSV via CsvJdbc (or similar) will allow you very quick operations on big data volumes, but without capabilities to sort or group records using SQL commands ;
mySQL CSV engine can provide rich set of SQL features, but with the cost of performance.
So if the size of your table is relatively small - go with mySQL. However if you need to process big files (> 100Mb) without need for grouping or sorting - go with CsvJdbc.
If you need both - handle very bif files and be able to manipulate them using SQL, then optimal course of action - to load the CSV into normal database table (e.g. mySQL) first and then handle the data as usual SQL table.