Class: Google::Apis::BigqueryV2::CsvOptions
- Inherits:
-
Object
- Object
- Google::Apis::BigqueryV2::CsvOptions
- Includes:
- Core::Hashable, Core::JsonObjectSupport
- Defined in:
- lib/google/apis/bigquery_v2/classes.rb,
lib/google/apis/bigquery_v2/representations.rb,
lib/google/apis/bigquery_v2/representations.rb
Instance Attribute Summary collapse
-
#allow_jagged_rows ⇒ Boolean
(also: #allow_jagged_rows?)
[Optional] Indicates if BigQuery should accept rows that are missing trailing optional columns.
-
#allow_quoted_newlines ⇒ Boolean
(also: #allow_quoted_newlines?)
[Optional] Indicates if BigQuery should allow quoted data sections that contain newline characters in a CSV file.
-
#encoding ⇒ String
[Optional] The character encoding of the data.
-
#field_delimiter ⇒ String
[Optional] The separator for fields in a CSV file.
-
#quote ⇒ String
[Optional] The value that is used to quote data sections in a CSV file.
-
#skip_leading_rows ⇒ Fixnum
[Optional] The number of rows at the top of a CSV file that BigQuery will skip when reading the data.
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#initialize(**args) ⇒ CsvOptions
constructor
A new instance of CsvOptions.
-
#update!(**args) ⇒ Object
Update properties of this object.
Constructor Details
#initialize(**args) ⇒ CsvOptions
Returns a new instance of CsvOptions.
1296 1297 1298 |
# File 'lib/google/apis/bigquery_v2/classes.rb', line 1296 def initialize(**args) update!(**args) end |
Instance Attribute Details
#allow_jagged_rows ⇒ Boolean Also known as: allow_jagged_rows?
[Optional] Indicates if BigQuery should accept rows that are missing trailing
optional columns. If true, BigQuery treats missing trailing columns as null
values. If false, records with missing trailing columns are treated as bad
records, and if there are too many bad records, an invalid error is returned
in the job result. The default value is false.
Corresponds to the JSON property allowJaggedRows
1243 1244 1245 |
# File 'lib/google/apis/bigquery_v2/classes.rb', line 1243 def allow_jagged_rows @allow_jagged_rows end |
#allow_quoted_newlines ⇒ Boolean Also known as: allow_quoted_newlines?
[Optional] Indicates if BigQuery should allow quoted data sections that
contain newline characters in a CSV file. The default value is false.
Corresponds to the JSON property allowQuotedNewlines
1250 1251 1252 |
# File 'lib/google/apis/bigquery_v2/classes.rb', line 1250 def allow_quoted_newlines @allow_quoted_newlines end |
#encoding ⇒ String
[Optional] The character encoding of the data. The supported values are UTF-8
or ISO-8859-1. The default value is UTF-8. BigQuery decodes the data after the
raw, binary data has been split using the values of the quote and
fieldDelimiter properties.
Corresponds to the JSON property encoding
1259 1260 1261 |
# File 'lib/google/apis/bigquery_v2/classes.rb', line 1259 def encoding @encoding end |
#field_delimiter ⇒ String
[Optional] The separator for fields in a CSV file. BigQuery converts the
string to ISO-8859-1 encoding, and then uses the first byte of the encoded
string to split the data in its raw, binary state. BigQuery also supports the
escape sequence "\t" to specify a tab separator. The default value is a comma (
',').
Corresponds to the JSON property fieldDelimiter
1268 1269 1270 |
# File 'lib/google/apis/bigquery_v2/classes.rb', line 1268 def field_delimiter @field_delimiter end |
#quote ⇒ String
[Optional] The value that is used to quote data sections in a CSV file.
BigQuery converts the string to ISO-8859-1 encoding, and then uses the first
byte of the encoded string to split the data in its raw, binary state. The
default value is a double-quote ('"'). If your data does not contain quoted
sections, set the property value to an empty string. If your data contains
quoted newline characters, you must also set the allowQuotedNewlines property
to true.
Corresponds to the JSON property quote
1279 1280 1281 |
# File 'lib/google/apis/bigquery_v2/classes.rb', line 1279 def quote @quote end |
#skip_leading_rows ⇒ Fixnum
[Optional] The number of rows at the top of a CSV file that BigQuery will skip
when reading the data. The default value is 0. This property is useful if you
have header rows in the file that should be skipped. When autodetect is on,
the behavior is the following: * skipLeadingRows unspecified - Autodetect
tries to detect headers in the first row. If they are not detected, the row is
read as data. Otherwise data is read starting from the second row. *
skipLeadingRows is 0 - Instructs autodetect that there are no headers and data
should be read starting from the first row. * skipLeadingRows = N > 0 -
Autodetect skips N-1 rows and tries to detect headers in row N. If headers are
not detected, row N is just skipped. Otherwise row N is used to extract column
names for the detected schema.
Corresponds to the JSON property skipLeadingRows
1294 1295 1296 |
# File 'lib/google/apis/bigquery_v2/classes.rb', line 1294 def skip_leading_rows @skip_leading_rows end |
Instance Method Details
#update!(**args) ⇒ Object
Update properties of this object
1301 1302 1303 1304 1305 1306 1307 1308 |
# File 'lib/google/apis/bigquery_v2/classes.rb', line 1301 def update!(**args) @allow_jagged_rows = args[:allow_jagged_rows] if args.key?(:allow_jagged_rows) @allow_quoted_newlines = args[:allow_quoted_newlines] if args.key?(:allow_quoted_newlines) @encoding = args[:encoding] if args.key?(:encoding) @field_delimiter = args[:field_delimiter] if args.key?(:field_delimiter) @quote = args[:quote] if args.key?(:quote) @skip_leading_rows = args[:skip_leading_rows] if args.key?(:skip_leading_rows) end |