#!/usr/bin/awk -f # # Compiles a "magic" CSV file into a normal CSV # # Copyright (C) 2016 R-T Specialty, LLC. # # This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program. If not, see . # # "Magic" CSVs simply exist to make life easier: they permit comments, blank # lines, variables, sub-delimiter expansion, and any number of ranges per line. # Ranges will be expanded in every combination, making rate tables highly # maintainable. # # Variables are also supported when defined using :var=val. Variables may # expand into ranges, 'cause they're awesome. Multiple variables may be # delimited by semi-colons, as may multiple values. # # For example: # :foo=1--3 # $foo;7;9--10:$foo, 5--10,1/1/2017 # # Would generate: # 1, 5, 1483246800 # 1, 6, 1483246800 # ... # 5, 10, 1483246800 # 2, 5, 1483246800 # ... # 9, 5, 14832468005 # ... # 1, 5, 1483246800 # 1, 6, 1483246800 # ... ## function parseline( i, m, j, me, orig ) { if ( i > NF ) { print return } orig = $i if ( match( $i, /^([0-9]+\/){2}[0-9]+$/, m ) ) { cmd = "date --date=" $i " +%s" cmd |& getline $i close(cmd) } # check first for delimiters if ( match( $i, /^([^;]+);(.*)$/, m ) ) { # give it a shot with the first value $i = m[1] parseline( i ) # strip off the first value and process with following value(s) $i = m[2] parseline( i ) # we've delegated; we're done $i = orig return } # attempt to parse variable (may expand into a range) if ( match( $i, /^\$([a-zA-Z_-]+)$/, m ) ) { $i = vars[ m[1] ]; } # parse range if ( match( $i, /^([0-9]+)--([0-9]+)$/, m ) ) { j = m[1] me = m[2] do { $i = j parseline( i + 1 ) } while ( j++ < me ) } else { parseline( i + 1 ); } # restore to original value $i = orig } BEGIN { # we're parsing CSVs FS = " *, *" OFS = "," } # skip all lines that begin with `#', which denotes a comment, or are empty /^#|^$/ { next; } # lines that begin with a colon are variable definitions /^:/ { match( $0, /^:([a-zA-Z_-]+)=(.*?)$/, m ) vars[ m[1] ] = m[2] next } # lines that need any sort of processing (ranges, dates, etc) /--|;|\$[a-zA-Z_-]|\// { parseline( 1 ); next; } # all other lines are normal; simply output them verbatim { # this assignment will ensure that awk processes the output, ensuring that # extra spaces between commas are stripped $1=$1 print }