Hello All,
I ran into some issues when pulling CSV data in from Power Automate Desktop because of commas in the actual data. I wanted to change the delimiter so I could more easily parse the data in a single Select action without commas in the actual data messing things up. I also may be parsing CSV files with hundreds or thousands of rows, so I didn’t want to use all my daily actions on this in a slow Apply to each loop.
Attached is the scope/flow I built so anyone can easily select their CSV data that has quotes around the comma-containing records, enter a new delimiter, and get the new delimiter separated data from the final compose action without the usual errors. And it only takes a few actions to do this, even on very large files.
I've found that many CSV files don't put quotes around their records with in-data commas, and this only works when there are quotes around those records. But if the file is saved as a text file, then it often puts quotes around the right records.
If you are using Power Automate Desktop, program the file to be saved as .txt and read that into your output variable.
It’s currently set to handle up to 50 comma-containing columns, but you can expand that to as many columns as needed by adding extra lines & expressions to the 1st Select action. Just follow the pattern by replacing some of the array numbers, like [50] with [51].
Also if your data has more unique values like an array with mixed quoted string data, Ex: ["string1", 2, 03/05/2022, "string3"], then this will create errors in the output.
The template for parsing CSV to JSON & entering it into a dataset uses the same change delimiter set-up: https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Power-Automate-Cookbook/CSV-to-Dataset/m-p/1508191#M584
*Copying the template scope into another flow may not work as it may mess up the expressions. You may need to start with a copy of this template and copy & paste the rest of your flow into this template flow.
Thanks for any feedback, & please subscribe to my YouTube channel (https://youtube.com/@tylerkolota?si=uEGKko1U8D29CJ86)
Version 3 Uploaded 03/26/2022 (Adjusted the 1st Select input so it can now also deal with in-data commas in the 1st column. Added more lines to the 1st Select so it can now handle up to 50 columns with commas in them.)
Google Drive Link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/11uT15hXY0VjnOKDvFxdVgkuMtXqTmA0c/view?usp=sharing
Version 4 Uploaded 04/09/2022
(More minor fixes & additions.
I adjusted several expressions so it can now handle a few more scenarios with arrays in the CSV data. It should handle any array that doesn't include double quotes and any array that is all strings with double quotes, so ["String1", "String2", "String3"], but it will have issues if it is a mixed array with some double-quoted strings and some other values, for example ["String", 4, 03/05/2022, "String2"] won't work.
I also adjusted how the LineBreak setting is set-up so it now uses the /r/n for the LineBreak. I also provided this link in the flow so anyone can look up the right string for the decodeUriComponent expression(s) if they happen to have different LineBreak characters. This change also made it possible to differentiate between in-data line-breaks and CSV row line-breaks on the files I tested, so it should now replace the in-data line-breaks, like the multiple-choice fields some sites use, with semi-colons. That should make those records much easier to deal with & parse in later actions.
I also looked over a problem with in-data trailing commas. I added a line in the settings where anyone can toggle whether they want it to adjust for trailing OR leading commas in the data, it just can't handle both in one dataset. So if one column in one row has ",String1 String2" and another column in another row has "String 3 String4," then it will have errors.)
Google Drive Link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ZbhFGVKHSpaH2Duv8qXwMnNww8czdgc4/view?usp=sharing
Version 5
More adjustments for comma edge cases and for instances with one comma-containing value following another in the file data.
Google Drive Link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1il_wI9fJRk11YaI4EPQvk2efrbBNRBwr/view?usp=sharing
Update 06/01/2022
Microsoft Power Platform & Paul Murana recently did a video demonstration of how to handle CSV & other files in dataflows: https://youtu.be/8IvHxRnwJ7Q
But it currently only outputs to a dataverse or Dataverse for teams table.
How sad, Please let us know once you already figured out a solution.
This is a big help, until I encounter this problem. I hope you can come up with a solution soon.. Thank You for your effort.
@takolota Hello
I hope you can help me with this, does this CHANGE DELIMITER can handle 100k plus files? I tried, but successful run is only if the row data is 50k..
@takolota your solution works like a charm. Thanks for that. But I have a new issue now.
My current CSV file is a tab delimited one i.e.., I have file of 1500 rows where instead of separate columns all data is present in one column in multiple rows. How to convert to excel please?
Thanks.
@sree813 If your data is tab delimited, then you should not need this change delimiter process as you can split the CSV on tabs
https://www.tachytelic.net/2021/02/power-automate-parse-csv/?amp
@Amirin Power Automate actions have a maximum content of 100MB to 200MB.
If you are going over that I suggest looking into larger-scale solutions like Azure Data Factory or Dataflows.