Ghost/ghost/members-csv
Hannah Wolfe 6161f94910
Updated to use assert/strict everywhere (#17047)
refs: https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/595

We're rolling out new rules around the node assert library, the first of which is enforcing the use of assert/strict. This means we don't need to use the strict version of methods, as the standard version will work that way by default.

This caught some gotchas in our existing usage of assert where the lack of strict mode had unexpected results:
- Url matching needs to be done on `url.href` see aa58b354a4
- Null and undefined are not the same thing,  there were a few cases of this being confused
- Particularly questionable changes in [PostExporter tests](c1a468744b) tracked [here](https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/3505).
- A typo see eaac9c293a

Moving forward, using assert strict should help us to catch unexpected behaviour, particularly around nulls and undefineds during implementation.
2023-06-21 09:56:59 +01:00
..
lib fixed member import email setting import (#16269) 2023-02-27 15:25:20 -06:00
test Updated to use assert/strict everywhere (#17047) 2023-06-21 09:56:59 +01:00
.eslintrc.js Removed trailing commas from .eslintrc.js 2021-07-14 12:04:46 +01:00
index.js Fixed module paths 2020-06-19 19:52:21 +12:00
package.json Added consistent linting pattern to all packages 2023-06-13 10:43:29 +01:00
README.md Tidied up package READMEs 2022-07-25 15:17:12 +02:00

Members Csv

Usage

There are 2 parts to this package: CSV to JSON serialization and JSON to CSV serialization. The module exposes 2 methods to fullfil these: parse and unparse respectively.

To parse CSV file and convert it to JSON use parse method, e.g.:

const {parse} = require('@tryghost/members-csv');

const mapping = {
    email: 'csv_column_containing_email_data',
    name: 'csv_column_containing_names_data'
}
const membersJSON = await parse(csvFilePath, mapping);

csvFilePath - is a path to the CSV file that has to be processed mapping - optional parameter, it's a hash describing custom mapping for CSV columns to JSON properties

Example mapping for CSV having email under correo_electronico column would look like following:

{
    email: 'correo_electronico'
}

To unparse JSON to CSV compatible with members format use following:

const {unparse} = require('@tryghost/members-csv');

const members = [{
    email: 'email@example.com',
    name: 'Sam Memberino',
    note: 'Early supporter'
}];

const membersCSV = unparse(members);

console.log(membersCSV);
// -> "id,email,name,note,subscribed_to_emails,complimentary_plan,stripe_customer_id,created_at,deleted_at,labels\r\n,email@example.com,Sam Memberino,Early supporter,,,,,,"