# sq: swiss army knife for data `sq` is a swiss army knife for data. `sq` provides uniform access to structured data sources like traditional SQL-style databases, or document formats such as CSV or Excel. `sq` can perform cross-source joins, execute database-native SQL, and output to a multitude of formats including JSON, Excel, CSV, HTML markdown and XML, or output directly to a SQL database. `sq` can inspect sources to see metadata about the source structure (tables, columns, size) and has commands for frequent database operations such as copying or dropping tables. ## Usage See the [wiki](https://github.com/neilotoole/sq/wiki). ## Installation ### From source From the `sq` project dir: ```shell script $ go install ``` The simple go install does not populate the binary with build info that is output via the `sq version` command. To do so, use [mage](https://magefile.org/). ```shell script $ brew install mage $ mage install ``` ### Other installation options For homebrew, scoop, rpm etc, see the [wiki](https://github.com/neilotoole/sq/wiki). ## Acknowledgements - Much inspiration is owed to [jq](https://stedolan.github.io/jq/). - See [`go.mod`](https://github.com/neilotoole/sq/blob/master/go.mod) for a list of third-party packages. - Additionally, `sq` incorporates modified versions of: - [`olekukonko/tablewriter`](https://github.com/olekukonko/tablewriter) - [`segmentio/encoding`](https://github.com/segmentio/encoding) for JSON encoding. - The [_Sakila_](https://dev.mysql.com/doc/sakila/en/) example databases were lifted from [jOOQ](https://github.com/jooq/jooq), which in turn owe their heritage to earlier work on Sakila.