2018-04-06 5:46 GMT+02:00 Jonathan S. Katz <jk...@postgresql.org>:

>
> > On Apr 5, 2018, at 11:08 PM, Peter Eisentraut <
> peter.eisentr...@2ndquadrant.com> wrote:
> >
> > On 4/1/18 03:27, Pavel Stehule wrote:
> >> I don't share option so CSV format should be exactly same like CSV COPY.
> >> COPY is designed for backups - and header is not too important there.
> >> When I seen some csv, then there usually header was used.
> >
> > I think in practice a lot of people use COPY also because it's a nice
> > way to get CSV output, even if it's not for backups.  The options that
> > COPY has for CSV are clearly designed around making the output
> > compatible with various CSV-variants.
>
> +1
>
> From a user standpoint this was mostly how I use COPY.  Someone
> requests a report that they can manipulate in $SPREADSHEET.  I write
> a query, place it inside a “COPY” statement with FORMAT CSV,
> HEADER TRUE, save to file, and deliver.
>
> > Another thought: Isn't CSV just the same as unaligned output plus some
> > quoting?  Could we add a quote character setting and then define --csv
> > to be quote-character = " and fieldsep = , ?
>
> This makes a lot of sense. I’ve also generated CSV files using a
> combination of:
>
>         \f ,
>         \a
>         \o file.csv
>
> and then running the query, but if any of the fields contained a “,” if
> would
> inevitably break in $SPREADSHEET.
>

unfortunately, most used CSV separator in Czech Repuplic is ; due MS Excel
settings for CR

Regards

Pavel

>
> Jonathan
>
>

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