Normalize and serialize a Tabular Application Profile.
To work correctly, "dctap" requires Python 3.7 or higher. Executing the command python3
should show you if Python 3 is installed on your machine and in which version.
As explained below, the command-line utility can be installed either from the online PyPI repository, using the pip
command, or from a local copy of the project on your own machine.
Installing with "pip" pulls the most recently published version of the project from the PyPI repository with the following command:
python3 -m pip install dctap
or uninstalled with:
python3 -m pip uninstall dctap
"dctap" can be installed directly from Github with:
python3 -m pip install -U https://github.com/dcmi/dctap-python/archive/main.zip
Installing "dctap" this way, and periodically re-running this command to refresh, is the best way to keep up with the latest version of "dctap".
For developers who work alot with Python projects, it is good practice to create and activate a virtual environment so that "dctap", and its dependencies, will not be installed into the global Python environment on your machine. The virtual environment is held in a directory of your choice; in the example below, a hidden directory .venv
is created in some_directory
(your current working directory), and the virtual environment is activated by executing source .venv/bin/activate
.
$ python3 -m venv .venv
$ source .venv/bin/activate
$ python3 -m pip install -U https://github.com/dcmi/dctap-python/archive/main.zip
Note that "dctap" will pip-install even without creating and activating a virtual environment, even though this is not considered good practice. If you do install it into a virtual environment, note that the virtual environment must be activated with source .venv/bin/activate or "dctap" will not work. The activation of a virtual environment can be automated by adding this command to a shell profile where it will be executed when starting the shell, for example by adding the lines to the file "~/.bash_profile":
cd /Users/foo/somedirectory
source .venv/bin/activate
Cloning the "dctap-python" repository to your machine and installing it from the dctap-python
directory is a good option if you want to keep up-to-date with the latest developments in the project. The following commands install "dctap" for the first time. In order to refresh the project directly from the project repository, you can at any time execute git pull
(from within the repository), which will install the latest features and bug fixes in your local copy.
$ git clone https://github.com/dcmi/dctap-python.git
$ cd dctap-python
$ python -m venv .venv
$ source .venv/bin/activate
$ python3 -m pip install flit Pygments
$ flit install -s
Run without arguments, "dctap" shows what options and commands are available.
$ dctap
Usage: dctap [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
DC Tabular Application Profiles (DCTAP) - base module
Examples:
$ dctap read my_profile.csv
$ dctap read --json my_profile.csv
$ dctap read --expand-prefixes my_profile.csv
$ dctap read --warnings my_profile.csv
$ dctap read --warnings --expand-prefixes --json my_profile.csv
$ dctap init
Built-in settings written to dctap.yml - edit as needed.
$ dctap init /Users/tbaker/dctap.yml
Built-in settings written to /Users/tbaker/dctap.yml - edit as needed.
$ dctap generate --configfile /Users/tbaker/dctap.yml
Options:
--version Show version and exit
--help Show help and exit
Commands:
generate Generate normalized text, JSON, or YAML of CSV, with warnings.
init Generate customizable configuration file [default: dctap.yml].
For more information, see the documentation on readthedocs.io.