pip install addok-csv
Warning: this plugin will not work when running addok serve
, you need either
gunicorn or uWSGI (see falcon-multipart issue).
This plugin adds the following endpoints:
Batch geocode a csv file.
- data: the CSV file to be processed
- columns (multiple): the columns, ordered, to be used for geocoding; if no column is given, all columns will be used
- encoding (optional): encoding of the file (you can also specify a
charset
in the file mimetype), such as 'utf-8' or 'iso-8859-1' (default to 'utf-8-sig') - delimiter (optional): CSV delimiter (
,
or;
); if not given, we try to guess - with_bom: if true, and if the encoding if utf-8, the returned CSV will contain a BOM (for Excel users…)
lat
andlon
parameters (optionals), like filters, can be used to define columns names that contain latitude and longitude values, for adding a preference center in the geocoding of each row
http -f POST http://localhost:7878/search/csv/ columns='voie' columns='ville' data@path/to/file.csv
http -f POST http://localhost:7878/search/csv/ columns='rue' postcode='code postal' data@path/to/file.csv
Batch reverse geocode a csv file.
- data: the CSV file to be processed; must contain columns
latitude
(orlat
) andlongitude
(orlon
orlng
) - encoding (optional): encoding of the file (you can also specify a
charset
in the file mimetype), such as 'utf-8' or 'iso-8859-1' (default to 'utf-8-sig') - delimiter (optional): CSV delimiter (
,
or;
); if not given, we try to guess
Any filter can be passed as key=value
querystring, where key
is the filter
name and value
is the column name containing the filter value for each row.
For example, if there is a column "code_insee" and we want to use it for
"citycode" filtering, we would pass citycode=code_insee
as query string
parameter.
- CSV_ENCODING: default encoding to open CSV files (default: 'utf-8-sig')
- CSV_EXTRA_FIELDS: list of field names to be added to the results rows
(default: names of the registered
FIELDS
)