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Import-Csv

Creates table-like custom objects from the items in a character-separated value (CSV) file.

Syntax

Import-Csv
      [[-Delimiter] <Char>]
      [-Path] <String[]>
      [-Header <String[]>]
      [-Encoding <Encoding>]
      [<CommonParameters>]
Import-Csv
      [[-Delimiter] <Char>]
      -LiteralPath <String[]>
      [-Header <String[]>]
      [-Encoding <Encoding>]
      [<CommonParameters>]
Import-Csv
      [-Path] <String[]>
      -UseCulture
      [-Header <String[]>]
      [-Encoding <Encoding>]
      [<CommonParameters>]
Import-Csv
      -LiteralPath <String[]>
      -UseCulture
      [-Header <String[]>]
      [-Encoding <Encoding>]
      [<CommonParameters>]

Description

The Import-Csv cmdlet creates table-like custom objects from the items in CSV files. Each column in the CSV file becomes a property of the custom object and the items in rows become the property values. Import-Csv works on any CSV file, including files that are generated by the Export-Csv cmdlet.

You can use the parameters of the Import-Csv cmdlet to specify the column header row and the item delimiter, or direct Import-Csv to use the list separator for the current culture as the item delimiter.

You can also use the ConvertTo-Csv and ConvertFrom-Csv cmdlets to convert objects to CSV strings (and back). These cmdlets are the same as the Export-CSV and Import-Csv cmdlets, except that they do not deal with files.

If a header row entry in a CSV file contains an empty or null value, PowerShell inserts a default header row name and displays a warning message.

Starting with PowerShell 6.0, Import-Csv now supports the W3C Extended Log File Format.

Examples

Example 1: Import process objects

This example shows how to export and then import a CSV file of process objects.

Get-Process | Export-Csv -Path .\Processes.csv
$P = Import-Csv -Path .\Processes.csv
$P | Get-Member

TypeName: System.Management.Automation.PSCustomObject

Name                       MemberType   Definition
----                       ----------   ----------
Equals                     Method       bool Equals(System.Object obj)
GetHashCode                Method       int GetHashCode()
GetType                    Method       type GetType()
ToString                   Method       string ToString()
BasePriority               NoteProperty string BasePriority=8
Company                    NoteProperty string Company=Microsoft Corporation
...

$P | Format-Table

Name                   SI Handles VM            WS        PM        NPM    Path
----                   -- ------- --            --        --        ---    ----
ApplicationFrameHost   4  407     2199293489152 15884288  15151104  23792  C:\WINDOWS\system32\ApplicationFrameHost.exe
...
wininit                0  157     2199112204288 4591616   1630208   10376
winlogon               4  233     2199125549056 7659520   2826240   10992  C:\WINDOWS\System32\WinLogon.exe
WinStore.App           4  846     873435136     33652736  26607616  55432  C:\Program Files\WindowsApps\Microsoft.WindowsStore_11712.1001.13.0_x64__8weky...
WmiPrvSE               0  201     2199100219392 8830976   3297280   10632  C:\WINDOWS\system32\wbem\wmiprvse.exe
WmiPrvSE               0  407     2199157727232 18509824  12922880  16624  C:\WINDOWS\system32\wbem\wmiprvse.exe
WUDFHost               0  834     2199310204928 51945472  87441408  24984  C:\Windows\System32\WUDFHost.exe

The Get-Process cmdlet sends process objects down the pipeline to the Export-Csv. The Export-Csv cmdlet converts the process objects to CSV strings and saves the strings in the Processes.csv file. The Import-Csv cmdlet imports the CSV strings from the Processes.csv file. The strings are saved in the $P variable. The $P variable is sent down the pipeline to the Get-Member cmdlet that displays the properties of the imported CSV strings. The $P variable is sent down the pipeline to the Format-Table cmdlet and displays the objects.

Example 2: Specify the delimiter

This example shows how to use the Delimiter parameter of the Import-Csv cmdlet.

Get-Process | Export-Csv -Path .\Processes.csv -Delimiter :
$P = Import-Csv -Path .\Processes.csv -Delimiter :
$P | Format-Table

The Get-Process cmdlet sends process objects down the pipeline to Export-Csv. The Export-Csv cmdlet converts the process objects to CSV strings and saves the strings in the Processes.csv file. The Delimiter parameter is used to specify a colon delimiter. The Import-Csv cmdlet imports the CSV strings from the Processes.csv file. The strings are saved in the $P variable. To $P variable is sent down the pipeline to the Format-Table cmdlet.

Example 3: Specify the current culture for the delimiter

This example shows how to use the Import-Csv cmdlet with the UseCulture parameter.

(Get-Culture).TextInfo.ListSeparator
Get-Process | Export-Csv -Path .\Processes.csv -UseCulture
Import-Csv -Path .\Processes.csv -UseCulture

The Get-Culture cmdlet uses the nested properties TextInfo and ListSeparator to get the current culture's default list separator. The Get-Process cmdlet sends process objects down the pipeline to Export-Csv. The Export-Csv cmdlet converts the process objects to CSV strings and saves the strings in the Processes.csv file. The UseCulture parameter uses the current culture's default list separator. The Import-Csv cmdlet imports the CSV strings from the Processes.csv file.

Example 4: Change property names in an imported object

This example shows how to use the Header parameter of Import-Csv to change the names of properties in the resulting imported object.

Start-Job -ScriptBlock { Get-Process } | Export-Csv -Path .\Jobs.csv -NoTypeInformation
$Header = 'State', 'MoreData', 'StatusMessage', 'Location', 'Command', 'StateInfo', 'Finished',
          'InstanceId', 'Id', 'Name', 'ChildJobs', 'BeginTime', 'EndTime', 'JobType', 'Output',
          'Error', 'Progress', 'Verbose', 'Debug', 'Warning', 'Information'
# Delete the default header from file
$A = Get-Content -Path .\Jobs.csv
$A = $A[1..($A.Count - 1)]
$A | Out-File -FilePath .\Jobs.csv
$J = Import-Csv -Path .\Jobs.csv -Header $Header
$J

State         : Running
MoreData      : True
StatusMessage :
Location      : localhost
Command       : Get-Process
StateInfo     : Running
Finished      : System.Threading.ManualResetEvent
InstanceId    : a259eb63-6824-4b97-a033-305108ae1c2e
Id            : 1
Name          : Job1
ChildJobs     : System.Collections.Generic.List`1[System.Management.Automation.Job]
BeginTime     : 12/20/2018 18:59:57
EndTime       :
JobType       : BackgroundJob
Output        : System.Management.Automation.PSDataCollection`1[System.Management.Automation.PSObject]
Error         : System.Management.Automation.PSDataCollection`1[System.Management.Automation.ErrorRecord]
Progress      : System.Management.Automation.PSDataCollection`1[System.Management.Automation.ProgressRecord]
Verbose       : System.Management.Automation.PSDataCollection`1[System.Management.Automation.VerboseRecord]
Debug         : System.Management.Automation.PSDataCollection`1[System.Management.Automation.DebugRecord]
Warning       : System.Management.Automation.PSDataCollection`1[System.Management.Automation.WarningRecord]
Information   : System.Management.Automation.PSDataCollection`1[System.Management.Automation.InformationRecord]

The Start-Job cmdlet starts a background job that runs Get-Process. A job object is sent down the pipeline to the Export-Csv cmdlet and converted to a CSV string. The NoTypeInformation parameter removes the type information header from CSV output and is optional in PowerShell v6 and higher. The $Header variable contains a custom header that replaces the following default values: HasMoreData, JobStateInfo, PSBeginTime, PSEndTime, and PSJobTypeName. The $A variable uses the Get-Content cmdlet to get the CSV string from the Jobs.csv file. The $A variable is used to remove the default header from the file. The Out-File cmdlet saves the new version of the Jobs.csv file in the $A variable. The Import-Csv cmdlet imports the Jobs.csv file and uses the Header parameter to apply the $Header variable. The $J variable contains the imported PSCustomObject and displays the object in the PowerShell console.

Example 5: Create a custom object using a CSV file

This example shows how to create a custom object in PowerShell by using a CSV file.

Get-Content -Path .\Links.csv

113207,about_Aliases
113208,about_Arithmetic_Operators
113209,about_Arrays
113210,about_Assignment_Operators
113212,about_Automatic_Variables
113213,about_Break
113214,about_Command_Precedence
113215,about_Command_Syntax
144309,about_Comment_Based_Help
113216,about_CommonParameters
113217,about_Comparison_Operators
113218,about_Continue
113219,about_Core_Commands
113220,about_Data_Section

$A = Import-Csv -Path .\Links.csv -Header 'LinkID', 'TopicTitle'
$A | Get-Member

TypeName: System.Management.Automation.PSCustomObject

Name        MemberType   Definition
----        ----------   ----------
Equals      Method       bool Equals(System.Object obj)
GetHashCode Method       int GetHashCode()
GetType     Method       type GetType()
ToString    Method       string ToString()
LinkID      NoteProperty string LinkID=113207
TopicTitle  NoteProperty string TopicTitle=about_Aliases

$A | Where-Object -Property TopicTitle -Like '*alias*'

LinkID TopicTitle
------ ----------
113207 about_Aliases

To create your Links.csv file, use the values shown in the Get-Content output.

The Get-Content cmdlet displays the Links.csv file. The Import-Csv cmdlet imports the Links.csv file. The Header parameter specifies the property names LinkId and TopicTitle. The objects are stored in the $A variable. The Get-Member cmdlet shows the property names from the Header parameter. The Where-Object cmdlet selects objects with the TopicTitle property that includes alias.

Example 6: Import a CSV that is missing a value

This example shows how the Import-Csv cmdlet in PowerShell responds when the header row in a CSV file includes a null or empty value. Import-Csv substitutes a default name for the missing header row that becomes the property name of the object that Import-Csv returns.

Get-Content -Path .\Projects.csv

ProjectID,ProjectName,,Completed
13,Inventory,Redmond,True
440,,FarEast,True
469,Marketing,Europe,False

Import-Csv -Path .\Projects.csv

WARNING: One or more headers were not specified. Default names starting with "H" have been used in
place of any missing headers.

ProjectID ProjectName H1      Completed
--------- ----------- --      ---------
13        Inventory   Redmond True
440                   FarEast True
469       Marketing   Europe  False

(Import-Csv -Path .\Projects.csv).H1

WARNING: One or more headers were not specified. Default names starting with "H" have been used in
place of any missing headers.
Redmond
FarEast
Europe

To create your Projects.csv file, use the values shown in the example's Get-Content output.

The Get-Content cmdlet displays the Projects.csv file. The header row is missing a value between ProjectName and Completed. The Import-Csv cmdlet imports the Projects.csv file and displays a warning message because H1 is a default header name. The (Import-Csv -Path .\Projects.csv).H1 command gets the H1 property values and displays a warning.

Parameters

-Delimiter

Specifies the delimiter that separates the property values in the CSV file. The default is a comma (,).

Enter a character, such as a colon (:). To specify a semicolon (;) enclose it in single quotation marks. To specify escaped special characters such as tab (`t), enclose it in double quotation marks.

If you specify a character other than the actual string delimiter in the file, Import-Csv cannot create the objects from the CSV strings and will return the CSV strings.

Type:Char
Position:1
Default value:comma (,)
Required:False
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False

-Encoding

Specifies the encoding for the imported CSV file. The default value is utf8NoBOM.

The acceptable values for this parameter are as follows:

  • ascii: Uses the encoding for the ASCII (7-bit) character set.
  • ansi: Uses the encoding for the for the current culture's ANSI code page. This option was added in PowerShell 7.4.
  • bigendianunicode: Encodes in UTF-16 format using the big-endian byte order.
  • bigendianutf32: Encodes in UTF-32 format using the big-endian byte order.
  • oem: Uses the default encoding for MS-DOS and console programs.
  • unicode: Encodes in UTF-16 format using the little-endian byte order.
  • utf7: Encodes in UTF-7 format.
  • utf8: Encodes in UTF-8 format.
  • utf8BOM: Encodes in UTF-8 format with Byte Order Mark (BOM)
  • utf8NoBOM: Encodes in UTF-8 format without Byte Order Mark (BOM)
  • utf32: Encodes in UTF-32 format.

Beginning with PowerShell 6.2, the Encoding parameter also allows numeric IDs of registered code pages (like -Encoding 1251) or string names of registered code pages (like -Encoding "windows-1251"). For more information, see the .NET documentation for Encoding.CodePage.

Starting with PowerShell 7.4, you can use the Ansi value for the Encoding parameter to pass the numeric ID for the current culture's ANSI code page without having to specify it manually.

Note

UTF-7* is no longer recommended to use. As of PowerShell 7.1, a warning is written if you specify utf7 for the Encoding parameter.

Type:Encoding
Accepted values:ASCII, BigEndianUnicode, BigEndianUTF32, OEM, Unicode, UTF7, UTF8, UTF8BOM, UTF8NoBOM, UTF32
Position:Named
Default value:UTF8NoBOM
Required:False
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False

-Header

Specifies an alternate column header row for the imported file. The column header determines the property names of the objects created by Import-Csv.

Enter column headers as a character-separated list. Do not enclose the header string in quotation marks. Enclose each column header in single quotation marks.

If you enter fewer column headers than there are data columns, the remaining data columns are discarded. If you enter more column headers than there are data columns, the additional column headers are created with empty data columns.

When using the Header parameter, delete the original header row from the CSV file. Otherwise, Import-Csv creates an extra object from the items in the header row.

Type:String[]
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:False
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False

-LiteralPath

Specifies the path to the CSV file to import. Unlike Path, the value of the LiteralPath parameter is used exactly as it is typed. No characters are interpreted as wildcards. If the path includes escape characters, enclose it in single quotation marks. Single quotation marks tell PowerShell not to interpret any characters as escape sequences.

Type:String[]
Aliases:PSPath, LP
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:True
Accept pipeline input:True
Accept wildcard characters:False

-Path

Specifies the path to the CSV file to import. You can also pipe a path to Import-Csv.

Type:String[]
Position:0
Default value:None
Required:True
Accept pipeline input:True
Accept wildcard characters:False

-UseCulture

Uses the list separator for the current culture as the item delimiter. To find the list separator for a culture, use the following command: (Get-Culture).TextInfo.ListSeparator.

Type:SwitchParameter
Position:Named
Default value:None
Required:True
Accept pipeline input:False
Accept wildcard characters:False

Inputs

String

You can pipe a string that contains a path to this cmdlet.

Outputs

Object

This cmdlet returns the objects described by the content in the CSV file.

Notes

PowerShell includes the following aliases for Import-Csv:

  • All platforms:
    • ipcsv

Because the imported objects are CSV versions of the object type, they are not recognized and formatted by the PowerShell type formatting entries that format the non-CSV versions of the object type.

The result of an Import-Csv command is a collection of strings that form a table-like custom object. Each row is a separate string, so you can use the Count property of the object to count the table rows. The columns are the properties of the object and items in the rows are the property values.

The column header row determines the number of columns and the column names. The column names are also the names of the properties of the objects. The first row is interpreted to be the column headers, unless you use the Header parameter to specify column headers. If any row has more values than the header row, the additional values are ignored.

If the column header row is missing a value or contains a null or empty value, Import-Csv uses H followed by a number for the missing column header and property name.

In the CSV file, each object is represented by a character-separated list of the property values of the object. The property values are converted to strings by using the ToString() method of the object, so they are represented by the name of the property value. Export-Csv does not export the methods of the object.

Import-Csv also supports the W3C Extended Log format. Lines starting with # are treated as comments and ignored unless the comment starts with #Fields: and contains delimited list of column names. In that case, the cmdlet uses those column names. This is the standard format for Windows IIS and other web server logs. For more information, see Extended Log File Format.