For example, easily such files are easily manipulated using awk.
awk "{print $1,$2,$3,$5,$7}" data.csv > interesting.csv
and this can be used in a pipeline...
Alan
On Thu, 22 Nov 2012 15:36:45 +0100
Marcin Borkowski
Dnia 2012-11-22, o godz. 13:26:52 Mojca Miklavec
napisaĆ(a): On Thu, Nov 22, 2012 at 12:57 PM, Marcin Borkowski wrote:
le) in order to typeset a (nice) TABLE. However, I have a few columns I'd like to omit. I can (of course) hand-edit the csv file; but is there a way to do it automatically? Something like
\setupTABLE[column][3,4,5][kill]
I did [empty=yes,width=0pt] in place of [kill], and it worked, but it seems like a hack (and I don't know whether it does actually process the cells I'm omitting - which in my case wouldn't bother me, but might be an additional layer of inelegance;)). And better ideas?
If you have up to 9 columns, you could use
\def\ProcessingLine#1#2#3#4#5#6#7{% \bTR\bTD#1\eTD\bTD#2\eTD\bTD#6\eTD\bTD#7\eTD}
and then [command=\ProcessingLine]
Well, something like 20 columns (on A4 landscape). ;)
It turns out that my method somehow doesn't work well without setting also height=0pt; then it's fine, but I'm still wondering about a cleaner way.
Mojca
Best,
-- Alan Braslau CEA DSM-IRAMIS-SPEC CNRS URA 2464 Orme des Merisiers 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette cedex FRANCE tel: +33 1 69 08 73 15 fax: +33 1 69 08 87 86 mailto:alan.braslau@cea.fr