# from csv Converts content (string or binary) into a table. The source format is specified as a subcommand, like `from csv` or `from json`. Use this when nushell cannot determine the input file extension. ## Available Subcommands * from bson * [from csv](from-csv.md) * from eml * [from ics](from-ics.md) * [from ini](from-ini.md) * [from json](from-json.md) * [from ods](from-ods.md) * from sqlite * from ssv * [from toml](from-toml.md) * [from tsv](from-tsv.md) * [from url](from-url.md) * [from vcf](from-vcf.md) * [from xlsx](from-xlsx.md) * [from xml](from-xml.md) * [from yaml](from-yaml.md) *Subcommands without links are currently missing their documentation.* ## Example for `from csv` Let's say we have the following file: ```shell > cat pets.txt animal, name, age cat, Tom, 7 dog, Alfred, 10 chameleon, Linda, 1 ``` `pets.txt` is actually a .csv file but it has the .txt extension, `open` is not able to convert it into a table: ```shell > open pets.txt animal, name, age cat, Tom, 7 dog, Alfred, 10 chameleon, Linda, 1 ``` To get a table from `pets.txt` we need to use the `from csv` command: ```shell > open pets.txt | from csv ━━━┯━━━━━━━━━━━┯━━━━━━━━━┯━━━━━━ # │ animal │ name │ age ───┼───────────┼─────────┼────── 0 │ cat │ Tom │ 7 1 │ dog │ Alfred │ 10 2 │ chameleon │ Linda │ 1 ━━━┷━━━━━━━━━━━┷━━━━━━━━━┷━━━━━━ ```