This module provides convenient parsing on top of Fetch. For example, to load a text file:
d3.text("/path/to/file.txt").then(function(text) {
console.log(text); // Hello, world!
});
To load and parse a CSV file:
d3.csv("/path/to/file.csv").then(function(data) {
console.log(data); // [{"Hello": "world"}, …]
});
This module has built-in support for parsing JSON, CSV, and TSV. You can parse additional formats by using text directly. (This module replaced d3-request.)
If you use NPM, npm install d3-fetch
. Otherwise, download the latest release. You can also load directly from d3js.org as a standalone library. AMD, CommonJS, and vanilla environments are supported. In vanilla, a d3
global is exported:
<script src="https://d3js.org/d3-dsv.v1.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://d3js.org/d3-fetch.v1.min.js"></script>
<script>
d3.csv("/path/to/file.csv").then(function(data) {
console.log(data); // [{"Hello": "world"}, …]
});
</script>
Fetches the binary file at the specified input URL as a Blob. If init is specified, it is passed along to the underlying call to fetch; see RequestInit for allowed fields.
Fetches the binary file at the specified input URL as an ArrayBuffer. If init is specified, it is passed along to the underlying call to fetch; see RequestInit for allowed fields.
# d3.csv(input[, init][, row]) <>
Equivalent to d3.dsv with the comma character as the delimiter.
# d3.dsv(delimiter, input[, init][, row]) <>
Fetches the DSV file at the specified input URL. If init is specified, it is passed along to the underlying call to fetch; see RequestInit for allowed fields. An optional row conversion function may be specified to map and filter row objects to a more-specific representation; see dsv.parse for details. For example:
d3.dsv(",", "test.csv", function(d) {
return {
year: new Date(+d.Year, 0, 1), // convert "Year" column to Date
make: d.Make,
model: d.Model,
length: +d.Length // convert "Length" column to number
};
}).then(function(data) {
console.log(data);
});
If only one of init and row is specified, it is interpreted as the row conversion function if it is a function, and otherwise an init object.
Fetches the file at the specified input URL as text and then parses it as HTML. If init is specified, it is passed along to the underlying call to fetch; see RequestInit for allowed fields.
Fetches the image at the specified input URL. If init is specified, sets any additional properties on the image before loading. For example, to enable an anonymous cross-origin request:
d3.image("https://example.com/test.png", {crossOrigin: "anonymous"}).then(function(img) {
console.log(img);
});
Fetches the JSON file at the specified input URL. If init is specified, it is passed along to the underlying call to fetch; see RequestInit for allowed fields.
Fetches the file at the specified input URL as text and then parses it as SVG. If init is specified, it is passed along to the underlying call to fetch; see RequestInit for allowed fields.
Fetches the text file at the specified input URL. If init is specified, it is passed along to the underlying call to fetch; see RequestInit for allowed fields.
# d3.tsv(input[, init][, row]) <>
Equivalent to d3.dsv with the tab character as the delimiter.
Fetches the file at the specified input URL as text and then parses it as XML. If init is specified, it is passed along to the underlying call to fetch; see RequestInit for allowed fields.