beancount-dkb | Beancount Importers for DKB ( Deutsche Kredit Bank | CSV Processing library

 by   siddhantgoel Python Version: 0.19.0 License: MIT

kandi X-RAY | beancount-dkb Summary

kandi X-RAY | beancount-dkb Summary

beancount-dkb is a Python library typically used in Financial Services, Banks, Payments, Utilities, CSV Processing applications. beancount-dkb has no bugs, it has no vulnerabilities, it has a Permissive License and it has low support. However beancount-dkb build file is not available. You can install using 'pip install beancount-dkb' or download it from GitHub, PyPI.

beancount-dkb provides an Importer for converting CSV exports of DKB (Deutsche Kreditbank) account summaries to the Beancount format.
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            kandi-support Support

              beancount-dkb has a low active ecosystem.
              It has 24 star(s) with 13 fork(s). There are 2 watchers for this library.
              There were 4 major release(s) in the last 12 months.
              There are 1 open issues and 8 have been closed. On average issues are closed in 32 days. There are 1 open pull requests and 0 closed requests.
              It has a neutral sentiment in the developer community.
              The latest version of beancount-dkb is 0.19.0

            kandi-Quality Quality

              beancount-dkb has 0 bugs and 0 code smells.

            kandi-Security Security

              beancount-dkb has no vulnerabilities reported, and its dependent libraries have no vulnerabilities reported.
              beancount-dkb code analysis shows 0 unresolved vulnerabilities.
              There are 0 security hotspots that need review.

            kandi-License License

              beancount-dkb is licensed under the MIT License. This license is Permissive.
              Permissive licenses have the least restrictions, and you can use them in most projects.

            kandi-Reuse Reuse

              beancount-dkb releases are not available. You will need to build from source code and install.
              Deployable package is available in PyPI.
              beancount-dkb has no build file. You will be need to create the build yourself to build the component from source.
              Installation instructions, examples and code snippets are available.
              It has 923 lines of code, 44 functions and 7 files.
              It has high code complexity. Code complexity directly impacts maintainability of the code.

            Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA

            kandi has reviewed beancount-dkb and discovered the below as its top functions. This is intended to give you an instant insight into beancount-dkb implemented functionality, and help decide if they suit your requirements.
            • Extract entries from a CSV file .
            • Initialize the Card object .
            • Return the date of a file .
            • Format a number in decimal places .
            • Check if the file is valid .
            • Check if the given line is a valid header .
            Get all kandi verified functions for this library.

            beancount-dkb Key Features

            No Key Features are available at this moment for beancount-dkb.

            beancount-dkb Examples and Code Snippets

            No Code Snippets are available at this moment for beancount-dkb.

            Community Discussions

            QUESTION

            Peformance issues reading CSV files in a Java (Spring Boot) application
            Asked 2022-Jan-29 at 12:37

            I am currently working on a spring based API which has to transform csv data and to expose them as json. it has to read big CSV files which will contain more than 500 columns and 2.5 millions lines each. I am not guaranteed to have the same header between files (each file can have a completly different header than another), so I have no way to create a dedicated class which would provide mapping with the CSV headers. Currently the api controller is calling a csv service which reads the CSV data using a BufferReader.

            The code works fine on my local machine but it is very slow : it takes about 20 seconds to process 450 columns and 40 000 lines. To improve speed processing, I tried to implement multithreading with Callable(s) but I am not familiar with that kind of concept, so the implementation might be wrong.

            Other than that the api is running out of heap memory when running on the server, I know that a solution would be to enhance the amount of available memory but I suspect that the replace() and split() operations on strings made in the Callable(s) are responsible for consuming a large amout of heap memory.

            So I actually have several questions :

            #1. How could I improve the speed of the CSV reading ?

            #2. Is the multithread implementation with Callable correct ?

            #3. How could I reduce the amount of heap memory used in the process ?

            #4. Do you know of a different approach to split at comas and replace the double quotes in each CSV line ? Would StringBuilder be of any healp here ? What about StringTokenizer ?

            Here below the CSV method

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2022-Jan-29 at 02:56

            I don't think that splitting this work onto multiple threads is going to provide much improvement, and may in fact make the problem worse by consuming even more memory. The main problem is using too much heap memory, and the performance problem is likely to be due to excessive garbage collection when the remaining available heap is very small (but it's best to measure and profile to determine the exact cause of performance problems).

            The memory consumption would be less from the replace and split operations, and more from the fact that the entire contents of the file need to be read into memory in this approach. Each line may not consume much memory, but multiplied by millions of lines, it all adds up.

            If you have enough memory available on the machine to assign a heap size large enough to hold the entire contents, that will be the simplest solution, as it won't require changing the code.

            Otherwise, the best way to deal with large amounts of data in a bounded amount of memory is to use a streaming approach. This means that each line of the file is processed and then passed directly to the output, without collecting all of the lines in memory in between. This will require changing the method signature to use a return type other than List. Assuming you are using Java 8 or later, the Stream API can be very helpful. You could rewrite the method like this:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/70900587

            QUESTION

            Inserting json column in Bigquery
            Asked 2021-Jun-02 at 06:55

            I have a JSON that I want to insert into BQ. The column data type is STRING. Here is the sample JSON value.

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-02 at 06:55

            I think there is an issue with how you escape the double quotes. I could reproduce the issue you describe, and fixed it by escaping the double quotes with " instead of a backslash \:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67799161

            QUESTION

            Avoid repeated checks in loop
            Asked 2021-Apr-23 at 11:51

            I'm sorry if this has been asked before. It probably has, but I just have not been able to find it. On with the question:

            I often have loops which are initialized with certain conditions that affect or (de)activate certain behaviors inside them, but do not drastically change the general loop logic. These conditions do not change through the loop's operation, but have to be checked every iteration anyways. Is there a way to optimized said loop in a pythonic way to avoid doing the same check every single time? I understand this would be a compiler's job in any compiled language, but there ain't no compiler here.

            Now, for a specific example, imagine I have a function that parses a CSV file with a format somewhat like this, where you do not know in advance the columns that will be present on it:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Apr-23 at 11:36

            Your code seems right to me, performance-wise.

            You are doing your checks at the beginning of the loop:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67228959

            QUESTION

            golang syscall, locked to thread
            Asked 2021-Apr-21 at 15:29

            I am attempting to create an program to scrape xml files. I'm experimenting with go because of it's goroutines. I have several thousand files, so some type of multiprocessing is almost a necessity...

            I got a program to successfully run, and convert xml to csv(as a test, not quite the end result), on a test set of files, but when run with the full set of files, it gives this:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Apr-21 at 15:25

            I apologize for not including the correct error. as the comments pointed out i was doing something dumb and creating a routine for every file. Thanks to JimB for correcting me, and torek for providing a solution and this link. https://gobyexample.com/worker-pools

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67182393

            QUESTION

            How to break up a string into a vector fast?
            Asked 2020-Jul-31 at 21:54

            I am processing CSV and using the following code to process a single line.

            play with code

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2020-Jul-31 at 21:54

            The fastest way to do something is to not do it at all.

            If you can ensure that your source string s will outlive the use of the returned vector, you could replace your std::vector with std::vector which would point to the beginning of each substring. You then replace your identified delimiters with zeroes.

            [EDIT] I have not moved up to C++17, so no string_view for me :)

            NOTE: typical CSV is different from what you imply; it doesn't use escape for the comma, but surrounds entries with comma in it with double quotes. But I assume you know your data.

            Implementation:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/63197165

            QUESTION

            CSV Regex skipping first comma
            Asked 2020-May-11 at 22:02

            I am using regex for CSV processing where data can be in Quotes, or no quotes. But if there is just a comma at the starting column, it skips it.

            Here is the regex I am using: (?:,"|^")(""|[\w\W]*?)(?=",|"$)|(?:,(?!")|^(?!"))([^,]*?|)(?=$|,)

            Now the example data I am using is: ,"data",moredata,"Data" Which should have 4 matches ["","data","moredata","Data"], but it always skips the first comma. It is fine if there is quotes on the first column, or it is not blank, but if it is empty with no quotes, it ignores it.

            Here is a sample code I am using for testing purposes, it is written in Dart:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2020-May-11 at 22:02

            Investigating your expression

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/61584722

            Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network

            Vulnerabilities

            No vulnerabilities reported

            Install beancount-dkb

            In case you prefer installing from the Github repository, please note that master is the development branch so stable is what you should be installing from.

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            Contributions are most welcome!. Please make sure you have Python 3.6+ and Poetry installed.
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          • PyPI

            pip install beancount-dkb

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            https://github.com/siddhantgoel/beancount-dkb.git

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            gh repo clone siddhantgoel/beancount-dkb

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            git@github.com:siddhantgoel/beancount-dkb.git

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