Ghost/ghost/members-csv
Naz 840deaf8d7
Restricted members importer to ignore "products" column
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/1076
refs 70229e4fd3 (diff-b67ecda91b5bd79c598e5c5a9ec2ccf28dbfab6a924b21352273865e07cd7ceaR57)

- The "products" column has not been doing any logic anything since at least 5.20.0 (see refed commit). The concept of columns in the export file was mostly there for analytical/data filtering reasons - so the user could analyze their exports. CSV was never a good suite for relational data that "products" (or now tiers) represent
- The "tiers" column will still be present in the exported CSV file, but there is not going to be any logic attached to it.
- The only columns that can effect the "tiers" state of the member are: "complimentary_plan" (assign default tier to the member) and "stripe_customer_id" (pulls in subscription/tier data from Stripe)
2022-10-24 18:06:02 +08:00
..
lib Restricted members importer to ignore "products" column 2022-10-24 18:06:02 +08:00
test Restricted members importer to ignore "products" column 2022-10-24 18:06:02 +08:00
.eslintrc.js
index.js
package.json
README.md

Members Csv

Usage

There are 2 parts to this package: CSV to JSON serialization and JSON to CSV serialization. The module exposes 2 methods to fullfil these: parse and unparse respectively.

To parse CSV file and convert it to JSON use parse method, e.g.:

const {parse} = require('@tryghost/members-csv');

const mapping = {
    email: 'csv_column_containing_email_data',
    name: 'csv_column_containing_names_data'
}
const membersJSON = await parse(csvFilePath, mapping);

csvFilePath - is a path to the CSV file that has to be processed mapping - optional parameter, it's a hash describing custom mapping for CSV columns to JSON properties

Example mapping for CSV having email under correo_electronico column would look like following:

{
    email: 'correo_electronico'
}

To unparse JSON to CSV compatible with members format use following:

const {unparse} = require('@tryghost/members-csv');

const members = [{
    email: 'email@example.com',
    name: 'Sam Memberino',
    note: 'Early supporter'
}];

const membersCSV = unparse(members);

console.log(membersCSV);
// -> "id,email,name,note,subscribed_to_emails,complimentary_plan,stripe_customer_id,created_at,deleted_at,labels\r\n,email@example.com,Sam Memberino,Early supporter,,,,,,"