short answer
variant A: in2csv (csvkit) + csvtool
- wrap your json in brackets
- use
in2csv's -I option to avoid unexpected behavior
- use a command to transpose the two-row CSV, e.g. csvtool
echo "[$the_json]" | in2csv -I -f json | csvtool transpose -
variant B: use jq instead
This is a solution using only jq: (https://stedolan.github.io/jq/)
echo "$the_json" | jq -r 'to_entries[] | [.key, .value] | @csv'
taken from How to map an object to arrays so it can be converted to csv?
long answer (csvkit + csvtool)
the input
in2csv -f json expects a list of JSON objects, so you need to wrap the single object ({...}) into square brackets ([{...}]).
On POSIX compatible shells, write
echo "[$the_json]"
which will print
[{
"whatever": 2342,
"otherwise": 119,
"and": 1,
"so": 2,
"on": 3
}]
the csvkit command
You may pipe the above data directly into in2csv. However, you might run into issues with the ”type inference“ (CSV data interpretation) feature of csvkit:
$ echo "[$the_json]" | in2csv -f json
whatever,otherwise,and,so,on
2342,119,True,2,3
1 has become True. For details, see the Tips and Troubleshooting part of the docs. It's suggested to turn off type inference using the -I option:
$ echo "[$the_json]" | in2csv -I -f json
whatever,otherwise,and,so,on
2342,119,1,2,3
Now the result is as expected
transpose the data
Still, you need to transpose the data. The csvkit docs say:
To transpose CSVs, consider csvtool.
(csvtool is available on github, opam, debian and probably other distribution channels.)
Using csvkit + csvtool, your final command looks like this:
echo "[$the_json]" | in2csv -I -f json | csvtool transpose -
with the hyphen (-) meaning to take the data from stdin. This is the result:
whatever,2342
otherwise,119
and,1
so,2
on,3
that's it.
I think there is no one-liner solution with csvtool only, you'll need in2csv. You may, however, use jq instead, see the short answer.
FTR, I'm using csvkit version 1.0.3.