I have the following method:
public byte[] WriteCsvWithHeaderToMemory<T>(IEnumerable<T> records) where T : class
{
using (var memoryStream = new MemoryStream())
using (var streamWriter = new StreamWriter(memoryStream))
using (var csvWriter = new CsvWriter(streamWriter))
{
csvWriter.WriteRecords<T>(records);
return memoryStream.ToArray();
}
}
Which is being called with a list of objects - eventually from a database, but since something is not working I'm just populating a static collection. The objects being passed are as follows:
using CsvHelper.Configuration;
namespace Application.Models.ViewModels
{
public class Model
{
[CsvField(Name = "Field 1", Ignore = false)]
public string Field1 { get; set; }
[CsvField(Name = "Statistic 1", Ignore = false)]
public int Stat1{ get; set; }
[CsvField(Name = "Statistic 2", Ignore = false)]
public int Stat2{ get; set; }
[CsvField(Name = "Statistic 3", Ignore = false)]
public int Stat3{ get; set; }
[CsvField(Name = "Statistic 4", Ignore = false)]
public int Stat4{ get; set; }
}
}
What I'm trying to do is write a collection to a csv for download in an MVC application. Every time I try to write to the method though, the MemoryStream is coming back with zero length and nothing being passed to it. I've used this before, but for some reason it's just not working - I'm somewhat confused. Can anyone point out to me what I've done wrong here?
Cheers
You already have a using
block which is great. That will flush your writer for you. You can just change your code slightly for it to work.
using (var memoryStream = new MemoryStream())
{
using (var streamWriter = new StreamWriter(memoryStream))
using (var csvWriter = new CsvWriter(streamWriter))
{
csvWriter.WriteRecords<T>(records);
} // StreamWriter gets flushed here.
return memoryStream.ToArray();
}
If you turn AutoFlush
on, you need to be careful. This will flush after every write. If your stream is a network stream and over the wire, it will be very slow.