| Internet-Draft | CSV++ | February 2026 |
| Caldas | Expires 29 August 2026 | [Page] |
This document specifies CSV++ (CSV Plus Plus), an extension to the Comma-Separated Values (CSV) format defined in RFC 4180. CSV++ adds support for repeating fields (one-to-many relationships) and hierarchicalcomponent structures while maintaining backward compatibility with standard CSV parsers. The extension uses declarative syntax in column headers to define array fields and nested structures, enabling representation of complex real-world data while preserving the simplicity and human-readability of CSV.¶
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CSV++ extends the CSV format defined in [RFC4180] to support repeating fields (one-to-many relationships) and hierarchical component structures while maintaining backward compatibility with standard CSV parsers.¶
Traditional CSV files represent flat, tabular data. However, real-world data often contains:¶
CSV++ addresses these limitations by introducing:¶
While formats like JSON, XML, and YAML excel at representing hierarchical data, they introduce complexity and redundancy that may not be warranted for moderately structured datasets. CSV++ occupies a middle ground by extending CSV's tabular simplicity with hierarchical capabilities, making it particularly suitable for:¶
CSV++ maintains CSV's core strengths - simple tooling, wide compatibility, and human-readable plain text - while addressing its limitations with hierarchical data through declarative header syntax.¶
CSV++ is most appropriate for:¶
For deeply nested hierarchical data (4+ levels), document-oriented formats like JSON or XML may provide better readability and tooling support. CSV++ aims to extend CSV's capabilities for moderately structured data while preserving its tabular nature, not to replace hierarchical data formats.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
CSV++ files MUST conform to [RFC4180] with these specifications:¶
The field separator character is detected using the same rules as [RFC4180]. Parsers SHOULD auto-detect the field separator by:¶
The comma (,) is the conventional field separator for CSV++ files.¶
A field containing repeated values is declared in the header using square brackets:¶
column_name[delimiter] column_name[]¶
Where:¶
Delimiter Resolution:¶
The tilde (~) is the default array delimiter for first-level (top-level) arrays only. When an array appears nested inside a structure or another array, its delimiter MUST be explicitly declared and MUST differ from every delimiter already in use at enclosing levels. Omitting the delimiter (using []) is not permitted for nested arrays.¶
Rationale: because the default tilde (~) is already consumed as the outermost repetition separator, reusing it at an inner level would make the data ambiguous and unparseable. Requiring an explicit delimiter at each inner level keeps the format unambiguous and consistent with the general principle that every nesting level MUST use a distinct delimiter.¶
id,name,phone[|],email[;] 1,John,555-1234|555-5678|555-9012,john@work.com;john@home.com 2,Jane,555-4444,jane@company.com
id,name,phone[],email[] 1,John,555-1234~555-5678~555-9012,john@work.com~john@home.com 2,Jane,555-4444,jane@company.com
Empty values in repetitions are represented by consecutive delimiters:¶
id,tags[|] 1,urgent||priority
This represents three tags: "urgent", "" (empty), "priority"¶
A field containing structured components is declared using parentheses:¶
column_name[repetition_delim]component_delim(
comp1 component_delim comp2 ...)
column_name[]component_delim(comp1 component_delim comp2 ...)
column_name[](comp1 component_delim comp2 ...)
column_name(comp1 component_delim comp2 ...)
¶
Component Delimiter Resolution:¶
The caret (^) is recommended as the default component delimiter to avoid conflicts with common data characters.¶
id,name,geo^(lat^lon) 1,Location A,34.0522^-118.2437 2,Location B,40.7128^-74.0060
id,name,address[~]^(street^city^state^zip) 1,John,123 Main St^Los Angeles^CA^90210~456 Oak Ave^New York^NY^10001 2,Jane,789 Pine St^Boston^MA^02101
Structures can nest arbitrarily deep. Component names can themselves be arrays or structures. Within component names in (...), array and structure syntax applies recursively.¶
id,name,address[~]^(type^lines[;]^city^state^zip) 1,John,home^123 Main;Apt 4^LA^CA^90210~work^456 Oak^NY^NY^10001
id,location^(name^coords:(lat:lon)) 1,Office^34.05:-118.24 2,Home^40.71:-74.00
To maintain readability and parseability:¶
A leaf element is a value that will not be further split by any array or component delimiter -- it is the innermost atomic unit at its position in the CSV++ hierarchy. Examples of leaf elements:¶
RFC 4180 double-quote quoting MUST only be applied to leaf elements. Quoting a value that still contains unprocessed array or component delimiters causes those delimiters to be treated as literal characters, preventing the parser from splitting the value into its constituent parts. This MUST NOT be done.¶
Quoting is valid when applied to an individual leaf value to escape a delimiter character that appears literally within that value:¶
id,notes[|] 1,First note|"Second note with | pipe"|Third note
The second array item is a leaf; quoting it escapes the literal pipe. The outer pipe delimiters that separate the three items remain unquoted and function as separators.¶
id,address^(street^city^state^zip) 1,"123 Main St, Apt 4"^Springfield^IL^62701
The street component is a leaf; quoting it escapes the comma within the street address.¶
Quoting MUST NOT be applied to a value that contains unprocessed array or component delimiters. The following examples are invalid CSV++ and MUST be rejected by parsers:¶
id,notes[|] 1,"First note|Second note|Third note"
The field value is quoted at the array level. The pipe characters are treated as literal data, so the parser sees a single note rather than three. This defeats the purpose of the array declaration and is invalid.¶
id,address^(street^city^state^zip) 1,"123 Main St^Springfield^IL^62701"
The entire structured value is quoted. The component delimiters are swallowed by the quote, so no components can be extracted. This is invalid.¶
id,address[~]^(street^city^state^zip) 1,"123 Main St^Springfield^IL^62701"~456 Oak Ave^New York^NY^10001
The first repetition is quoted at the structure level, preventing component splitting. To escape a literal tilde within a component leaf, quote only that leaf value.¶
CSV++ parsers process files in two phases:¶
The ABNF grammar in Appendix A provides a formal specification. Implementations MUST handle arbitrary nesting depth up to their documented limits.¶
Implementations SHOULD validate:¶
CSV is a long-established and widely deployed format with well-known security considerations. As a result, most mature implementations already incorporate mitigations for common CSV-related risks. This specification builds on [RFC4180] and remains fully backward compatible, but introduces additional structural semantics that may increase parser complexity and therefore require corresponding care in implementations.¶
Malicious data may attempt to inject delimiters or structural markers to influence parsing behavior. Implementations MUST respect [RFC4180] quoting rules. Delimiters and structural markers appearing within quoted fields MUST be treated as literal values.¶
The default delimiters defined by this specification are intentionally chosen to be neutral and to avoid characters commonly associated with executable or control semantics. In addition, the explicit declaration of any non-default delimiters in the header allows parsers to establish expectations up front, reducing the likelihood of delimiter injection or ambiguous interpretation.¶
As with traditional CSV, some spreadsheet applications interpret certain values (e.g. those beginning with "=", "+", "-", or "@") as formulas. This specification does not attempt to redefine or mitigate spreadsheet formula evaluation; producers and consumers SHOULD continue to apply established best practices when targeting such environments.¶
Deeply nested, malformed, or highly repetitive structures may lead to excessive CPU or memory consumption during parsing.¶
Implementations SHOULD:¶
CSV++ files may transit through tools unaware of the extended semantics, potentially resulting in loss of structure or unintended reinterpretation. Implementations used in security-sensitive pipelines SHOULD explicitly validate inputs and avoid implicit trust when moving between CSV-aware and CSV++-aware tools.¶
Files SHOULD use UTF-8 encoding. Implementations SHOULD detect and handle encoding errors. A BOM (Byte Order Mark) MAY be present.¶
This document has no IANA actions.¶
CSV++ files use the text/csv media type as defined in
[RFC4180]. The format is fully backward compatible with
standard CSV parsers; implementations unaware of the extensions defined
in this document will process CSV++ files as conventional CSV, ignoring
extended semantics.¶
Changes from -01 to -02:¶
Changes from -00 to -01:¶
csvpp-file = header-row data-rows
header-row = field *(field-sep field) CRLF
data-rows = *(data-row CRLF)
data-row = value *(field-sep value)
field = simple-field / array-field /
struct-field / array-struct-field
simple-field = name
array-field = name "[" [delimiter] "]"
struct-field = name [component-delim] "(" component-list ")"
array-struct-field = name "[" [delimiter] "]"
[component-delim] "(" component-list ")"
component-list = component *(component-delim component)
component = simple-field / array-field /
struct-field / array-struct-field
name = 1*field-char
field-char = ALPHA / DIGIT / "_" / "-"
delimiter = CHAR
component-delim = CHAR
value = quoted-value / unquoted-value
quoted-value = DQUOTE *(textdata / escaped-quote) DQUOTE
unquoted-value = *textdata
escaped-quote = DQUOTE DQUOTE
textdata = <any character except DQUOTE, CRLF, or field-sep>
¶
id,cust,items[~]^(sku^name^qty^price^opts[;]:(k:v)) 1,Alice,S1^Shirt^2^20^sz:M;col:blu~S2^Pant^1^50^sz:32
This specification was inspired by the HL7 Version 2.x delimiter hierarchy and the need for a simple, human-readable format for hierarchical data that maintains compatibility with existing CSV tools.¶