Update doc, clarify the use and scope of the flag headers.

This commit is contained in:
Daniel
2019-10-27 21:00:21 +01:00
parent 08a6759520
commit 87d15a1529
2 changed files with 7 additions and 1 deletions
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@@ -8,6 +8,7 @@ Here is a list of passed and present much-appreciated contributors:
Benjamin Wohlwend
Bruno Soares
Claude Paroz
Daniel Santos
Erik Youngren
Hugo van Kemenade
Iuri de Silvio
+6 -1
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@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ You can now start filling this :class:`Dataset <tablib.Dataset>` object with dat
.. admonition:: Example Context
From here on out, if you see ``data``, assume that it's a fresh
From here on out, if you see ``data``, assume that it's a fresh
:class:`Dataset <tablib.Dataset>` object.
@@ -110,6 +110,11 @@ Creating a :class:`tablib.Dataset` object by importing a pre-existing file is si
This detects what sort of data is being passed in, and uses an appropriate formatter to do the import. So you can import from a variety of different file types.
.. admonition::
When the format is :class:`csv <Dataset.csv>`, :class:`tsv <Dataset.tsv>`, :class:`dbf <Dataset.dbf>`, :class:`xls <Dataset.xls>` or :class:`xlsx <Dataset.xlsx>`, and this does not have headers, the import should be done as follows ::
imported_data = Dataset().load(open('data.csv').read(), headers=False)
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