Concatenate comma separated value files. SYNTAX: csvcat [] filename [filename...] -c col[,col...], --columns=col[,col...] -d name, --dialect=name --debug -h --help --quiet --skip-headers -v --verbose=level ARGUMENTS: The names of comma separated value files, such as might be exported from a spreadsheet or database program. OPTIONS: -c col[,col...], --columns=col[,col...] Limit the output to the specified columns. Columns are identified by number, starting with 0. -d name, --dialect=name Specify the output dialect name. Defaults to "excel". --debug Set debug mode to see tracebacks. -h Displays abbreviated help message. --help Displays verbose help message. --quiet Turn on quiet mode. --skip-headers Treat the first line of each file as a header, and only include one copy in the output. -v Increment the verbose level. Higher levels are more verbose. The default is 1. --verbose=level Set the verbose level. EXAMPLES: To concatenate 2 files, including all columns and headers: $ csvcat file1.csv file2.csv To concatenate 2 files, skipping the headers in the second file: $ csvcat --skip-headers file1.csv file2.csv To concatenate 2 files, including only the first and third columns: $ csvcat --col 0,2 file1.csv file2.csv OUTPUT DIALECTS: excel-tab excel