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I need to view (large) CSV files on my Mac. I could use something like OpenOffice, but unfortunately it's pretty big and slow. I'm wondering if there's a Mac equivalent of some of the Windows tools mentioned on this SU question.

Hay
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    Adding on my own remark about the slowness of OpenOffice: the new LibreOffice is a *lot* faster in starting up than the old Oracle version. Still a bit heavy for just viewing CSV files though. – Hay Feb 25 '11 at 15:19

3 Answers3

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Quick Look the file. There are two methods of doing so.

  1. Right click the file, in the context menu, select 'Quick Look "file you right-clicked"'.
  2. Click the file, keyboard shortcut Command-Y.
paragbaxi
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Update 7/24/2019

Commenter @Boris Yakubchik points out there's a new CSV app: Tablecruncher - tablecruncher.com . I have not tested it.

Update 4/13/2017

There's a new desktop app for viewing and analyzing CSV files on macOS: Tad.

Update 9/8/2016

There's a new cross-platform desktop app for viewing CSV files: Comma Chameleon.

Original answer

Open Refine weighs in at 50.6 MB, but I don't think that's the 'weight' you're interested in. Anyway I think it's a good tool for any size dataset. They make it faster by paginating the data.

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Not sure how light-weight it is, but I found this with a quick Google search: XTabulator 2

XTabulator is a tabular data file editor for Mac OS X. With XTabulator, you can edit, manipulate, > massage, slice, and dice comma-separated (CSV), tab-separated (TAB), or anything-separated files quickly and easily.

Jason Sundram
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Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
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