Table To Table (Conversion)

Summary

Exports the rows of a table to a different table.

Legacy:

This is a deprecated tool. This functionality has been replaced by the Export Table tool.

Usage

  • The tool copies the rows of a table, table view, feature class, feature layer, delimited file, or raster with an attribute table to a new geodatabase or dBASE table or a delimited file.

  • This tool supports the following table formats as input:

    • Geodatabase
    • dBASE (.dbf)
    • Microsoft Excel worksheets (.xls and .xlsx)
    • Memory-based tables
    • Delimited files
      • Comma-delimited files (.csv, .txt, and .asc)
      • Tab-delimited files (.tsv and .tab)
      • Pipe-delimited files (.psv)

    For delimited files, the first row of the input file is used as the field names on the output table. Field names cannot contain spaces or special characters (such as $ or *), and an error will occur if the first row of the input file contains spaces or special characters.

  • If the Output Location parameter value is not a geodatabase, BLOB or raster fields will not be included. GlobalID fields will be converted to text fields.

  • The tool can be used to output a delimited file by adding one of the following file extensions to the output name in a folder workspace:

    • Comma-delimited files (.csv, .txt, or .asc)
    • Tab-delimited files (.tsv or .tab)
    • Pipe-delimited files (.psv)

  • To manage the fields in the output dataset and the contents of those fields, use the Field Map parameter.

    • To change the field order, select a field name and drag it to the new position.
    • The default data type of an output field is the same as the data type of the first input field (of that name) it encounters. You can manually change the data type at any time to any other valid data type.
    • The available merge rules are first, last, join, sum, mean, median, mode, minimum, maximum, standard deviation, and count.
    • When using the Join merge rule, you can specify a delimiter such as a space, comma, period, dash, and so on. To use a space, ensure that the pointer is at the start of the input box and press the Spacebar once.
    • You can specify the start and end positions of text fields using the format option.
    • Do not perform standard deviation on a single input because values cannot be divided by zero, so standard deviation is not a valid option for single inputs.

    Learn more about mapping fields in scripts

  • When converting geodatabase data that has subtypes or domains to a dBASE table, both the subtype and domain codes and descriptions can be included in the output. Use the Transfer field domain descriptions geoprocessing environment to do this. By default, only domain and subtype codes will be included in the output, not descriptions.

    Note:

    Converting to a dBASE table with subtype and domain descriptions may take more time (slower performance) than without descriptions. If subtype and domain descriptions are not required in the dBASE table output, leave the Transfer field domain descriptions environment unchecked for best performance.

Parameters

LabelExplanationData Type
Input Rows

The input table that will be exported to a new table.

Table View; Raster Layer
Output Location

The destination where the output table will be written.

Workspace
Output Name

The name of the output table.

If the output location is a folder, include an extension such as .csv, .txt, or .dbf to export the table to that format. If the output location is a geodatabase, do not specify an extension.

String
Expression
(Optional)

An SQL expression that will be used to select a subset of records.

SQL Expression
Field Map
(Optional)

The attribute fields that will be in the output with the corresponding field properties and source fields. By default, all fields from the inputs will be included.

Fields can be added, deleted, renamed, and reordered, and you can change their properties.

Merge rules allow you to specify how values from two or more input fields will be merged or combined into a single output value. The following merge rules can be used to determine how the output field will be populated with values:

  • First—Use the input fields' first value.
  • Last—Use the input fields' last value.
  • Join—Concatenate (join) the input field values.
  • Sum—Calculate the total of the input field values.
  • Mean—Calculate the mean (average) of the input field values.
  • Median—Calculate the median (middle) of the input field values.
  • Mode—Use the value with the highest frequency.
  • Min—Use the minimum value of all the input field values.
  • Max—Use the maximum value of all the input field values.
  • Standard deviation—Use the standard deviation classification method on all the input field values.
  • Count—Find the number of records included in the calculation.

Field Mappings
Config Keyword
(Optional)

Specifies the default storage parameters (configurations) for geodatabases in a relational database management system (RDBMS). This setting is applicable only when using enterprise geodatabase tables.

Configuration keywords are set by the database administrator.

Learn more about configuration keywords

String

Derived Output

LabelExplanationData Type
Output Table

The output table.

Table

arcpy.conversion.TableToTable(in_rows, out_path, out_name, {where_clause}, {field_mapping}, {config_keyword})
NameExplanationData Type
in_rows

The input table that will be exported to a new table.

Table View; Raster Layer
out_path

The destination where the output table will be written.

Workspace
out_name

The name of the output table.

If the output location is a folder, include an extension such as .csv, .txt, or .dbf to export the table to that format. If the output location is a geodatabase, do not specify an extension.

String
where_clause
(Optional)

An SQL expression that will be used to select a subset of records.

Learn more about SQL query expressions

SQL Expression
field_mapping
(Optional)

The attribute fields that will be in the output with the corresponding field properties and source fields. By default, all fields from the inputs will be included.

Fields can be added, deleted, renamed, and reordered, and you can change their properties.

Merge rules allow you to specify how values from two or more input fields will be merged or combined into a single output value. The following merge rules can be used to determine how the output field will be populated with values:

  • First—Use the input fields' first value.
  • Last—Use the input fields' last value.
  • Join—Concatenate (join) the input field values.
  • Sum—Calculate the total of the input field values.
  • Mean—Calculate the mean (average) of the input field values.
  • Median—Calculate the median (middle) of the input field values.
  • Mode—Use the value with the highest frequency.
  • Min—Use the minimum value of all the input field values.
  • Max—Use the maximum value of all the input field values.
  • Standard deviation—Use the standard deviation classification method on all the input field values.
  • Count—Find the number of records included in the calculation.

In Python, you can use the FieldMappings class to define this parameter.

Field Mappings
config_keyword
(Optional)

Specifies the default storage parameters (configurations) for geodatabases in a relational database management system (RDBMS). This setting is applicable only when using enterprise geodatabase tables.

Configuration keywords are set by the database administrator.

Learn more about configuration keywords

String

Derived Output

NameExplanationData Type
out_table

The output table.

Table

Code sample

TableToTable example 1 (Python window)

The following Python window script demonstrates how to use the TableToTable function in immediate mode.

import arcpy
arcpy.env.workspace = "C:/data"
arcpy.conversion.TableToTable("vegtable.dbf", "C:/output/output.gdb", "vegtable")
TableToTable example 2 (stand-alone script)

The following stand-alone script demonstrates how to use the TableToTable function.

# Description: Use TableToTable with an expression to create a subset
#  of the original table.
 
# Import system modules
import arcpy
 
# Set environment settings
arcpy.env.workspace = "C:/data"
 
# Set local variables
inTable = "vegtable.dbf"
outLocation = "C:/output/output.gdb"
outTable = "estuarine"

# Set the expression, with help from the AddFieldDelimiters function, to select 
# the appropriate field delimiters for the data type
expression = arcpy.AddFieldDelimiters(arcpy.env.workspace, "VEG_TYPE") + " = 'Estuarine'"
 
# Run TableToTable
arcpy.conversion.TableToTable(inTable, outLocation, outTable, expression)

Licensing information

  • Basic: Yes
  • Standard: Yes
  • Advanced: Yes

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