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rubyXL

<img src=“https://badge.fury.io/rb/rubyXL.svg” alt=“Gem Version” /> <img src=“https://codeclimate.com/github/weshatheleopard/rubyXL.png” alt=“Code Climate” />

This gem supports operating on xlsx files (Open XML format). While it is capable of properly parsing the entire OOXML structure, its current main emphasis is on reading files produced by MS Excel, making minor modifications to them and saving them to be opened again, while preserving as much of the structure as possible.

Please note that proprietary binary xls format is not supported.

To Install:

gem install rubyXL

To Use:

require 'rubyXL' # Assuming rubygems is already required

Parsing an existing workbook

workbook = RubyXL::Parser.parse("path/to/Excel/file.xlsx")

Creating a new Workbook

workbook = RubyXL::Workbook.new

Accessing

Accessing a Worksheet

workbook.worksheets[0] # Returns first worksheet
workbook[0]            # Returns first worksheet
workbook['Sheet1']     # Finds and returns worksheet titled "Sheet1"

Accessing a Row (Array of Cells)

Please note that worksheet is a sparse array of rows. Your code must expect that any row it plucks from the array may be nil.

worksheet = workbook[0]
worksheet.sheet_data[0] # Returns first row of the worksheet
worksheet[0]            # Returns first row of the worksheet

Accessing a Cell object

Please note that row is a sparse array of cells. Your code must expect that any cell it plucks from the array may be nil.

worksheet = workbook[0]
worksheet.sheet_data[0][0] # Returns cell A1 in the worksheet
worksheet[0][0]            # Returns cell A1 in the worksheet

Wrappers for accessing Cell properties

cell = workbook[0][0][0]
cell.is_struckthrough  # Returns +true+ if the cell is struckthrough, other boolean properties have same syntax
cell.font_name
cell.font_size
cell.font_color
cell.fill_color
cell.horizontal_alignment
cell.vertical_alignment
cell.get_border(:top)
cell.get_border_color(:top)

Wrappers for accessing Row properties

Please note: these methods are being phased out in favor of the OOXML object model.

worksheet = workbook[0]
worksheet.get_row_fill(0)
worksheet.get_row_font_name(0)
worksheet.get_row_font_size(0)
worksheet.get_row_font_color(0)
worksheet.is_row_underlined(0)
worksheet.get_row_height(0)
worksheet.get_row_alignment(0, true)
worksheet.get_row_alignment(0, false)
worksheet.get_row_border(0, :right)
worksheet.get_row_border_color(0, :right)

Accessing column properties

Please note: these methods are being phased out in favor of the OOXML object model.

worksheet = workbook[0]
worksheet.get_column_fill(0)
worksheet.get_column_font_name(0)
worksheet.get_column_font_size(0)
worksheet.get_column_font_color(0)
worksheet.is_column_underlined(0)
worksheet.get_column_width(0)
worksheet.get_column_alignment(0, :horizontal)
worksheet.get_column_alignment(0, :vertical)
worksheet.get_column_border(0, :right)
worksheet.get_column_border_color(0, :right)

Table reading

In order to discourage unnecessary reshuffling of data in memory, methods extract_data and get_table are being deprecated. You should access and iterate through rows and cells directly:

worksheet.each { |row|
   row && row.cells.each { |cell|
     val = cell && cell.value
     do_whatever_you_want(val)
   }
}

Modifying

Adding Worksheets

worksheet = workbook.add_worksheet('Sheet2')

Renaming Worksheets

worksheet.sheet_name = 'Cool New Name'

Adding Cells

worksheet.add_cell(0, 0, 'A1')      # Sets cell A1 to string "A1"
worksheet.add_cell(0, 1, '', 'A1')  # Sets formula in the cell B1 to '=A1'

Changing Cells

worksheet[0][0].change_contents("", worksheet[0][0].formula) # Sets value of cell A1 to empty string, preserves formula

Changing Fonts

worksheet.sheet_data[0][0].change_font_bold(true) # Makes A1 bold
worksheet.change_row_italics(0,true)              # Makes first row italicized
worksheet.change_column_font_name(0, 'Courier')   # Makes first column have font Courier

Changing Fills

worksheet.sheet_data[0][0].change_fill('0ba53d')  # Sets A1 to have fill #0ba53d
worksheet.change_row_fill(0, '0ba53d')            # Sets first row to have fill #0ba53d
worksheet.change_column_fill(0, '0ba53d')         # Sets first column to have fill #0ba53d

Changing Borders

# Possible weights: hairline, thin, medium, thick
# Possible "directions": top, bottom, left, right, diagonal
worksheet.sheet_data[0][0].change_border(:top, 'thin')  # Sets A1 to have a top, thin border
worksheet.change_row_border(0, :left, 'hairline')       # Sets first row to have a left, hairline border
worksheet.change_column_border(0, :diagonal, 'medium')  # Sets first column to have diagonal, medium border

# Set the border style first so there's something to color.
worksheet.change_row_border_color(0, :top, '0ba53d')    # Sets first row to have a green top border
worksheet.change_column_border_color(0, :top, '0ba53d') # Sets first column to have a green top border

Changing Alignment

Horizontal

center, distributed, justify, left, right

worksheet.sheet_data[0][0].change_horizontal_alignment('center') # Sets A1 to be centered
worksheet.change_row_horizontal_alignment(0, 'justify')          # Sets first row to be justified
worksheet.change_column_horizontal_alignment(0, 'right')         # Sets first column to be right-aligned
Vertical

bottom, center, distributed, top

worksheet.sheet_data[0][0].change_vertical_alignment('bottom')  # Sets A1 to be bottom aligned
worksheet.change_row_vertical_alignment(0, 'distributed')       # Sets first row to be distributed vertically
worksheet.change_column_vertical_alignment(0, 'top')            # Sets first column to be top aligned

Changing Row Height

worksheet.change_row_height(0, 30)  # Sets first row height to 30

Changing Column Width

worksheet.change_column_width(0, 30)  # Sets first column width to 30

Merging Cells

worksheet.merge_cells(0, 0, 1, 1)  # Merges A1:B2

Insert Row

This method will insert a row at specified index, pushing all rows below it down. It also copies styles from row above.

WARNING: Use of this method WILL break formulas referencing cells which have been moved, as the formulas do not adapt to the shifted rows

worksheet.insert_row(1)

Insert Column

This method will insert a column at specified index, pushing all columns to the right of it one to the right. It also copies styles from column to the left

WARNING: Use of this method WILL break formulas referencing cells which have been moved, as the formulas do not adapt to the shifted columns

worksheet.insert_column(1)

Delete Row

This method will delete a row at specified index, pushing all rows below it up.

WARNING: Use of this method WILL break formulas referencing cells which have been moved, as the formulas do not adapt to the shifted rows

worksheet.delete_row(1)

Delete Column

This method will delete a column at specified index, pushing all columns to the right of it left.

WARNING: Use of this method WILL break formulas referencing cells which have been moved, as the formulas do not adapt to the shifted columns

worksheet.delete_column(1)

Insert Cell

This method will insert a cell at specified position. It takes a :right or :down option, to shift cells either left or down upon inserting (nil means replacing the cell)

WARNING: Use of this method WILL break formulas referencing cells which have been moved, as the formulas do not adapt to the shifted cells

worksheet.insert_cell(0, 0, "blah", formula = nil, :right)  # Inserts cell at A1, shifts cells in first row right
worksheet.insert_cell(0, 0, "blah", formula = nil, :down)   # Inserts cell at A1, shifts cells in first column down
worksheet.insert_cell(0, 0, "blah")                         # Inserts cell at A1, shifts nothing

Delete Cell

This method will delete a cell at specified position. It takes a :left or :up option, to shift cells either up or left upon deletion (nil means simply deleting the cell contents)

WARNING: Use of this method WILL break formulas referencing cells which have been moved, as the formulas do not adapt to the shifted cells

worksheet.delete_cell(0, 0, :left)  # Deletes A1, shifts contents of first row left
worksheet.delete_cell(0, 0, :up)    # Deletes A1, shifts contents of first column up
worksheet.delete_cell(0, 0)         # Deletes A1, does not shift cells

Modifying Cell Format

cell = worksheet[0][0]
cell.set_number_format '0.0000%'    # For formats, see https://support.office.com/en-us/article/5026bbd6-04bc-48cd-bf33-80f18b4eae68

I/O

By default, the gem operates with files on the local filesystem:

workbook = RubyXL::Parser.parse("path/to/Excel/file.xlsx")
workbook.write("path/to/desired/Excel/file.xlsx")

It can also operate on StringIO objects, thus eliminating the need to save the xlsx file to disk. This capability comes in handy for web servers.

workbook = RubyXL::Parser.parse_buffer(buffer)
workbook.stream

Miscellaneous

Reference.ind2ref(0,0) == 'A1'    # Converts row and column index to Excel-style cell reference
Reference.ref2ind('A1') == [0, 0] # Converts Excel-style cell reference to row and column index

For more information

Take a look at the files in spec/lib/ for rspecs on most methods

Contributing to rubyXL

  • Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn’t been implemented or the bug hasn’t been fixed yet

  • Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn’t requested it and/or contributed it

  • Fork the project

  • Start a feature/bugfix branch

  • Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution

  • Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don’t break it in a future version unintentionally.

  • Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, version, or history. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it.

Copyright © 2011 Vivek Bhagwat, 2013-2016 Wesha. See LICENSE.txt for further details.

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