0.2.15 • Published 8 years ago

exceljs2 v0.2.15

Weekly downloads
9
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
8 years ago

ExcelJS2

Read, manipulate and write spreadsheet data and styles to XLSX and JSON.

Reverse engineered from Excel spreadsheet files as a project.

This is a forked copy of exceljs. I recommend using the original.

Installation

npm install exceljs2

New Features!

Backlog

Contents

Interface

var Excel = require('exceljs');

Create a Workbook

var workbook = new Excel.Workbook();

Set Workbook Properties

workbook.creator = 'Me';
workbook.lastModifiedBy = 'Her';
workbook.created = new Date(1985, 8, 30);
workbook.modified = new Date();

Workbook Views

The Workbook views controls how many separate windows Excel will open when viewing the workbook.

workbook.views = [
  {
    x: 0, y: 0, width: 10000, height: 20000,
    firstSheet: 0, activeTab: 1, visibility: 'visible'
  }
]

Add a Worksheet

var sheet = workbook.addWorksheet('My Sheet');

Use the second parameter of the addWorksheet function to specify options for the worksheet.

For Example:

// create a sheet with red tab colour
var sheet = workbook.addWorksheet('My Sheet', {properties:{tabColor:{argb:'FFC0000'}}});

// create a sheet where the grid lines are hidden
var sheet = workbook.addWorksheet('My Sheet', {properties: {showGridLines: false}});

// create a sheet with the first row and column frozen
var sheet = workbook.addWorksheet('My Sheet', {views:[{xSplit: 1, ySplit:1}]});

Access Worksheets

// Iterate over all sheets
// Note: workbook.worksheets.forEach will still work but this is better
workbook.eachSheet(function(worksheet, sheetId) {
    // ...
});

// fetch sheet by name
var worksheet = workbook.getWorksheet('My Sheet');

// fetch sheet by id
var worksheet = workbook.getWorksheet(1);

Worksheet Properties

Worksheets support a property bucket to allow control over some features of the worksheet.

// create new sheet with properties
var worksheet = workbook.addWorksheet('sheet', {properties:{tabColor:{argb:'FF00FF00'}}});

// create a new sheet writer with properties
var worksheetWriter = workbookWriter.addSheet('sheet', {properties:{outlineLevelCol:1}});

// adjust properties afterwards (not supported by worksheet-writer)
worksheet.properties.outlineLevelCol = 2;
worksheet.properties.defaultRowHeight = 15;

Supported Properties

NameDefaultDescription
tabColorundefinedColor of the tabs
outlineLevelCol0The worksheet column outline level
outlineLevelRow0The worksheet row outline level
defaultRowHeight15Default row height
dyDescent55TBD

Page Setup

All properties that can affect the printing of a sheet are held in a pageSetup object on the sheet.

// create new sheet with pageSetup settings for A4 - landscape
var worksheet =  workbook.addWorksheet('sheet', {
  pageSetup:{paperSize: 9, orientation:'landscape'}
});

// create a new sheet writer with pageSetup settings for fit-to-page
var worksheetWriter = workbookWriter.addSheet('sheet', {
  pageSetup:{fitToPage: true, fitToHeight: 5, fitToWidth: 7}
});

// adjust pageSetup settings afterwards
worksheete.pageSetup.margins = {
  left: 0.7, right: 0.7,
  top: 0.75, bottom: 0.75,
  header: 0.3, footer: 0.3
};

Supported pageSetup settings

NameDefaultDescription
marginsWhitespace on the borders of the page. Units are inches.
orientation'portrait'Orientation of the page - i.e. taller (portrait) or wider (landscape)
horizontalDpi4294967295Horizontal Dots per Inch. Default value is -1
verticalDpi4294967295Vertical Dots per Inch. Default value is -1
fitToPageWhether to use fitToWidth and fitToHeight or scale settings. Default is based on presence of these settings in the pageSetup object - if both are present, scale wins (i.e. default will be false)
pageOrder'downThenOver'Which order to print the pages - one of 'downThenOver', 'overThenDown'
blackAndWhitefalsePrint without colour
draftfalsePrint with less quality (and ink)
cellComments'None'Where to place comments - one of 'atEnd', 'asDisplayed', 'None'
errors'displayed'Where to show errors - one of 'dash', 'blank', 'NA', 'displayed'
scale100Percentage value to increase or reduce the size of the print. Active when fitToPage is false
fitToWidth1How many pages wide the sheet should print on to. Active when fitToPage is true
fitToHeight1How many pages high the sheet should print on to. Active when fitToPage is true
paperSizeWhat paper size to use (see below)
showRowColHeadersfalseWhether to show the row numbers and column letters
showGridLinesfalseWhether to show grid lines
firstPageNumberWhich number to use for the first page
horizontalCenteredfalseWhether to center the sheet data horizontally
verticalCenteredfalseWhether to center the sheet data vertically

Example Paper Sizes

NameValue
Letterundefined
Legal5
Executive7
A49
A511
B5 (JIS)13
Envelope #1020
Envelope DL27
Envelope C528
Envelope B534
Envelope Monarch37
Double Japan Postcard Rotated82
16K 197x273 mm119

Worksheet Views

Worksheets now support a list of views, that control how Excel presents the sheet:

  • frozen - where a number of rows and columns to the top and left are frozen in place. Only the bottom left section will scroll
  • split - where the view is split into 4 sections, each semi-independently scrollable.

Each view also supports various properties:

NameDefaultDescription
state'normal'Controls the view state - one of normal, frozen or split
activeCellundefinedThe currently selected cell
showRulertrueShows or hides the ruler in Page Layout
showRowColHeaderstrueShows or hides the row and column headers (e.g. A1, B1 at the top and 1,2,3 on the left
showGridlinestrueShows or hides the gridlines (shown for cells where borders have not been defined)
zoomScale100Percentage zoom to use for the view
zoomScaleNormal100Normal zoom for the view
styleundefinedPresentation style - one of pageBreakPreview or pageLayout. Note pageLayout is not compatable with frozen views

Frozen Views

Frozen views support the following extra properties:

NameDefaultDescription
xSplit0How many columns to freeze. To freeze rows only, set this to 0 or undefined
ySplit0How many rows to freeze. To freeze columns only, set this to 0 or undefined
topLeftCellspecialWhich cell will be top-left in the bottom-right pane. Note: cannot be a frozen cell. Defaults to first unfrozen cell
worksheet.views = [
    {state: 'frozen', xSplit: 2, ySplit: 3, topLeftCell: 'G10', activeCell: 'A1'}
];

Split Views

Split views support the following extra properties:

NameDefaultDescription
xSplit0How many points from the left to place the splitter. To split vertically, set this to 0 or undefined
ySplit0How many points from the top to place the splitter. To split horizontally, set this to 0 or undefined
topLeftCellundefinedWhich cell will be top-left in the bottom-right pane.
activePaneundefinedWhich pane will be active - one of topLeft, topRight, bottomLeft and bottomRight
worksheet.views = [
    {state: 'split', xSplit: 2000, ySplit: 3000, topLeftCell: 'G10', activeCell: 'A1'}
];

Columns

// Add column headers and define column keys and widths
// Note: these column structures are a workbook-building convenience only,
// apart from the column width, they will not be fully persisted.
worksheet.columns = [
    { header: 'Id', key: 'id', width: 10 },
    { header: 'Name', key: 'name', width: 32 },
    { header: 'D.O.B.', key: 'DOB', width: 10, outlineLevel: 1 }
];

// Access an individual columns by key, letter and 1-based column number
var idCol = worksheet.getColumn('id');
var nameCol = worksheet.getColumn('B');
var dobCol = worksheet.getColumn(3);

// set column properties

// Note: will overwrite cell value C1
dobCol.header = 'Date of Birth';

// Note: this will overwrite cell values C1:C2
dobCol.header = ['Date of Birth', 'A.K.A. D.O.B.'];

// from this point on, this column will be indexed by 'dob' and not 'DOB'
dobCol.key = 'dob';

dobCol.width = 15;

// Hide the column if you'd like
dobCol.hidden = true;

// set an outline level for columns
worksheet.getColumn(4).outlineLevel = 0;
worksheet.getColumn(5).outlineLevel = 1;

// columns support a readonly field to indicate the collapsed state based on outlineLevel
expect(worksheet.getColumn(4).collapsed).to.equal(false);
expect(worksheet.getColumn(5).collapsed).to.equal(true);

// iterate over all current cells in this column
dobCol.eachCell(function(cell, rowNumber) {
    // ...
});

// iterate over all current cells in this column including empty cells
dobCol.eachCell({ includeEmpty: true }, function(cell, rowNumber) {
    // ...
});

Rows

// Add a couple of Rows by key-value, after the last current row, using the column keys
worksheet.addRow({id: 1, name: 'John Doe', dob: new Date(1970,1,1)});
worksheet.addRow({id: 2, name: 'Jane Doe', dob: new Date(1965,1,7)});

// Add a row by contiguous Array (assign to columns A, B & C)
worksheet.addRow([3, 'Sam', new Date()]);

// Add a row by sparse Array (assign to columns A, E & I)
var rowValues = [];
rowValues[1] = 4;
rowValues[5] = 'Kyle';
rowValues[9] = new Date();
worksheet.addRow(rowValues);

// Add an array of rows
var rows = [
    [5,'Bob',new Date()], // row by array
    {id:6, name: 'Barbara', dob: new Date()}
];
worksheet.addRows(rows);

// Get a row object. If it doesn't already exist, a new empty one will be returned
var row = worksheet.getRow(5);

// Get the last editable row in a worksheet (or undefined if there are none)
var row = worksheet.lastRow;

// Set a specific row height
row.height = 42.5;

// make row hidden
row.hidden = true;

// set an outline level for rows
worksheet.getRow(4).outlineLevel = 0;
worksheet.getRow(5).outlineLevel = 1;

// rows support a readonly field to indicate the collapsed state based on outlineLevel
expect(worksheet.getRow(4).collapsed).to.equal(false);
expect(worksheet.getRow(5).collapsed).to.equal(true);


row.getCell(1).value = 5; // A5's value set to 5
row.getCell('name').value = 'Zeb'; // B5's value set to 'Zeb' - assuming column 2 is still keyed by name
row.getCell('C').value = new Date(); // C5's value set to now

// Get a row as a sparse array
// Note: interface change: worksheet.getRow(4) ==> worksheet.getRow(4).values
row = worksheet.getRow(4).values;
expect(row[5]).toEqual('Kyle');

// assign row values by contiguous array (where array element 0 has a value)
row.values = [1,2,3];
expect(row.getCell(1).value).toEqual(1);
expect(row.getCell(2).value).toEqual(2);
expect(row.getCell(3).value).toEqual(3);

// assign row values by sparse array  (where array element 0 is undefined)
var values = []
values[5] = 7;
values[10] = 'Hello, World!';
row.values = values;
expect(row.getCell(1).value).toBeNull();
expect(row.getCell(5).value).toEqual(7);
expect(row.getCell(10).value).toEqual('Hello, World!');

// assign row values by object, using column keys
row.values = {
    id: 13,
    name: 'Thing 1',
    dob: new Date()
};

// Iterate over all rows that have values in a worksheet
worksheet.eachRow(function(row, rowNumber) {
    console.log('Row ' + rowNumber + ' = ' + JSON.stringify(row.values));
});

// Iterate over all rows (including empty rows) in a worksheet
worksheet.eachRow({ includeEmpty: true }, function(row, rowNumber) {
    console.log('Row ' + rowNumber + ' = ' + JSON.stringify(row.values));
});

// Iterate over all non-null cells in a row
row.eachCell(function(cell, colNumber) {
    console.log('Cell ' + colNumber + ' = ' + cell.value);
});

// Iterate over all cells in a row (including empty cells)
row.eachCell({ includeEmpty: true }, function(cell, colNumber) {
    console.log('Cell ' + colNumber + ' = ' + cell.value);
});

// Commit a completed row to stream
row.commit();

Handling Individual Cells

// Modify/Add individual cell
worksheet.getCell('C3').value = new Date(1968, 5, 1);

// query a cell's type
expect(worksheet.getCell('C3').type).toEqual(Excel.ValueType.Date);

Merged Cells

// merge a range of cells
worksheet.mergeCells('A4:B5');

// ... merged cells are linked
worksheet.getCell('B5').value = 'Hello, World!';
expect(worksheet.getCell('B5').value).toBe(worksheet.getCell('A4').value);
expect(worksheet.getCell('B5').master).toBe(worksheet.getCell('A4'));

// ... merged cells share the same style object
expect(worksheet.getCell('B5').style).toBe(worksheet.getCell('A4').style);
worksheet.getCell('B5').style.font = myFonts.arial;
expect(worksheet.getCell('A4').style.font).toBe(myFonts.arial);

// unmerging the cells breaks the style links
worksheet.unMergeCells('A4');
expect(worksheet.getCell('B5').style).not.toBe(worksheet.getCell('A4').style);
expect(worksheet.getCell('B5').style.font).not.toBe(myFonts.arial);

// merge by top-left, bottom-right
worksheet.mergeCells('G10', 'H11');
worksheet.mergeCells(10,11,12,13); // top,left,bottom,right

Defined Names

Individual cells (or multiple groups of cells) can have names assigned to them. The names can be used in formulas and data validation (and probably more).

// assign (or get) a name for a cell (will overwrite any other names that cell had)
worksheet.getCell('A1').name = 'PI';
expect(worksheet.getCell('A1').name).to.equal('PI');

// assign (or get) an array of names for a cell (cells can have more than one name)
worksheet.getCell('A1').names = ['thing1', 'thing2'];
expect(worksheet.getCell('A1').names).to.have.members(['thing1', 'thing2']);

// remove a name from a cell
worksheet.getCell('A1').removeName('thing1');
expect(worksheet.getCell('A1').names).to.have.members(['thing2']);

Data Validations

Cells can define what values are valid or not and provide prompting to the user to help guide them.

Validation types can be one of the following:

TypeDescription
listDefine a discrete set of valid values. Excel will offer these in a dropdown for easy entry
wholeThe value must be a whole number
decimalThe value must be a decimal number
textLengthThe value may be text but the length is controlled
customA custom formula controls the valid values

For types other than list or custom, the following operators affect the validation:

OperatorDescription
betweenValues must lie between formula results
notBetweenValues must not lie between formula results
equalValue must equal formula result
notEqualValue must not equal formula result
greaterThanValue must be greater than formula result
lessThanValue must be less than formula result
greaterThanOrEqualValue must be greater than or equal to formula result
lessThanOrEqualValue must be less than or equal to formula result
// Specify list of valid values (One, Two, Three, Four). Excel will provide a dropdown with these values.
worksheet.getCell('A1').dataValidation = {
    type: 'list',
    allowBlank: true,
    formulae: ['"One,Two,Three,Four"']
};

// Specify list of valid values from a range. Excel will provide a dropdown with these values.
    worksheet.getCell('A1').dataValidation = {
        type: 'list',
        allowBlank: true,
        formulae: ['$D$5:$F$5']
};

// Specify Cell must be a whole number that is not 5. Show the user an appropriate error message if they get it wrong
worksheet.getCell('A1').dataValidation = {
    type: 'whole',
    operator: 'notEqual',
    showErrorMessage: true,
    formulae: [5],
    errorStyle: 'error',
    errorTitle: 'Five',
    error: 'The value must not be Five'
};

// Specify Cell must be a decomal number between 1.5 and 7. Add 'tooltip' to help guid the user
worksheet.getCell('A1').dataValidation = {
    type: 'decimal',
    operator: 'between',
    allowBlank: true,
    showInputMessage: true,
    formulae: [1.5, 7],
    promptTitle: 'Decimal',
    prompt: 'The value must between 1.5 and 7'
};

// Specify Cell must be have a text length less than 15
worksheet.getCell('A1').dataValidation = {
    type: 'textLength',
    operator: 'lessThan',
    showErrorMessage: true,
    allowBlank: true,
    formulae: [15]
};

// Specify Cell must be have be a date before 1st Jan 2016
worksheet.getCell('A1').dataValidation = {
    type: 'date',
    operator: 'lessThan',
    showErrorMessage: true,
    allowBlank: true,
    formulae: [new Date(2016,0,1)]
};

Styles

Cells, Rows and Columns each support a rich set of styles and formats that affect how the cells are displayed.

Styles are set by assigning the following properties:

  • numFmt
  • font
  • alignment
  • border
  • fill
// assign a style to a cell
ws.getCell('A1').numFmt = '0.00%';

// Apply styles to worksheet columns
ws.columns = [
    { header: 'Id', key: 'id', width: 10 },
    { header: 'Name', key: 'name', width: 32, style: { font: { name: 'Arial Black' } } },
    { header: 'D.O.B.', key: 'DOB', width: 10, style: { numFmt: 'dd/mm/yyyy' } }
];

// Set Column 3 to Currency Format
ws.getColumn(3).numFmt = '�#,##0;[Red]-�#,##0';

// Set Row 2 to Comic Sans.
ws.getRow(2).font = { name: 'Comic Sans MS', family: 4, size: 16, underline: 'double', bold: true };

When a style is applied to a row or column, it will be applied to all currently existing cells in that row or column. Also, any new cell that is created will inherit its initial styles from the row and column it belongs to.

If a cell's row and column both define a specific style (e.g. font), the cell will use the row style over the column style. However if the row and column define different styles (e.g. column.numFmt and row.font), the cell will inherit the font from the row and the numFmt from the column.

Caveat: All the above properties (with the exception of numFmt, which is a string), are JS object structures. If the same style object is assigned to more than one spreadsheet entity, then each entity will share the same style object. If the style object is later modified before the spreadsheet is serialized, then all entities referencing that style object will be modified too. This behaviour is intended to prioritize performance by reducing the number of JS objects created. If you want the style objects to be independent, you will need to clone them before assigning them. Also, by default, when a document is read from file (or stream) if spreadsheet entities share similar styles, then they will reference the same style object too.

Number Formats

// display value as '1 3/5'
ws.getCell('A1').value = 1.6;
ws.getCell('A1').numFmt = '# ?/?';

// display value as '1.60%'
ws.getCell('B1').value = 0.016;
ws.getCell('B1').numFmt = '0.00%';

Fonts

// for the wannabe graphic designers out there
ws.getCell('A1').font = {
    name: 'Comic Sans MS',
    family: 4,
    size: 16,
    underline: true,
    bold: true
};

// for the graduate graphic designers...
ws.getCell('A2').font = {
    name: 'Arial Black',
    color: { argb: 'FF00FF00' },
    family: 2,
    size: 14,
    italic: true
};

// note: the cell will store a reference to the font object assigned.
// If the font object is changed afterwards, the cell font will change also...
var font = { name: 'Arial', size: 12 };
ws.getCell('A3').font = font;
font.size = 20; // Cell A3 now has font size 20!

// Cells that share similar fonts may reference the same font object after
// the workbook is read from file or stream
Font PropertyDescriptionExample Value(s)
nameFont name.'Arial', 'Calibri', etc.
familyFont family. An integer value.1,2,3, etc.
schemeFont scheme.'minor', 'major', 'none'
charsetFont charset. An integer value.1, 2, etc.
colorColour description, an object containing an ARGB value.{ argb: 'FFFF0000'}
boldFont weighttrue, false
italicFont slopetrue, false
underlineFont underline styletrue, false, 'none', 'single', 'double', 'singleAccounting', 'doubleAccounting'
strikeFont strikethroughtrue, false
outlineFont outlinetrue, false

Alignment

// set cell alignment to top-left, middle-center, bottom-right
ws.getCell('A1').alignment = { vertical: 'top', horizontal: 'left' };
ws.getCell('B1').alignment = { vertical: 'middle', horizontal: 'center' };
ws.getCell('C1').alignment = { vertical: 'bottom', horizontal: 'right' };

// set cell to wrap-text
ws.getCell('D1').alignment = { wrapText: true };

// set cell indent to 1
ws.getCell('E1').alignment = { indent: 1 };

// set cell text rotation to 30deg upwards, 45deg downwards and vertical text
ws.getCell('F1').alignment = { textRotation: 30 };
ws.getCell('G1').alignment = { textRotation: -45 };
ws.getCell('H1').alignment = { textRotation: 'vertical' };

Valid Alignment Property Values

horizontalverticalwrapTextindentreadingOrdertextRotation
lefttoptrueintegerrtl0 to 90
centermiddlefalseltr-1 to -90
rightbottomvertical
filldistributed
justifyjustify
centerContinuous
distributed

Borders

// set single thin border around A1
ws.getCell('A1').border = {
    top: {style:'thin'},
    left: {style:'thin'},
    bottom: {style:'thin'},
    right: {style:'thin'}
};

// set double thin green border around A3
ws.getCell('A3').border = {
    top: {style:'double', color: {argb:'FF00FF00'}},
    left: {style:'double', color: {argb:'FF00FF00'}},
    bottom: {style:'double', color: {argb:'FF00FF00'}},
    right: {style:'double', color: {argb:'FF00FF00'}}
};

// set thick red cross in A5
ws.getCell('A5').border = {
    diagonal: {up: true, down: true, style:'thick', color: {argb:'FFFF0000'}}
};

Valid Border Styles

  • thin
  • dotted
  • dashDot
  • hair
  • dashDotDot
  • slantDashDot
  • mediumDashed
  • mediumDashDotDot
  • mediumDashDot
  • medium
  • double
  • thick

Fills

// fill A1 with red darkVertical stripes
ws.getCell('A1').fill = {
    type: 'pattern',
    pattern:'darkVertical',
    fgColor:{argb:'FFFF0000'}
};

// fill A2 with yellow dark trellis and blue behind
ws.getCell('A2').fill = {
    type: 'pattern',
    pattern:'darkTrellis',
    fgColor:{argb:'FFFFFF00'},
    bgColor:{argb:'FF0000FF'}
};

// fill A3 with blue-white-blue gradient from left to right
ws.getCell('A3').fill = {
    type: 'gradient',
    gradient: 'angle',
    degree: 0,
    stops: [
        {position:0, color:{argb:'FF0000FF'}},
        {position:0.5, color:{argb:'FFFFFFFF'}},
        {position:1, color:{argb:'FF0000FF'}}
    ]
};


// fill A4 with red-green gradient from center
ws.getCell('A2').fill = {
    type: 'gradient',
    gradient: 'path',
    center:{left:0.5,top:0.5},
    stops: [
        {position:0, color:{argb:'FFFF0000'}},
        {position:1, color:{argb:'FF00FF00'}}
    ]
};

Pattern Fills

PropertyRequiredDescription
typeYValue: 'pattern'Specifies this fill uses patterns
patternYSpecifies type of pattern (see Valid Pattern Types below)
fgColorNSpecifies the pattern foreground color. Default is black.
bgColorNSpecifies the pattern background color. Default is white.

Valid Pattern Types

  • none
  • solid
  • darkVertical
  • darkGray
  • mediumGray
  • lightGray
  • gray125
  • gray0625
  • darkHorizontal
  • darkVertical
  • darkDown
  • darkUp
  • darkGrid
  • darkTrellis
  • lightHorizontal
  • lightVertical
  • lightDown
  • lightUp
  • lightGrid
  • lightTrellis
  • lightGrid

Gradient Fills

PropertyRequiredDescription
typeYValue: 'gradient'Specifies this fill uses gradients
gradientYSpecifies gradient type. One of 'angle', 'path'
degreeangleFor 'angle' gradient, specifies the direction of the gradient. 0 is from the left to the right. Values from 1 - 359 rotates the direction clockwise
centerpathFor 'path' gradient. Specifies the relative coordinates for the start of the path. 'left' and 'top' values range from 0 to 1
stopsYSpecifies the gradient colour sequence. Is an array of objects containing position and color starting with position 0 and ending with position 1. Intermediatary positions may be used to specify other colours on the path.

Caveats

Using the interface above it may be possible to create gradient fill effects not possible using the XLSX editor program. For example, Excel only supports angle gradients of 0, 45, 90 and 135. Similarly the sequence of stops may also be limited by the UI with positions 0,1 or 0,0.5,1 as the only options. Take care with this fill to be sure it is supported by the target XLSX viewers.

Rich Text

Individual cells now support rich text or in-cell formatting. Rich text values can control the font properties of any number of sub-strings within the text value. See Fonts for a complete list of details on what font properties are supported.

ws.getCell('A1').value = {
  'richText': [
     {'font': {'size': 12,'color': {'theme': 0},'name': 'Calibri','family': 2,'scheme': 'minor'},'text': 'This is '},
     {'font': {'italic': true,'size': 12,'color': {'theme': 0},'name': 'Calibri','scheme': 'minor'},'text': 'a'},
     {'font': {'size': 12,'color': {'theme': 1},'name': 'Calibri','family': 2,'scheme': 'minor'},'text': ' '},
     {'font': {'size': 12,'color': {'argb': 'FFFF6600'},'name': 'Calibri','scheme': 'minor'},'text': 'colorful'},
     {'font': {'size': 12,'color': {'theme': 1},'name': 'Calibri','family': 2,'scheme': 'minor'},'text': ' text '},
     {'font': {'size': 12,'color': {'argb': 'FFCCFFCC'},'name': 'Calibri','scheme': 'minor'},'text': 'with'},
     {'font': {'size': 12,'color': {'theme': 1},'name': 'Calibri','family': 2,'scheme': 'minor'},'text': ' in-cell '},
     {'font': {'bold': true,'size': 12,'color': {'theme': 1},'name': 'Calibri','family': 2,'scheme': 'minor'},'text': 'format'}
  ]
};

expect(ws.getCell('A1').text).to.equal('This is a colorful text with in-cell format');
expect(ws.getCell('A1').type).to.equal(Excel.ValueType.RichText);

Outline Levels

Excel supports outlining; where rows or columns can be expanded or collapsed depending on what level of detail the user wishes to view.

Outline levels can be defined in column setup:

worksheet.columns = [
    { header: 'Id', key: 'id', width: 10 },
    { header: 'Name', key: 'name', width: 32 },
    { header: 'D.O.B.', key: 'DOB', width: 10, outlineLevel: 1 }
];

Or directly on the row or column

worksheet.getColumn(3).outlineLevel = 1;
worksheet.getRow(3).outlineLevel = 1;

The sheet outline levels can be set on the worksheet

// set column outline level
worksheet.properties.outlineLevelCol = 1;

// set row outline level
worksheet.properties.outlineLevelRow = 1;

Note: adjusting outline levels on rows or columns or the outline levels on the worksheet will incur a side effect of also modifying the collapsed property of all rows or columns affected by the property change. E.g.:

worksheet.properties.outlineLevelCol = 1;

worksheet.getColumn(3).outlineLevel = 1;
expect(worksheet.getColumn(3).collapsed).to.be.true;

worksheet.properties.outlineLevelCol = 2;
expect(worksheet.getColumn(3).collapsed).to.be.false;

File I/O

XLSX

Reading XLSX

// read from a file
var workbook = new Excel.Workbook();
workbook.xlsx.readFile(filename)
    .then(function() {
        // use workbook
    });

// pipe from stream
var workbook = new Excel.Workbook();
stream.pipe(workbook.xlsx.createInputStream());

Writing XLSX

// write to a file
var workbook = createAndFillWorkbook();
workbook.xlsx.writeFile(filename)
    .then(function() {
        // done
    });

// write to a stream
workbook.xlsx.write(stream)
    .then(function() {
        // done
    });

CSV

Reading CSV

// read from a file
var workbook = new Excel.Workbook();
workbook.csv.readFile(filename)
    .then(function(worksheet) {
        // use workbook or worksheet
    });

// read from a stream
var workbook = new Excel.Workbook();
workbook.csv.read(stream)
    .then(function(worksheet) {
        // use workbook or worksheet
    });

// pipe from stream
var workbook = new Excel.Workbook();
stream.pipe(workbook.csv.createInputStream());

// read from a file with European Dates
var workbook = new Excel.Workbook();
var options = {
    dateFormats: ['DD/MM/YYYY']
};
workbook.csv.readFile(filename, options)
    .then(function(worksheet) {
        // use workbook or worksheet
    });


// read from a file with custom value parsing
var workbook = new Excel.Workbook();
var options = {
    map: function(value, index) {
        switch(index) {
            case 0:
                // column 1 is string
                return value;
            case 1:
                // column 2 is a date
                return new Date(value);
            case 2:
                // column 3 is JSON of a formula value
                return JSON.parse(value);
            default:
                // the rest are numbers
                return parseFloat(value);
        }
    }
};
workbook.csv.readFile(filename, options)
    .then(function(worksheet) {
        // use workbook or worksheet
    });

The CSV parser uses fast-csv to read the CSV file. The options passed into the read functions above is also passed to fast-csv for parsing of the csv data. Please refer to the fast-csv README.md for details.

Dates are parsed using the npm module moment. If no dateFormats are supplied, the following are used:

  • moment.ISO_8601
  • 'MM-DD-YYYY'
  • 'YYYY-MM-DD'

Writing CSV

// write to a file
var workbook = createAndFillWorkbook();
workbook.csv.writeFile(filename)
    .then(function() {
        // done
    });

// write to a stream
workbook.csv.write(stream)
    .then(function() {
        // done
    });


// read from a file with European Date-Times
var workbook = new Excel.Workbook();
var options = {
    dateFormat: 'DD/MM/YYYY HH:mm:ss'
};
workbook.csv.readFile(filename, options)
    .then(function(worksheet) {
        // use workbook or worksheet
    });


// read from a file with custom value formatting
var workbook = new Excel.Workbook();
var options = {
    map: function(value, index) {
        switch(index) {
            case 0:
                // column 1 is string
                return value;
            case 1:
                // column 2 is a date
                return moment(value).format('YYYY-MM-DD');
            case 2:
                // column 3 is a formula, write just the result
                return value.result;
            default:
                // the rest are numbers
                return value;
        }
    }
};
workbook.csv.readFile(filename, options)
    .then(function(worksheet) {
        // use workbook or worksheet
    });

The CSV parser uses fast-csv to write the CSV file. The options passed into the write functions above is also passed to fast-csv for writing the csv data. Please refer to the fast-csv README.md for details.

Dates are formatted using the npm module moment. If no dateFormat is supplied, moment.ISO_8601 is used.

Streaming I/O

The File I/O documented above requires that an entire workbook is built up in memory before the file can be written. While convenient, it can limit the size of the document due to the amount of memory required.

A streaming writer (or reader) processes the workbook or worksheet data as it is generated, converting it into file form as it goes. Typically this is much more efficient on memory as the final memory footprint and even intermediate memory footprints are much more compact than with the document version, especially when you consider that the row and cell objects are disposed once they are committed.

The interface to the streaming workbook and worksheet is almost the same as the document versions with a few minor practical differences:

  • Once a worksheet is added to a workbook, it cannot be removed.
  • Once a row is committed, it is no longer accessible since it will have been dropped from the worksheet.
  • unMergeCells() is not supported.

Note that it is possible to build the entire workbook without committing any rows. When the workbook is committed, all added worksheets (including all uncommitted rows) will be automatically committed. However in this case, little will have been gained over the Document version.

Streaming XLSX

Streaming XLSX Writer

The streaming XLSX writer is available in the ExcelJS.stream.xlsx namespace.

The constructor takes an optional options object with the following fields:

FieldDescription
streamSpecifies a writable stream to write the XLSX workbook to.
filenameIf stream not specified, this field specifies the path to a file to write the XLSX workbook to.
useSharedStringsSpecifies whether to use shared strings in the workbook. Default is false
useStylesSpecifies whether to add style information to the workbook. Styles can add some performance overhead. Default is false

If neither stream nor filename is specified in the options, the workbook writer will create a StreamBuf object that will store the contents of the XLSX workbook in memory. This StreamBuf object, which can be accessed via the property workbook.stream, can be used to either access the bytes directly by stream.read() or to pipe the contents to another stream.

// construct a streaming XLSX workbook writer with styles and shared strings
var options = {
    filename: './streamed-workbook.xlsx',
    useStyles: true,
    useSharedStrings: true
};
var workbook = new Excel.stream.xlsx.WorkbookWriter(options);

In general, the interface to the streaming XLSX writer is the same as the Document workbook (and worksheets) described above, in fact the row, cell and style objects are the same.

However there are some differences...

Construction

As seen above, the WorkbookWriter will typically require the output stream or file to be specified in the constructor.

Committing Data

When a worksheet row is ready, it should be committed so that the row object and contents can be freed. Typically this would be done as each row is added...

worksheet.addRow({
   id: i,
   name: theName,
   etc: someOtherDetail
}).commit();

The reason the WorksheetWriter does not commit rows as they are added is to allow cells to be merged across rows:

worksheet.mergeCells('A1:B2');
worksheet.getCell('A1').value = 'I am merged';
worksheet.getCell('C1').value = 'I am not';
worksheet.getCell('C2').value = 'Neither am I';
worksheet.getRow(2).commit(); // now rows 1 and two are committed.

As each worksheet is completed, it must also be committed:

// Finished adding data. Commit the worksheet
worksheet.commit();

To complete the XLSX document, the workbook must be committed. If any worksheet in a workbook are uncommitted, they will be committed automatically as part of the workbook commit.

// Finished the workbook.
workbook.commit()
  .then(function() {
    // the stream has been written
  });

Value Types

The following value types are supported.

Enum NameEnumDescriptionExample Value
Excel.ValueType.Null0No value.null
Excel.ValueType.Merge1N/AN/A
Excel.ValueType.Number2A numerical value3.14
Excel.ValueType.String3A text value'Hello, World!'
Excel.ValueType.Date4A Date valuenew Date()
Excel.ValueType.Hyperlink5A hyperlink{ text: 'www.mylink.com', hyperlink: 'http://www.mylink.com' }
Excel.ValueType.Formula6A formula{ formula: 'A1+A2', result: 7 }

Interface Changes

Every effort is made to make a good consistent interface that doesn't break through the versions but regrettably, now and then some things have to change for the greater good.

Interface Breaks in 0.1.0

Worksheet.eachRow

The arguments in the callback function to Worksheet.eachRow have been swapped and changed; it was function(rowNumber,rowValues), now it is function(row, rowNumber) which gives it a look and feel more like the underscore (_.each) function and prioritises the row object over the row number.

Worksheet.getRow

This function has changed from returning a sparse array of cell values to returning a Row object. This enables accessing row properties and will facilitate managing row styles and so on.

The sparse array of cell values is still available via Worksheet.getRow(rowNumber).values;

Interface Breaks in 0.1.1

cell.model

cell.styles renamed to cell.style

Known Issues

Release History

VersionChanges
0.0.9Number Formats
0.1.0Bug Fixes"<" and ">" text characters properly rendered in xlsxBetter Column controlBetter Row control
0.1.1Bug FixesMore textual data written properly to xml (including text, hyperlinks, formula results and format codes)Better date format code recognitionCell Font Style
0.1.2Fixed potential race condition on zip write
0.1.3Cell Alignment StyleRow HeightSome Internal Restructuring
0.1.5Bug FixesNow handles 10 or more worksheets in one workbooktheme1.xml file properly added and referencedCell Borders
0.1.6Bug FixesMore compatable theme1.xml included in XLSX fileCell Fills
0.1.8Bug FixesMore compatable theme1.xml included in XLSX fileFixed filename case issueCell Fills
0.1.9Bug FixesAdded docProps files to satisfy Mac Excel usersFixed filename case issueFixed worksheet id issueCore Workbook Properties
0.1.10Bug FixesHandles File Not Found errorCSV Files
0.1.11Bug FixesFixed Vertical Middle Alignment IssueRow and Column StylesWorksheet.eachRow supports optionsRow.eachCell supports optionsNew function Column.eachCell
0.2.0Streaming XLSX WriterAt long last ExcelJS can support writing massive XLSX files in a scalable memory efficient manner. Performance has been optimised and even smaller spreadsheets can be faster to write than the document writer. Options have been added to control the use of shared strings and styles as these can both have a considerable effect on performanceWorksheet.lastRowAccess the last editable row in a worksheet.Row.commit()For streaming writers, this method commits the row (and any previous rows) to the stream. Committed rows will no longer be editable (and are typically deleted from the worksheet object). For Document type workbooks, this method has no effect.
0.2.2One Billion CellsAchievement Unlocked: A simple test using ExcelJS has created a spreadsheet with 1,000,000,000 cells. Made using random data with 100,000,000 rows of 10 cells per row. I cannot validate the file yet as Excel will not open it and I have yet to implement the streaming reader but I have every confidence that it is good since 1,000,000 rows loads ok.
0.2.3Bug FixesMerge Cell StylesMerged cells now persist (and parse) their styles.Streaming XLSX WriterAt long last ExcelJS can support writing massive XLSX files in a scalable memory efficient manner. Performance has been optimised and even smaller spreadsheets can be faster to write than the document writer. Options have been added to control the use of shared strings and styles as these can both have a considerable effect on performanceWorksheet.lastRowAccess the last editable row in a worksheet.Row.commit()For streaming writers, this method commits the row (and any previous rows) to the stream. Committed rows will no longer be editable (and are typically deleted from the worksheet object). For Document type workbooks, this method has no effect.
0.2.4Bug FixesWorksheets with Ampersand NamesWorksheet names are now xml-encoded and should work with all xml compatable charactersRow.hidden & Column.hiddenRows and Columns now support the hidden attribute.Worksheet.addRowsNew function to add an array of rows (either array or object form) to the end of a worksheet.
0.2.6Bug Fixesinvalid signature: 0x80014: Thanks to hasanlussa for the PRDefined NamesCells can now have assigned names which may then be used in formulas.Converted Bluebird.defer() to new Bluebird(function(resolve, reject){}). Thanks to user Nishchit for the Pull Request
0.2.7Data ValidationsCells can now define validations that controls the valid values the cell can have
0.2.8Rich Text ValueCells now support in-cell formatting - Thanks to Peter ADAMFixed typo in README - Thanks to MRdNkFixing emit in worksheet-reader - Thanks to Alan GunningClearer Docs - Thanks to miensol
0.2.9Fixed "read property 'richText' of undefined error. Thanks to james075
0.2.10Refactoring Complete. All unit and integration tests pass.
0.2.11Outline Levels thanks to cricri for the contribution.Worksheet PropertiesFurther refactoring of worksheet writer.
0.2.12Sheet Views thanks to cricri again for the contribution.
0.2.13Fix for exceljs might be vulnerable for regular expression denial of service. Kudos to yonjah and Josh Emerson for the resolution.Fix for Multiple Sheets opens in 'Group' mode in Excel. My bad - overzealous sheet view code.Also fix for empty sheet generating invalid xlsx.
0.2.14Fix for exceljs might be vulnerable for regular expression denial of service. Kudos to yonjah and Josh Emerson for the resolution.Fixed Multiple Sheets opens in 'Group' mode in Excel again. Added Workbook views.Also fix for empty sheet generating invalid xlsx.