write-excel-file v2.0.10
write-excel-file
Write simple *.xlsx files in a browser or Node.js
Also check out read-excel-file for reading small to medium *.xlsx files.
Install
npm install write-excel-file --saveIf you're not using a bundler then use a standalone version from a CDN.
Data
To write an *.xlsx file, one should provide the data — an array of rows. Each row must be an array of cells.
Each cell should have a value, a type, and, optionally, other cell parameters.
If a cell doesn't have a type, then it is automatically detected from the value, or defaults to a String. Possible types are:
StringNumberBooleanDate"Formula"
An empty cell could be represented by null or undefined.
const HEADER_ROW = [
{
value: 'Name',
fontWeight: 'bold'
},
{
value: 'Date of Birth',
fontWeight: 'bold'
},
{
value: 'Cost',
fontWeight: 'bold'
},
{
value: 'Paid',
fontWeight: 'bold'
}
]
const DATA_ROW_1 = [
// "Name"
{
type: String,
value: 'John Smith'
},
// "Date of Birth"
{
type: Date,
value: new Date(),
format: 'mm/dd/yyyy'
},
// "Cost"
{
type: Number,
value: 1800
},
// "Paid"
{
type: Boolean,
value: true
}
]
const data = [
HEADER_ROW,
DATA_ROW_1,
...
]API
Browser
import writeXlsxFile from 'write-excel-file'
await writeXlsxFile(data, {
columns, // (optional) column widths, etc.
fileName: 'file.xlsx'
})Uses file-saver to save an *.xlsx file from a web browser.
If fileName parameter is not passed then the returned Promise resolves to a "blob" with the contents of the *.xlsx file.
Node.js
const writeXlsxFile = require('write-excel-file/node')
await writeXlsxFile(data, {
columns, // (optional) column widths, etc.
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx'
})If filePath parameter is not passed, but buffer: true parameter is passed, then it returns a Buffer:
const buffer = await writeXlsxFile(data, { buffer: true })If neither filePath parameter nor buffer: true parameter are passed, then it returns a readable Stream:
const output = fs.createWriteStream(...)
const stream = await writeXlsxFile(data)
stream.pipe(output)AWS S3 might throw Cannot determine length of [object Object]:
await new AWS.S3().putObject({
Bucket: ...,
Key: ...,
Body: stream,
ContentType: 'application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet'
}).promise()The reason is that AWS S3 only accepts streams of known length, and the length of a zip file can't be known in advance.
Workaround for AWS SDK v2: write to Buffer instead of a stream.
Workaround for AWS SDK v3: use Upload operation.
Schema
Alternatively, instead of providing data, one could provide a list of objects and a schema describing each column:
const objects = [
{
name: 'John Smith',
dateOfBirth: new Date(),
cost: 1800,
paid: true
},
{
name: 'Alice Brown',
dateOfBirth: new Date(),
cost: 2600,
paid: false
}
]const schema = [
{
column: 'Name',
type: String,
value: student => student.name
},
{
column: 'Date of Birth',
type: Date,
format: 'mm/dd/yyyy',
value: student => student.dateOfBirth
},
{
column: 'Cost',
type: Number,
format: '#,##0.00',
value: student => student.cost
},
{
column: 'Paid',
type: Boolean,
value: student => student.paid
}
]When using a schema, column types are required (not autodetected).
Schema API
Browser
import writeXlsxFile from 'write-excel-file'
await writeXlsxFile(objects, {
schema,
fileName: 'file.xlsx'
})Node.js
const writeXlsxFile = require('write-excel-file/node')
await writeXlsxFile(objects, {
schema,
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx'
})Cell Parameters
Aside from having a type and a value, each cell (or schema column) can also have:
align: string— Horizontal alignment of cell content. Available values:"left","center","right".alignVertical: string— Vertical alignment of cell content. Available values:"top","center","bottom".textRotation: number— Text rotation angle. Values from-90to90are supported. Positive values rotate the text counterclockwise, and negative values rotate the text clockwise.height: number— Row height, in "points".span: number— Column span. Even if a cell spansNcolumns, it should still be represented asNindividual cells in thedata. In that case, all the cells except the left-most one will be ignored. One could usenullorundefinedto represent such ignored cells. For example, if the first cell in a row spans 3 columns, then the row would look like[{ value: 'Text', span: 3 }, null, null, { value: 'After text' }].rowSpan: number— Row span. Even if a cell spansNrows, it should still be represented asNindividual cells in thedata. In that case, all the cells except the top-most one will be ignored. One could usenullorundefinedto represent such ignored cells. For example, if the top left cell spans 2 rows, then the first row would look like[{ value: 'Rows', rowSpan: 2 }, { value: 'R1' }]and the second row would look like[null, { value: 'R2' }].indent: number— Horizontal indentation level for the cell content.wrap: boolean— Set totrueto "wrap" text when it overflows the cell.fontFamily: string— Can be used to print text in a custom font family. Example:"Calibri".fontSize: number— Can be used to print text in a custom font size. Example:12.fontWeight: string— Can be used to print text in bold. Available values:"bold".fontStyle: string— Can be used to make text appear italicized. Available values:"italic".color: string— Cell text color (in hexademical format). Example:"#aabbcc".backgroundColor: string— Cell background color (in hexademical format). Example:"#aabbcc".borderColor: string— Cell border color. Example:"#aabbcc".borderStyle: string— Cell border style. Example:"thick".leftBorderColorleftBorderStylerightBorderColorrightBorderStyletopBorderColortopBorderStylebottomBorderColorbottomBorderStyle
format: string— Cell data format. Can only be used onDate,Numberor"Formula"cells. There're many formats supported in the*.xlsxstandard. Some of the common ones:0.00— Floating-point number with 2 decimal places. Example:1234.56.0.000— Floating-point number with 3 decimal places. Example:1234.567.#,##0— Number with a comma as a thousands separator, as used in most English-speaking countries. Example:1,234,567.#,##0.00— Currency, as in most English-speaking countries. Example:1,234.50.0%— Percents. Example:30%.0.00%— Percents with 2 decimal places. Example:30.00%.All
Datecells (or schema columns) require aformat(unless the defaultdateFormatis set):mm/dd/yy— US date format. Example:12/31/00for December 31, 2000.mmm d yyyy— Example:Dec 31 2000.d mmmm yyyy— Example:31 December 2000.dd/mm/yyyy hh:mm AM/PM— US date-time format. Example:31/12/2000 12:30 AM.or any other format where:
yy— Last two digits of a year number.yyyy— Four digits of a year number.m— Month number without a leading0.mm— Month number with a leading0(when less than10).mmm— Month name (short).mmmm— Month name (long).d— Day number without a leading0.dd— Day number with a leading0(when less than10).h— Hours without a leading0.hh— Hours with a leading0(when less than10).mm— Minutes with a leading0(when less than10).ss— Seconds with a leading0(when less than10).AM/PM— EitherAMorPM, depending on the time.
Table Header
Schema
When using a schema, column titles can be set via a column property on each column. It will be printed at the top of the table.
const schema = [
// Column #1
{
column: 'Name', // Column title
value: student => student.name
},
...
]If column property is missing then column title won't be printed.
The default table header style is fontWeight: "bold" and align being same as the schema column's align. One can provide a custom table header style by supplying a getHeaderStyle parameter:
await writeXlsxFile(objects, {
schema,
getHeaderStyle: (column) => ({
backgroundColor: '#eeeeee',
fontWeight: 'bold',
align: column.align,
indent: column.indent
}),
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx'
})Cell Data
When not using a schema, one can print column titles by supplying them as the first row of the data:
const data = [
[
{ value: 'Name', fontWeight: 'bold' },
{ value: 'Age', fontWeight: 'bold'},
...
],
...
]Column Width
Column width can also be specified (in "characters").
Schema
To specify column width when using a schema, set a width on a schema column:
const schema = [
// Column #1
{
column: 'Name',
value: student => student.name,
width: 20 // Column width (in characters).
},
...
]Cell Data
When not using a schema, one can provide a separate columns parameter to specify column widths:
// Set Column #3 width to "20 characters".
const columns = [
{},
{},
{ width: 20 }, // in characters
{}
]Font
The default font is Calibri at 12px. To change the default font, pass fontFamily and fontSize parameters when calling writeXlsxFile():
await writeXlsxFile(data, {
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx',
fontFamily: 'Arial',
fontSize: 16
})Orientation
To specify custom orientation (for all sheets), pass orientation parameter when calling writeXlsxFile():
await writeXlsxFile(data, {
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx',
orientation: 'landscape'
})Date Format
To set the default date format, pass dateFormat parameter when calling writeXlsxFile():
await writeXlsxFile(data, {
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx',
dateFormat: 'mm/dd/yyyy'
})Sticky Rows
To make some of the top rows "sticky" (Excel calls them "frozen"), pass stickyRowsCount parameter when calling writeXlsxFile():
await writeXlsxFile(data, {
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx',
stickyRowsCount: 1
})Sticky Columns
To make some of the columns at the start "sticky" (Excel calls them "frozen"), pass stickyColumnsCount parameter when calling writeXlsxFile():
await writeXlsxFile(data, {
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx',
stickyColumnsCount: 1
})Hide Grid Lines
To hide grid lines, pass showGridLines: false parameter when calling writeXlsxFile():
await writeXlsxFile(data, {
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx',
showGridLines: false
})Right-to-Left
To use right-to-left layout on all sheets, pass rightToLeft: true parameter when calling writeXlsxFile():
await writeXlsxFile(data, {
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx',
rightToLeft: true
})Sheet Name
To set the default sheet name, pass a sheet parameter when calling writeXlsxFile():
await writeXlsxFile(data, {
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx',
sheet: 'Data'
})Multiple Sheets
Schema
To generate an *.xlsx file with multiple sheets:
- Pass a
sheetsparameter — an array of sheet names. - The
objectsargument should be an array ofobjectsfor each sheet. - The
schemaparameter should be an array ofschemas for each sheet.
await writeXlsxFile([objects1, objects2], {
schema: [schema1, schema2],
sheets: ['Sheet 1', 'Sheet 2'],
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx'
})Cell Data
To generate an *.xlsx file with multiple sheets:
- Pass a
sheetsparameter — an array of sheet names. - The
dataargument should be an array ofdatafor each sheet. - (optional) The
columnsparameter should be an array ofcolumnsfor each sheet.
await writeXlsxFile([data1, data2], {
columns: [columns1, columns2], // (optional)
sheets: ['Sheet 1', 'Sheet 2'],
filePath: '/path/to/file.xlsx'
})Images
This library currently doesn't support inserting images in a spreadsheet, although implementing such feature would be kinda trivial because I've already researched it a bit and described the implementation instructions in a document.
TypeScript
This library comes with TypeScript "typings". If you happen to find any bugs in those, create an issue.
CDN
One can use any npm CDN service, e.g. unpkg.com or jsdelivr.net
<script src="https://unpkg.com/write-excel-file@1.x/bundle/write-excel-file.min.js"></script>
<script>
writeXlsxFile(objects, schema, {
fileName: 'file.xlsx'
})
</script>References
This project was inspired by zipcelx package.
GitHub
On March 9th, 2020, GitHub, Inc. silently banned my account (erasing all my repos, issues and comments, even in my employer's private repos) without any notice or explanation. Because of that, all source codes had to be promptly moved to GitLab. The GitHub repo is now only used as a backup (you can star the repo there too), and the primary repo is now the GitLab one. Issues can be reported in any repo.
License
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