What it is
Node.js bindings for libxl. Node versions starting from 4.0.0
are supported (see 'Platform and Node.js support' below for details).
Compilation and Installation
Pull the library into your project with npm install libxl
and require the module via
var xl = require('libxl');
LibXL installation
As this packages contains only bindings for the libxl library, the library
itself is required for building and running the bindings.
Compilation Phase
Before the bindings are compiled, the install-libxl.js
script pulls the latest
version of the library from the XLware FTP server and unpacks it in deps/libxl
.
Therefore, no separate installation of libxl is necessary for building the
bindings.
If you want to compile the bindings against a particular version of the library
or if, for some reason, the automatic download fails, you can point the install
script to a locally downloaded archive of the SDK by setting the
NODE_LIBXL_SDK_ARCHIVE
environment variable.
Runtime
In order to load and use the bindings, the libxl library must be available in
your dynamic library search path. This is achieved by either
Copying the library into your system library search path, e.g. /usr/lib
on
Linux.
Copying the library into the working directory where you run the script which
uses the bindings. The name of the library file is libxl.so
on Linux,
libxl.dylib
on Mac and libxl.dll
on Windows.
Properly setting the LD_LIBRARY_PATH
(Linux) or DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH
(Mac)
environment variable. For example, the following command will execute the
demo.js
script in the package directory without requiring libxl to be
installed separately
LD_LIBRARY_PATH="`pwd`/deps/libxl/lib:`pwd`/deps/libxl/lib64:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH" node demo.js
Overriding the location of the compiled bindings
You can override the location where the Javascript wrapper looks for the
libxl.node
file by setting the NODE_LIBXL_PATH
environment variable. This
allows to distribute / deploy an application that uses the bindings to a system
which runs on a different platform / architecture without recompiling the
bindings there.
API
Usage
A new excel document is created via
var xlsBook = new xl.Book(xl.BOOK_TYPE_XLS);
or
var xlsxBook = new xl.Book(xl.BOOK_TYPE_XLSX);
(for xlsx documents). The document is written to disk via
xlsBook.writeSync('file.xls');
or
xlsBook.write('file.xls', callback);
and read back via
xlsBook.loadSync('file.xls');
or
xlsBook.load('file.xls', callback);
where callback
will be called after the operation has completed, receiving an
optional error object as argument if anything goes wrong.
IMPORTANT: See below for additional notes on the async implementation
of libxl calls.
The Javascript API closely follows the C++ API described in the
libxl documentation.
For example, adding a new sheet and writing two cells works as
var sheet = xlsBook.addSheet('Sheet 1');
sheet.writeStr(1, 0, 'A string');
sheet.writeNum(1, 1, 42);
Functions whose C++ counterpart returns void or an error status
have been implemented to return the respective instance, so it
is possible to chain calls
sheet
.writeStr(1, 0, 'A string');
.writeNum(1, 1, 42);
Errors are handled by throwing exceptions.
Functions that return multiple values by reference in C++ (like
Book::dateUnpack) return a object with the return values as properties.
See 'Differences...' below for a more detailed description of the methods whose
behavior differs from their C++ counterpart.
IMPORTANT: The Javascript API enforces the types defined in its C++
counterpart for all function arguments; there is no implicit type casting. For
example, passing a number to Sheet::writeStr will throw a TypeError instead of
silently converting the string to a number.
Coverage
The bindings cover the current (version 3.5.4) libxl API completely.
Implementation details and differences w.r.t. the C++ API
Asynchroneous variants of libxl calls
The async variants of libxl calls implement the standard Node.js API for
async functions: a callback is passed as last argument which is called once the
operation has finished. The first argument of the callback is an error object,
which is undefined
if the operation completed without errors. Any results are
passed as additional arguments to the callback.
IMPORTANT: While an async operation is pending, other operations (sync or
async) on the same book object (and its descendants like sheets, formats and
fonts) are not allowed and will throw an exception. However, multiple
simultaneous operations on different books are allowed.
The following async functions are available:
book.write
/ book.save
, book.load
are implemented asynchroneously. If
you need synchroneous behavior you can use book.loadSync
etc.book.writeRaw
/ book.saveRaw
, book.loadRaw
are implemented
asynchroneously. book.saveRaw
and its alias return the book data as second
argument to the supplied callback. Use book.loadRawSync
& friends for
synchroneous behavior.book.addPicture
has a async version book.addPictureAsync
. The index of the
new picture is passed as the second argument to the callback.book.getPicture
has a async version book.getPictureAsync
. Picture type and
data are passed to the callback as second and third arguments.sheet.insertRow
and sheet.insertCol
are very slow and thus are also
available as async implementations sheet.insertRowAsync
and
sheet.insertColAsync
.
Interface differences
book.write
, book.writeRaw
and their sync versions are also available as
book.save
etc.book.loadRaw
/ book.loadRawSync
take a node buffer as argumentbook.writeRaw
/ book.writeRawSync
return a node bufferbook.getPicture
returns an object with type
and data
properties. The
data
property is a node buffer containing the image data.book.addPicture
and book.addPictureAsync
are overloaded and can be called
with either a file path or a node buffer, thus implementing both
Book.AddPicture
and Book.AddPicture2
from the libxl API.book.dateUnpack
: Returns an object with year
, month
,
date
, hour
, minute
, seconds
and mseconds
properties.book.colorUnpack
: Returns an object with red
, green
and blue
properties.book.defaultFont
: Returns an object with name
and size
properties.sheet.readStr
& friends: If sheet.readXXX
is provided with an object as
optional second argument, the cell format is returned in the objects format
property.sheet.getMerge
: Returns an object with the rowFirst
, rowLast
,
colFirst
, colLast
properties.sheet.getPrintFit
: Returns either false
or an object with the wPages
and
hPages
properties.sheet.getNamedRange
: Returns an object with rowFirst
, rowLast
,
colFirst
, colLast
and hidden
properties.sheet.namedRange
: Returns an object with rowFirst
, rowLast
,
colFirst
, colLast
, name
, scopeId
, and hidden
properties.sheet.getTopLeftView
: Returns an object with row
and col
properties.sheet.addrToRowCol
: Returns an object with row
, col
, rowRelative
,
colRelative
properties.
Other differences
- Book object creation: Books are not created via
xlCreateBook
and
xlCreateXMLBook
. Instead, object instances are directly constructed from the
xl.Book
constructor via either new xl.Book(xl.BOOK_TYPE_XLS)
or new xl.Book(xl.BOOK_TYPE_XLSX)
- Accessing the parent book: sheet, format and font objects hold a reference to
their parent book that can be accessed via the
book
property
Enum constants
All C enum constants provided by the library are available as constants on the
library object, e.g. xl.NUMFORMAT_DATE
or xl.PICTURETYPE_PNG
.
Unlocking the API
If you have purchased a licence key from XLware, you can call book.setKey in
order to unlock the library. As an alternative, you can build the key into the
bindings by modifying api_key.h
and rebuilding the library via node-gyp rebuild
(you'll have to install node-gyp for this) or npm install
in the
package directory.
Platform and Node.js support
Platforms
The package supports Linux, Windows and Mac.
Node.js
The current branch (0.3.x) supports all current versions of Node.js starting with 4.0.0.
If you need support for older Node versions, use the 0.2.x branch --- this supports
Node.js down to version 0.10.0.
Restrictions
Some of the newer parts of the libxl API are currently unsupported. Nag me to implement
them if you miss anything (or provide a pull request).
The async hooks API introduced with Node.js 9 is currently unsupported.
Tests
The bindings are fully covered with jasmine tests. If you have jasmine-node
installed (via NPM), you can run the suite via
jasmine-node specs/
Reporting bugs
Please report any bugs or feature requests on the github issue tracker.
Roadmap
As the API is completely covered, I consider the bindings complete. New releases
will only cover new libxl methods and fix bugs. If you identify parts of
libxl that are particularily slow, asynchroneous version of those could be added
as well. Note that only the latest version branch (0.3.x) is maintained and
supported.
Credits
- Torben Fitschen wrote the install script which pulls the
necessary libxl SDK before building.
- Martin Schröder for adding Mac support.
- Parts if this package were developed during slacktime provided by the awesome folks at
Mayflower GmbH
- Alexander Makarenko wrote
node-excel-libxl
Though node-libxl is rewritten from scratch, this
package served as the starting point.