Parser and writer for various spreadsheet formats. Pure-JS cleanroom
implementation from official specifications, related documents, and test files.
Emphasis on parsing and writing robustness, cross-format feature compatibility
with a unified JS representation, and ES3/ES5 browser compatibility back to IE6.
This is the community version. We also offer a pro version with performance
enhancements, additional features by request, and dedicated support.
Pro Version
Commercial Support
Rendered Documentation
In-Browser Demos
Source Code
Issues and Bug Reports
Other General Support Issues
File format support for known spreadsheet data formats:
Graph of supported formats (click to show)
Browser Test
Table of Contents
Expand to show Table of Contents
Installation
In the browser, just add a script tag:
<script lang="javascript" src="dist/xlsx.full.min.js"></script>
With npm:
$ npm install xlsx
With bower:
$ bower install js-xlsx
CDNjs automatically pulls the latest version and makes all versions available at
http://cdnjs.com/libraries/xlsx
JS Ecosystem Demos
The demos
directory includes sample projects for:
Optional Modules
The node version automatically requires modules for additional features. Some
of these modules are rather large in size and are only needed in special
circumstances, so they do not ship with the core. For browser use, they must
be included directly:
<script src="dist/cpexcel.js"></script>
An appropriate version for each dependency is included in the dist/ directory.
The complete single-file version is generated at dist/xlsx.full.min.js
Webpack and browserify builds include optional modules by default. Webpack can
be configured to remove support with resolve.alias
:
resolve: {
alias: { "./dist/cpexcel.js": "" }
}
ECMAScript 5 Compatibility
Since xlsx.js uses ES5 functions like Array#forEach
, older browsers require
Polyfills. This repo and the gh-pages branch include
a shim
To use the shim, add the shim before the script tag that loads xlsx.js:
<script type="text/javascript" src="/path/to/shim.js"></script>
Philosophy
Philosophy (click to show)
Prior to SheetJS, APIs for processing spreadsheet files were format-specific.
Third-party libraries either supported one format, or they involved a separate
set of classes for each supported file type. Even though XLSB was introduced in
Excel 2007, nothing outside of SheetJS or Excel supported the format.
To promote a format-agnostic view, js-xlsx starts from a pure-JS representation
that we call the "Common Spreadsheet Format".
Emphasizing a uniform object representation enables radical features like format
conversion (e.g. reading an XLSX template and saving as XLS) and circumvents the
"class trap". By abstracting the complexities of the various formats, tools
need not worry about the specific file type!
A simple object representation combined with careful coding practices enables
use cases in older browsers and in alternative environments like ExtendScript
and Web Workers. It is always tempting to use the latest and greatest features,
but they tend to require the latest versions of browsers, limiting usability.
Utility functions capture common use cases like generating JS objects or HTML.
Most simple operations should only require a few lines of code. More complex
operations generally should be straightforward to implement.
Excel pushes the XLSX format as default starting in Excel 2007. However, there
are other formats with more appealing properties. For example, the XLSB format
is spiritually similar to XLSX but files often tend up taking less than half the
space and open much faster! Even though an XLSX writer is available, other
format writers are available so users can take advantage of the unique
characteristics of each format.
Parsing Workbooks
For parsing, the first step is to read the file. This involves acquiring the
data and feeding it into the library. Here are a few common scenarios:
nodejs read a file (click to show)
if(typeof require !== 'undefined') XLSX = require('xlsx');
var workbook = XLSX.readFile('test.xlsx');
Browser read TABLE element from page (click to show)
var worksheet = XLSX.utils.table_to_book(document.getElementById('tableau'));
Browser download file (ajax) (click to show)
Note: for a more complete example that works in older browsers, check the demo
at http://oss.sheetjs.com/js-xlsx/ajax.html):
var url = "test_files/formula_stress_test_ajax.xlsx";
var oReq = new XMLHttpRequest();
oReq.open("GET", url, true);
oReq.responseType = "arraybuffer";
oReq.onload = function(e) {
var arraybuffer = oReq.response;
var data = new Uint8Array(arraybuffer);
var arr = new Array();
for(var i = 0; i != data.length; ++i) arr[i] = String.fromCharCode(data[i]);
var bstr = arr.join("");
var workbook = XLSX.read(bstr, {type:"binary"});
}
oReq.send();
Browser drag-and-drop (click to show)
Drag-and-drop uses FileReader with readAsBinaryString or readAsArrayBuffer.
Note: readAsBinaryString and readAsArrayBuffer may not be available in every
browser. Use dynamic feature tests to determine which method to use.
function fixdata(data) {
var o = "", l = 0, w = 10240;
for(; l<data.byteLength/w; ++l) o+=String.fromCharCode.apply(null,new Uint8Array(data.slice(l*w,l*w+w)));
o+=String.fromCharCode.apply(null, new Uint8Array(data.slice(l*w)));
return o;
}
var rABS = true;
function handleDrop(e) {
e.stopPropagation();
e.preventDefault();
var files = e.dataTransfer.files;
var i,f;
for (i = 0; i != files.length; ++i) {
f = files[i];
var reader = new FileReader();
var name = f.name;
reader.onload = function(e) {
var data = e.target.result;
var workbook;
if(rABS) {
workbook = XLSX.read(data, {type: 'binary'});
} else {
var arr = fixdata(data);
workbook = XLSX.read(btoa(arr), {type: 'base64'});
}
};
if(rABS) reader.readAsBinaryString(f);
else reader.readAsArrayBuffer(f);
}
}
drop_dom_element.addEventListener('drop', handleDrop, false);
Browser file upload form element (click to show)
function handleFile(e) {
var files = e.target.files;
var i,f;
for (i = 0; i != files.length; ++i) {
f = files[i];
var reader = new FileReader();
var name = f.name;
reader.onload = function(e) {
var data = e.target.result;
var workbook;
if(rABS) {
workbook = XLSX.read(data, {type: 'binary'});
} else {
var arr = fixdata(data);
workbook = XLSX.read(btoa(arr), {type: 'base64'});
}
};
reader.readAsBinaryString(f);
}
}
input_dom_element.addEventListener('change', handleFile, false);
Complete Examples
Note that older versions of IE do not support HTML5 File API, so the base64 mode
is used for testing. On OSX you can get the base64 encoding with:
$ <target_file base64 | pbcopy
On Windows XP and up you can get the base64 encoding using certutil
:
> certutil -encode target_file target_file.b64
(note: You have to open the file and remove the header and footer lines)
Note on Streaming Read
The most common and interesting formats (XLS, XLSX/M, XLSB, ODS) are ultimately
ZIP or CFB containers of files. Neither format puts the directory structure at
the beginning of the file: ZIP files place the Central Directory records at the
end of the logical file, while CFB files can place the FAT structure anywhere in
the file! As a result, to properly handle these formats, a streaming function
would have to buffer the entire file before commencing. That belies the
expectations of streaming, so we do not provide any streaming read API. If you
really want to stream, there are node modules like concat-stream
that will do
the buffering for you.
Working with the Workbook
The full object format is described later in this README.
This example extracts the value stored in cell A1 from the first worksheet:
var first_sheet_name = workbook.SheetNames[0];
var address_of_cell = 'A1';
var worksheet = workbook.Sheets[first_sheet_name];
var desired_cell = worksheet[address_of_cell];
var desired_value = (desired_cell ? desired_cell.v : undefined);
Complete Examples
The node version installs a command line tool xlsx
which can read spreadsheet
files and output the contents in various formats. The source is available at
xlsx.njs
in the bin directory.
Some helper functions in XLSX.utils
generate different views of the sheets:
XLSX.utils.sheet_to_csv
generates CSVXLSX.utils.sheet_to_json
generates an array of objectsXLSX.utils.sheet_to_formulae
generates a list of formulae
Writing Workbooks
For writing, the first step is to generate output data. The helper functions
write
and writeFile
will produce the data in various formats suitable for
dissemination. The second step is to actual share the data with the end point.
Assuming workbook
is a workbook object:
nodejs write a file (click to show)
XLSX.writeFile(workbook, 'out.xlsx');
Browser download file (click to show)
Note: browser generates binary blob and forces a "download" to client. This
example uses FileSaver.js:
var wopts = { bookType:'xlsx', bookSST:false, type:'binary' };
var wbout = XLSX.write(workbook,wopts);
function s2ab(s) {
var buf = new ArrayBuffer(s.length);
var view = new Uint8Array(buf);
for (var i=0; i!=s.length; ++i) view[i] = s.charCodeAt(i) & 0xFF;
return buf;
}
saveAs(new Blob([s2ab(wbout)],{type:"application/octet-stream"}), "test.xlsx");
Complete Examples
Streaming Write
The streaming write functions are available in the XLSX.stream
object. They
take the same arguments as the normal write functions but return a readable
stream. They are only exposed in node.
XLSX.stream.to_csv
is the streaming version of XLSX.utils.sheet_to_csv
.XLSX.stream.to_html
is the streaming version of the HTML output type.
https://github.com/sheetjs/sheetaki pipes write streams to nodejs response.
Interface
XLSX
is the exposed variable in the browser and the exported node variable
XLSX.version
is the version of the library (added by the build script).
XLSX.SSF
is an embedded version of the format library.
Parsing functions
XLSX.read(data, read_opts)
attempts to parse data
.
XLSX.readFile(filename, read_opts)
attempts to read filename
and parse.
Parse options are described in the Parsing Options section.
Writing functions
XLSX.write(wb, write_opts)
attempts to write the workbook wb
XLSX.writeFile(wb, filename, write_opts)
attempts to write wb
to filename
XLSX.writeFileAsync(filename, wb, o, cb)
attempts to write wb
to filename
.
If o
is omitted, the writer will use the third argument as the callback.
XLSX.stream
contains a set of streaming write functions.
Write options are described in the Writing Options section.
Utilities
Utilities are available in the XLSX.utils
object:
Importing:
aoa_to_sheet
converts an array of arrays of JS data to a worksheet.
Exporting:
sheet_to_json
converts a worksheet object to an array of JSON objects.sheet_to_csv
generates delimiter-separated-values output.sheet_to_formulae
generates a list of the formulae (with value fallbacks).
Exporters are described in the Utility Functions section.
Cell and cell address manipulation:
format_cell
generates the text value for a cell (using number formats){en,de}code_{row,col}
convert between 0-indexed rows/cols and A1 forms.{en,de}code_cell
converts cell addresses{en,de}code_range
converts cell ranges
Common Spreadsheet Format
js-xlsx conforms to the Common Spreadsheet Format (CSF):
General Structures
Cell address objects are stored as {c:C, r:R}
where C
and R
are 0-indexed
column and row numbers, respectively. For example, the cell address B5
is
represented by the object {c:1, r:4}
.
Cell range objects are stored as {s:S, e:E}
where S
is the first cell and
E
is the last cell in the range. The ranges are inclusive. For example, the
range A3:B7
is represented by the object {s:{c:0, r:2}, e:{c:1, r:6}}
. Utils
use the following pattern to walk each of the cells in a range:
for(var R = range.s.r; R <= range.e.r; ++R) {
for(var C = range.s.c; C <= range.e.c; ++C) {
var cell_address = {c:C, r:R};
}
}
Cell Object
Key | Description |
---|
v | raw value (see Data Types section for more info) |
w | formatted text (if applicable) |
t | cell type: b Boolean, n Number, e error, s String, d Date |
f | cell formula encoded as an A1-style string (if applicable) |
F | range of enclosing array if formula is array formula (if applicable) |
r | rich text encoding (if applicable) |
h | HTML rendering of the rich text (if applicable) |
c | comments associated with the cell |
z | number format string associated with the cell (if requested) |
l | cell hyperlink object (.Target holds link, .Tooltip is tooltip) |
s | the style/theme of the cell (if applicable) |
Built-in export utilities (such as the CSV exporter) will use the w
text if it
is available. To change a value, be sure to delete cell.w
(or set it to
undefined
) before attempting to export. The utilities will regenerate the w
text from the number format (cell.z
) and the raw value if possible.
The actual array formula is stored in the f
field of the first cell in the
array range. Other cells in the range will omit the f
field.
Data Types
The raw value is stored in the v
field, interpreted based on the t
field.
Type b
is the Boolean type. v
is interpreted according to JS truth tables.
Type e
is the Error type. v
holds the number and w
holds the common name:
Error values and interpretation (click to show)
Value | Error Meaning |
---|
0x00 | #NULL! |
0x07 | #DIV/0! |
0x0F | #VALUE! |
0x17 | #REF! |
0x1D | #NAME? |
0x24 | #NUM! |
0x2A | #N/A |
0x2B | #GETTING_DATA |
Type n
is the Number type. This includes all forms of data that Excel stores
as numbers, such as dates/times and Boolean fields. Excel exclusively uses data
that can be fit in an IEEE754 floating point number, just like JS Number, so the
v
field holds the raw number. The w
field holds formatted text. Dates are
stored as numbers by default and converted with XLSX.SSF.parse_date_code
.
Type d
is the Date type, generated only when the option cellDates
is passed.
Since JSON does not have a natural Date type, parsers are generally expected to
store ISO 8601 Date strings like you would get from date.toISOString()
. On
the other hand, writers and exporters should be able to handle date strings and
JS Date objects. Note that Excel disregards timezone modifiers and treats all
dates in the local timezone. js-xlsx does not correct for this error.
Type s
is the String type. v
should be explicitly stored as a string to
avoid possible confusion.
Type z
represents blank stub cells. These do not have any data or type, and
are not processed by any of the core library functions. By default these cells
will not be generated; the parser sheetStubs
option must be set to true
.
Dates
By default, Excel stores dates as numbers with a format code that specifies date
processing. For example, the date 19-Feb-17
is stored as the number 42785
with a number format of d-mmm-yy
. The SSF
module understands number formats
and performs the appropriate conversion.
XLSX also supports a special date type d
where the data is an ISO 8601 date
string. The formatter converts the date back to a number.
The default behavior for all parsers is to generate number cells. Setting
cellDates
to true will force the generators to store dates.
Sheet Objects
Each key that does not start with !
maps to a cell (using A-1
notation)
sheet[address]
returns the cell object for the specified address.
Special sheet keys (accessible as sheet[key]
, each starting with !
):
-
sheet['!ref']
: A-1 based range representing the sheet range. Functions that
work with sheets should use this parameter to determine the range. Cells that
are assigned outside of the range are not processed. In particular, when
writing a sheet by hand, cells outside of the range are not included
Functions that handle sheets should test for the presence of !ref
field.
If the !ref
is omitted or is not a valid range, functions are free to treat
the sheet as empty or attempt to guess the range. The standard utilities that
ship with this library treat sheets as empty (for example, the CSV output is
empty string).
When reading a worksheet with the sheetRows
property set, the ref parameter
will use the restricted range. The original range is set at ws['!fullref']
-
sheet['!margins']
: Object representing the page margins. The default values
follow Excel's "normal" preset. Excel also has a "wide" and a "narrow" preset
but they are stored as raw measurements. The main properties are listed below:
Page margin details (click to show)
key | description | "normal" | "wide" | "narrow" |
---|
left | left margin (inches) | 0.7 | 1.0 | 0.25 |
right | right margin (inches) | 0.7 | 1.0 | 0.25 |
top | top margin (inches) | 0.75 | 1.0 | 0.75 |
bottom | bottom margin (inches) | 0.75 | 1.0 | 0.75 |
header | header margin (inches) | 0.3 | 0.5 | 0.3 |
footer | footer margin (inches) | 0.3 | 0.5 | 0.3 |
sheet["!margins"] = { left:0.7, right:0.7, top:0.75, bottom:0.75, header:0.3, footer:0.3 }
sheet["!margins"] = { left:1.0, right:1.0, top:1.0, bottom:1.0, header:0.5, footer:0.5 }
sheet["!margins"] = { left:0.25, right:0.25, top:0.75, bottom:0.75, header:0.3, footer:0.3 }
Worksheet Object
In addition to the base sheet keys, worksheets also add:
-
ws['!cols']
: array of column properties objects. Column widths are actually
stored in files in a normalized manner, measured in terms of the "Maximum
Digit Width" (the largest width of the rendered digits 0-9, in pixels). When
parsed, the column objects store the pixel width in the wpx
field, character
width in the wch
field, and the maximum digit width in the MDW
field.
-
ws['!rows']
: array of row properties objects as explained later in the docs.
Each row object encodes properties including row height and visibility.
-
ws['!merges']
: array of range objects corresponding to the merged cells in
the worksheet. Plaintext utilities are unaware of merge cells. CSV export
will write all cells in the merge range if they exist, so be sure that only
the first cell (upper-left) in the range is set.
-
ws['!protect']
: object of write sheet protection properties. The password
key specifies the password for formats that support password-protected sheets
(XLSX/XLSB/XLS). The writer uses the XOR obfuscation method. The following
keys control the sheet protection -- set to false
to enable a feature when
sheet is locked or set to true
to disable a feature:
Worksheet Protection Details (click to show)
key | feature (true=disabled / false=enabled) | default |
---|
selectLockedCells | Select locked cells | enabled |
selectUnlockedCells | Select unlocked cells | enabled |
formatCells | Format cells | disabled |
formatColumns | Format columns | disabled |
formatRows | Format rows | disabled |
insertColumns | Insert columns | disabled |
insertRows | Insert rows | disabled |
insertHyperlinks | Insert hyperlinks | disabled |
deleteColumns | Delete columns | disabled |
deleteRows | Delete rows | disabled |
sort | Sort | disabled |
autoFilter | Filter | disabled |
pivotTables | Use PivotTable reports | disabled |
objects | Edit objects | enabled |
scenarios | Edit scenarios | enabled |
ws['!autofilter']
: AutoFilter object following the schema:
type AutoFilter = {
ref:string;
}
Chartsheet Object
Chartsheets are represented as standard sheets. They are distinguished with the
!type
property set to "chart"
.
The underlying data and !ref
refer to the cached data in the chartsheet. The
first row of the chartsheet is the underlying header.
Workbook Object
workbook.SheetNames
is an ordered list of the sheets in the workbook
wb.Sheets[sheetname]
returns an object representing the worksheet.
wb.Props
is an object storing the standard properties. wb.Custprops
stores
custom properties. Since the XLS standard properties deviate from the XLSX
standard, XLS parsing stores core properties in both places.
wb.WBProps
includes more workbook-level properties:
- Excel supports two epochs (January 1 1900 and January 1 1904), see
1900 vs. 1904 Date System.
The workbook's epoch can be determined by examining the workbook's
wb.WBProps.date1904
property.
Workbook File Properties
The various file formats use different internal names for file properties. The
workbook Props
object normalizes the names:
File Properties (click to show)
JS Name | Excel Description |
---|
Title | Summary tab "Title" |
Subject | Summary tab "Subject" |
Author | Summary tab "Author" |
Manager | Summary tab "Manager" |
Company | Summary tab "Company" |
Category | Summary tab "Category" |
Keywords | Summary tab "Keywords" |
Comments | Summary tab "Comments" |
LastAuthor | Statistics tab "Last saved by" |
CreatedDate | Statistics tab "Created" |
For example, to set the workbook title property:
if(!wb.Props) wb.Props = {};
wb.Props.Title = "Insert Title Here";
Custom properties are added in the workbook Custprops
object:
if(!wb.Custprops) wb.Custprops = {};
wb.Custprops["Custom Property"] = "Custom Value";
Writers will process the Props
key of the options object:
XLSX.write(wb, {Props:{Author:"SheetJS"}});
Workbook-Level Attributes
wb.Workbook
stores workbook level attributes.
Defined Names
wb.Workbook.Names
is an array of defined name objects which have the keys:
Defined Name Properties (click to show)
Key | Description |
---|
Sheet | Name scope. Sheet Index (0 = first sheet) or null (Workbook) |
Name | Case-sensitive name. Standard rules apply ** |
Ref | A1-style Reference (e.g. "Sheet1!$A$1:$D$20" ) |
Comment | Comment (only applicable for XLS/XLSX/XLSB) |
Excel allows two sheet-scoped defined names to share the same name. However, a
sheet-scoped name cannot collide with a workbook-scope name. Workbook writers
may not enforce this constraint.
Document Features
Even for basic features like date storage, the official Excel formats store the
same content in different ways. The parsers are expected to convert from the
underlying file format representation to the Common Spreadsheet Format. Writers
are expected to convert from CSF back to the underlying file format.
Formulae
The A1-style formula string is stored in the f
field. Even though different
file formats store the formulae in different ways, the formats are translated.
Even though some formats store formulae with a leading equal sign, CSF formulae
do not start with =
.
Representation of A1=1, A2=2, A3=A1+A2 (click to show)
{
"!ref": "A1:A3",
A1: { t:'n', v:1 },
A2: { t:'n', v:2 },
A3: { t:'n', v:3, f:'A1+A2' }
}
Shared formulae are decompressed and each cell has the formula corresponding to
its cell. Writers generally do not attempt to generate shared formulae.
Cells with formula entries but no value will be serialized in a way that Excel
and other spreadsheet tools will recognize. This library will not automatically
compute formula results! For example, to compute BESSELJ
in a worksheet:
Formula without known value (click to show)
{
"!ref": "A1:A3",
A1: { t:'n', v:3.14159 },
A2: { t:'n', v:2 },
A3: { t:'n', f:'BESSELJ(A1,A2)' }
}
Array Formulae
Array formulae are stored in the top-left cell of the array block. All cells
of an array formula have a F
field corresponding to the range. A single-cell
formula can be distinguished from a plain formula by the presence of F
field.
Array Formula examples (click to show)
For example, setting the cell C1
to the array formula {=SUM(A1:A3*B1:B3)}
:
worksheet['C1'] = { t:'n', f: "SUM(A1:A3*B1:B3)", F:"C1:C1" };
For a multi-cell array formula, every cell has the same array range but only the
first cell specifies the formula. Consider D1:D3=A1:A3*B1:B3
:
worksheet['D1'] = { t:'n', F:"D1:D3", f:"A1:A3*B1:B3" };
worksheet['D2'] = { t:'n', F:"D1:D3" };
worksheet['D3'] = { t:'n', F:"D1:D3" };
Utilities and writers are expected to check for the presence of a F
field and
ignore any possible formula element f
in cells other than the starting cell.
They are not expected to perform validation of the formulae!
Formula Output Utility Function (click to show)
The sheet_to_formulae
method generates one line per formula or array formula.
Array formulae are rendered in the form range=formula
while plain cells are
rendered in the form cell=formula or value
. Note that string literals are
prefixed with an apostrophe '
, consistent with Excel's formula bar display.
Formulae File Format Details (click to show)
Storage Representation | Formats | Read | Write |
---|
A1-style strings | XLSX | :o: | :o: |
RC-style strings | XLML and plaintext | :o: | :o: |
BIFF Parsed formulae | XLSB and all XLS formats | :o: | |
OpenFormula formulae | ODS/FODS/UOS | :o: | :o: |
Since Excel prohibits named cells from colliding with names of A1 or RC style
cell references, a (not-so-simple) regex conversion is possible. BIFF Parsed
formulae have to be explicitly unwound. OpenFormula formulae can be converted
with regexes for the most part.
Column Properties
The !cols
array in each worksheet, if present, is a collection of ColInfo
objects which have the following properties:
type ColInfo = {
hidden:?boolean;
wpx?:number;
width:number;
wch?:number;
MDW?:number;
};
Excel internally stores column widths in a nebulous "Max Digit Width" form. The
Max Digit Width is the width of the largest digit when rendered (generally the
"0" character is the widest). The internal width must be an integer multiple of
the the width divided by 256. ECMA-376 describes a formula for converting
between pixels and the internal width.
Implementation details (click to show)
Given the constraints, it is possible to determine the MDW without actually
inspecting the font! The parsers guess the pixel width by converting from width
to pixels and back, repeating for all possible MDW and selecting the MDW that
minimizes the error. XLML actually stores the pixel width, so the guess works
in the opposite direction.
Even though all of the information is made available, writers are expected to
follow the priority order:
- use
width
field if available - use
wpx
pixel width if available - use
wch
character count if available
Row Properties
The !rows
array in each worksheet, if present, is a collection of RowInfo
objects which have the following properties:
type RowInfo = {
hidden:?boolean;
hpx?:number;
hpt?:number;
};
Implementation details (click to show)
Excel internally stores row heights in points. The default resolution is 72 DPI
or 96 PPI, so the pixel and point size should agree. For different resolutions
they may not agree, so the library separates the concepts.
Even though all of the information is made available, writers are expected to
follow the priority order:
- use
hpx
pixel height if available - use
hpt
point height if available
Number Formats
The cell.w
formatted text for each cell is produced from cell.v
and cell.z
format. If the format is not specified, the Excel General
format is used.
The format can either be specified as a string or as an index into the format
table. Parsers are expected to populate workbook.SSF
with the number format
table. Writers are expected to serialize the table.
Custom tools should ensure that the local table has each used format string
somewhere in the table. Excel convention mandates that the custom formats start
at index 164. The following example creates a custom format from scratch:
New worksheet with custom format (click to show)
var tbl = {};
var wb = {
SheetNames: ["Sheet1"],
Sheets: {
Sheet1: {
"!ref":"A1:C1",
A1: { t:"n", v:10000 },
B1: { t:"n", v:10000, z: "0%" },
C1: { t:"n", v:10000, z: "\"T\"\ #0.00" }
}
}
}
The rules are slightly different from how Excel displays custom number formats.
In particular, literal characters must be wrapped in double quotes or preceded
by a backslash. For more info, see the Excel documentation article
Create or delete a custom number format
or ECMA-376 18.8.31 (Number Formats)
Default Number Formats (click to show)
The default formats are listed in ECMA-376 18.8.30:
ID | Format |
---|
0 | General |
1 | 0 |
2 | 0.00 |
3 | #,##0 |
4 | #,##0.00 |
9 | 0% |
10 | 0.00% |
11 | 0.00E+00 |
12 | # ?/? |
13 | # ??/?? |
14 | m/d/yy (see below) |
15 | d-mmm-yy |
16 | d-mmm |
17 | mmm-yy |
18 | h:mm AM/PM |
19 | h:mm:ss AM/PM |
20 | h:mm |
21 | h:mm:ss |
22 | m/d/yy h:mm |
37 | #,##0 ;(#,##0) |
38 | #,##0 ;[Red](#,##0) |
39 | #,##0.00;(#,##0.00) |
40 | #,##0.00;[Red](#,##0.00) |
45 | mm:ss |
46 | [h]:mm:ss |
47 | mmss.0 |
48 | ##0.0E+0 |
49 | @ |
Format 14 (m/d/yy
) is localized by Excel: even though the file specifies that
number format, it will be drawn differently based on system settings. It makes
sense when the producer and consumer of files are in the same locale, but that
is not always the case over the Internet. To get around this ambiguity, parse
functions accept the dateNF
option to override the interpretation of that
specific format string.
Hyperlinks
Hyperlinks are stored in the l
key of cell objects. The Target
field of the
hyperlink object is the target of the link, including the URI fragment. Tooltips
are stored in the Tooltip
field and are displayed when you move your mouse
over the text.
For example, the following snippet creates a link from cell A3
to
http://sheetjs.com with the tip "Find us @ SheetJS.com!"
:
ws['A3'].l = { Target:"http://sheetjs.com", Tooltip:"Find us @ SheetJS.com!" };
Note that Excel does not automatically style hyperlinks -- they will generally
be displayed as normal text.
Cell comments are objects stored in the c
array of cell objects. The actual
contents of the comment are split into blocks based on the comment author. The
a
field of each comment object is the author of the comment and the t
field
is the plaintext representation.
For example, the following snippet appends a cell comment into cell A1
:
if(!ws.A1.c) ws.A1.c = [];
ws.A1.c.push({a:"SheetJS", t:"I'm a little comment, short and stout!"});
Note: XLSB enforces a 54 character limit on the Author name. Names longer than
54 characters may cause issues with other formats.
Sheet Visibility
Excel enables hiding sheets in the lower tab bar. The sheet data is stored in
the file but the UI does not readily make it available. Standard hidden sheets
are revealed in the unhide menu. Excel also has "very hidden" sheets which
cannot be revealed in the menu. It is only accessible in the VB Editor!
The visibility setting is stored in the Hidden
property of sheet props array.
More details (click to show)
Value | Definition |
---|
0 | Visible |
1 | Hidden |
2 | Very Hidden |
With https://rawgit.com/SheetJS/test_files/master/sheet_visibility.xlsx:
> wb.Workbook.Sheets.map(function(x) { return [x.name, x.Hidden] })
[ [ 'Visible', 0 ], [ 'Hidden', 1 ], [ 'VeryHidden', 2 ] ]
Non-Excel formats do not support the Very Hidden state. The best way to test
if a sheet is visible is to check if the Hidden
property is logical truth:
> wb.Workbook.Sheets.map(function(x) { return [x.name, !x.Hidden] })
[ [ 'Visible', true ], [ 'Hidden', false ], [ 'VeryHidden', false ] ]
Parsing Options
The exported read
and readFile
functions accept an options argument:
Option Name | Default | Description |
---|
type | | Input data encoding (see Input Type below) |
cellFormula | true | Save formulae to the .f field |
cellHTML | true | Parse rich text and save HTML to the .h field |
cellNF | false | Save number format string to the .z field |
cellStyles | false | Save style/theme info to the .s field |
cellText | true | Generated formatted text to the .w field |
cellDates | false | Store dates as type d (default is n ) |
dateNF | | If specified, use the string for date code 14 ** |
sheetStubs | false | Create cell objects of type z for stub cells |
sheetRows | 0 | If >0, read the first sheetRows rows ** |
bookDeps | false | If true, parse calculation chains |
bookFiles | false | If true, add raw files to book object ** |
bookProps | false | If true, only parse enough to get book metadata ** |
bookSheets | false | If true, only parse enough to get the sheet names |
bookVBA | false | If true, expose vbaProject.bin to vbaraw field ** |
password | "" | If defined and file is encrypted, use password ** |
WTF | false | If true, throw errors on unexpected file features ** |
- Even if
cellNF
is false, formatted text will be generated and saved to .w
- In some cases, sheets may be parsed even if
bookSheets
is false. bookSheets
and bookProps
combine to give both sets of informationDeps
will be an empty object if bookDeps
is falsybookFiles
behavior depends on file type:
keys
array (paths in the ZIP) for ZIP-based formatsfiles
hash (mapping paths to objects representing the files) for ZIPcfb
object for formats using CFB containers
sheetRows-1
rows will be generated when looking at the JSON object output
(since the header row is counted as a row when parsing the data)bookVBA
merely exposes the raw vba object. It does not parse the data.- Currently only XOR encryption is supported. Unsupported error will be thrown
for files employing other encryption methods.
- WTF is mainly for development. By default, the parser will suppress read
errors on single worksheets, allowing you to read from the worksheets that do
parse properly. Setting
WTF:1
forces those errors to be thrown.
The defaults are enumerated in bits/84_defaults.js
Input Type
Strings can be interpreted in multiple ways. The type
parameter for read
tells the library how to parse the data argument:
type | expected input |
---|
"base64" | string: base64 encoding of the file |
"binary" | string: binary string (n -th byte is data.charCodeAt(n) ) |
"buffer" | nodejs Buffer |
"array" | array: array of 8-bit unsigned int (n -th byte is data[n] ) |
"file" | string: filename that will be read and processed (nodejs only) |
Guessing File Type
Implementation Details (click to show)
Excel and other spreadsheet tools read the first few bytes and apply other
heuristics to determine a file type. This enables file type punning: renaming
files with the .xls
extension will tell your computer to use Excel to open the
file but Excel will know how to handle it. This library applies similar logic:
Byte 0 | Raw File Type | Spreadsheet Types |
---|
0xD0 | CFB Container | BIFF 5/8 or password-protected XLSX/XLSB or WQ3/QPW |
0x09 | BIFF Stream | BIFF 2/3/4/5 |
0x3C | XML/HTML | SpreadsheetML / Flat ODS / UOS1 / HTML / plaintext |
0x50 | ZIP Archive | XLSB or XLSX/M or ODS or UOS2 or plaintext |
0x49 | Plain Text | SYLK or plaintext |
0x54 | Plain Text | DIF or plaintext |
0xFE | UTF16 Encoded | SpreadsheetML or Flat ODS or UOS1 or plaintext |
0x00 | Record Stream | Lotus WK* or Quattro Pro or plaintext |
DBF files are detected based on the first byte as well as the third and fourth
bytes (corresponding to month and day of the file date)
Plaintext format guessing follows the priority order:
Format | Test |
---|
HTML | starts with <html |
XML | starts with < |
DSV | starts with /sep=.$/ , separator is the specified character |
TSV | one of the first 1024 characters is a tab char "\t" |
CSV | one of the first 1024 characters is a comma char "," |
PRN | (default) |
Writing Options
The exported write
and writeFile
functions accept an options argument:
Option Name | Default | Description |
---|
type | | Output data encoding (see Output Type below) |
cellDates | false | Store dates as type d (default is n ) |
bookSST | false | Generate Shared String Table ** |
bookType | "xlsx" | Type of Workbook (see below for supported formats) |
sheet | "" | Name of Worksheet for single-sheet formats ** |
compression | false | Use ZIP compression for ZIP-based formats ** |
Props | | Override workbook properties when writing ** |
themeXLSX | | Override theme XML when writing XLSX/XLSB/XLSM ** |
bookSST
is slower and more memory intensive, but has better compatibility
with older versions of iOS Numbers- The raw data is the only thing guaranteed to be saved. Features not described
in this README may not be serialized.
cellDates
only applies to XLSX output and is not guaranteed to work with
third-party readers. Excel itself does not usually write cells with type d
so non-Excel tools may ignore the data or blow up in the presence of dates.Props
is an object mirroring the workbook Props
field. See the table from
the Workbook File Properties section.- if specified, the string from
themeXLSX
will be saved as the primary theme
for XLSX/XLSB/XLSM files (to xl/theme/theme1.xml
in the ZIP)
Supported Output Formats
For broad compatibility with third-party tools, this library supports many
output formats. The specific file type is controlled with bookType
option:
bookType | file ext | container | sheets | Description |
---|
xlsx | .xlsx | ZIP | multi | Excel 2007+ XML Format |
xlsm | .xlsm | ZIP | multi | Excel 2007+ Macro XML Format |
xlsb | .xlsb | ZIP | multi | Excel 2007+ Binary Format |
biff2 | .xls | none | single | Excel 2.0 Worksheet format |
xlml | .xls | none | multi | Excel 2003-2004 (SpreadsheetML) |
ods | .ods | ZIP | multi | OpenDocument Spreadsheet |
fods | .fods | none | multi | Flat OpenDocument Spreadsheet |
csv | .csv | none | single | Comma Separated Values |
txt | .txt | none | single | UTF-16 Unicode Text (TXT) |
sylk | .sylk | none | single | Symbolic Link (SYLK) |
html | .html | none | single | HTML Document |
dif | .dif | none | single | Data Interchange Format (DIF) |
prn | .prn | none | single | Lotus Formatted Text |
compression
only applies to formats with ZIP containers.- Formats that only support a single sheet require a
sheet
option specifying
the worksheet. If the string is empty, the first worksheet is used. writeFile
will automatically guess the output file format based on the file
extension if bookType
is not specified. It will choose the first format in
the aforementioned table that matches the extension.
Output Type
The type
argument for write
mirrors the type
argument for read
:
type | output |
---|
"base64" | string: base64 encoding of the file |
"binary" | string: binary string (n -th byte is data.charCodeAt(n) ) |
"buffer" | nodejs Buffer |
"file" | string: name of file to be written (nodejs only) |
Utility Functions
The sheet_to_*
functions accept a worksheet and an optional options object.
The *_to_sheet
functions accept a data object and an optional options object.
The examples are based on the following worksheet:
XXX| A | B | C | D | E | F | G |
---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+
1 | S | h | e | e | t | J | S |
2 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
3 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
Array of Arrays Input
XLSX.utils.aoa_to_sheet
takes an array of arrays of JS values and returns a
worksheet resembling the input data. Numbers, Booleans and Strings are stored
as the corresponding styles. Dates are stored as date or numbers. Array holes
and explicit undefined
values are skipped. null
values may be stubbed. All
other values are stored as strings. The function takes an options argument:
Option Name | Default | Description |
---|
dateNF | fmt 14 | Use specified date format in string output |
cellDates | false | Store dates as type d (default is n ) |
sheetStubs | false | Create cell objects of type z for null values |
Examples (click to show)
To generate the example sheet:
var ws = XLSX.utils.aoa_to_sheet([
"SheetJS".split(""),
[1,2,3,4,5,6,7],
[2,3,4,5,6,7,8]
]);
HTML Table Input
XLSX.utils.table_to_sheet
takes a table DOM element and returns a worksheet
resembling the input table. Numbers are parsed. All other data will be stored
as strings.
XLSX.utils.table_to_book
produces a minimal workbook based on the worksheet.
Examples (click to show)
To generate the example sheet, start with the HTML table:
<table id="sheetjs">
<tr><td>S</td><td>h</td><td>e</td><td>e</td><td>t</td><td>J</td><td>S</td></tr>
<tr><td>1</td><td>2</td><td>3</td><td>4</td><td>5</td><td>6</td><td>7</td></tr>
<tr><td>2</td><td>3</td><td>4</td><td>5</td><td>6</td><td>7</td><td>8</td></tr>
</table>
To process the table:
var tbl = document.getElementById('sheetjs');
var wb = XLSX.utils.table_to_book(tbl);
Note: XLSX.read
can handle HTML represented as strings.
Formulae Output
XLSX.utils.sheet_to_formulae
generates an array of commands that represent
how a person would enter data into an application. Each entry is of the form
A1-cell-address=formula-or-value
. String literals are prefixed with a '
in
accordance with Excel.
Examples (click to show)
For the example sheet:
> var o = XLSX.utils.sheet_to_formulae(ws);
> o.filter(function(v, i) { return i % 5 === 0; });
[ 'A1=\'S', 'F1=\'J', 'D2=4', 'B3=3', 'G3=8' ]
Delimiter-Separated Output
As an alternative to the writeFile
CSV type, XLSX.utils.sheet_to_csv
also
produces CSV output. The function takes an options argument:
Option Name | Default | Description |
---|
FS | "," | "Field Separator" delimiter between fields |
RS | "\n" | "Record Separator" delimiter between rows |
dateNF | fmt 14 | Use specified date format in string output |
strip | false | Remove trailing field separators in each record ** |
blankrows | true | Include blank lines in the CSV output |
strip
will remove trailing commas from each line under default FS/RS
- blankrows must be set to
false
to skip blank lines.
Examples (click to show)
For the example sheet:
> console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_csv(ws));
S,h,e,e,t,J,S
1,2,3,4,5,6,7
2,3,4,5,6,7,8
> console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_csv(ws, {FS:"\t"}));
S h e e t J S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
> console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_csv(ws,{FS:":",RS:"|"}));
S:h:e:e:t:J:S|1:2:3:4:5:6:7|2:3:4:5:6:7:8|
UTF-16 Unicode Text
The txt
output type uses the tab character as the field separator. If the
codepage library is available (included in the full distribution but not core),
the output will be encoded in codepage 1200
and the BOM will be prepended.
JSON
XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json
generates different types of JS objects. The function
takes an options argument:
Option Name | Default | Description |
---|
raw | false | Use raw values (true) or formatted strings (false) |
range | from WS | Override Range (see table below) |
header | | Control output format (see table below) |
dateNF | fmt 14 | Use specified date format in string output |
defval | | Use specified value in place of null or undefined |
blankrows | ** | Include blank lines in the output ** |
raw
only affects cells which have a format code (.z
) field or a formatted
text (.w
) field.- If
header
is specified, the first row is considered a data row; if header
is not specified, the first row is the header row and not considered data. - When
header
is not specified, the conversion will automatically disambiguate
header entries by affixing _
and a count starting at 1
. For example, if
three columns have header foo
the output fields are foo
, foo_1
, foo_2
null
values are returned when raw
is true but are skipped when false.- If
defval
is not specified, null and undefined values are skipped normally.
If specified, all null and undefined points will be filled with defval
- When
header
is 1
, the default is to generate blank rows. blankrows
must
be set to false
to skip blank rows. - When
header
is not 1
, the default is to skip blank rows. blankrows
must
be truthy to generate blank rows
range
is expected to be one of:
range | Description |
---|
(number) | Use worksheet range but set starting row to the value |
(string) | Use specified range (A1-style bounded range string) |
(default) | Use worksheet range (ws['!ref'] ) |
header
is expected to be one of:
header | Description |
---|
1 | Generate an array of arrays ("2D Array") |
"A" | Row object keys are literal column labels |
array of strings | Use specified strings as keys in row objects |
(default) | Read and disambiguate first row as keys |
If header is not 1
, the row object will contain the non-enumerable property
__rowNum__
that represents the row of the sheet corresponding to the entry.
Examples (click to show)
For the example sheet:
> console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(ws));
[ { S: 1, h: 2, e: 3, e_1: 4, t: 5, J: 6, S_1: 7 },
{ S: 2, h: 3, e: 4, e_1: 5, t: 6, J: 7, S_1: 8 } ]
> console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(ws, {header:1}));
[ [ 'S', 'h', 'e', 'e', 't', 'J', 'S' ],
[ '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7' ],
[ '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8' ] ]
> console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(ws, {header:"A"}));
[ { A: 'S', B: 'h', C: 'e', D: 'e', E: 't', F: 'J', G: 'S' },
{ A: '1', B: '2', C: '3', D: '4', E: '5', F: '6', G: '7' },
{ A: '2', B: '3', C: '4', D: '5', E: '6', F: '7', G: '8' } ]
> console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(ws, {header:["A","E","I","O","U","6","9"]}));
[ { '6': 'J', '9': 'S', A: 'S', E: 'h', I: 'e', O: 'e', U: 't' },
{ '6': '6', '9': '7', A: '1', E: '2', I: '3', O: '4', U: '5' },
{ '6': '7', '9': '8', A: '2', E: '3', I: '4', O: '5', U: '6' } ]
Example showing the effect of raw
:
> ws['A2'].w = "3";
> console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(ws, {header:1}));
[ [ 'S', 'h', 'e', 'e', 't', 'J', 'S' ],
[ '3', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7' ],
[ '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8' ] ]
> console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(ws, {header:1, raw:true}));
[ [ 'S', 'h', 'e', 'e', 't', 'J', 'S' ],
[ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 ],
[ 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 ] ]
File Formats
Despite the library name xlsx
, it supports numerous spreadsheet file formats:
Format | Read | Write |
---|
Excel Worksheet/Workbook Formats | :-----: | :-----: |
Excel 2007+ XML Formats (XLSX/XLSM) | :o: | :o: |
Excel 2007+ Binary Format (XLSB BIFF12) | :o: | :o: |
Excel 2003-2004 XML Format (XML "SpreadsheetML") | :o: | :o: |
Excel 97-2004 (XLS BIFF8) | :o: | |
Excel 5.0/95 (XLS BIFF5) | :o: | |
Excel 4.0 (XLS/XLW BIFF4) | :o: | |
Excel 3.0 (XLS BIFF3) | :o: | |
Excel 2.0/2.1 (XLS BIFF2) | :o: | :o: |
Excel Supported Text Formats | :-----: | :-----: |
Delimiter-Separated Values (CSV/TXT) | :o: | :o: |
Data Interchange Format (DIF) | :o: | :o: |
Symbolic Link (SYLK/SLK) | :o: | :o: |
Lotus Formatted Text (PRN) | :o: | :o: |
UTF-16 Unicode Text (TXT) | :o: | :o: |
Other Workbook/Worksheet Formats | :-----: | :-----: |
OpenDocument Spreadsheet (ODS) | :o: | :o: |
Flat XML ODF Spreadsheet (FODS) | :o: | :o: |
Uniform Office Format Spreadsheet (标文通 UOS1/UOS2) | :o: | |
dBASE II/III/IV / Visual FoxPro (DBF) | :o: | |
Lotus 1-2-3 (WKS/WK1/WK2/WK3/WK4/123) | :o: | |
Quattro Pro Spreadsheet (WQ1/WQ2/WB1/WB2/WB3/QPW) | :o: | |
Other Common Spreadsheet Output Formats | :-----: | :-----: |
HTML Tables | :o: | :o: |
Excel 2007+ XML (XLSX/XLSM)
(click to show)
XLSX and XLSM files are ZIP containers containing a series of XML files in
accordance with the Open Packaging Conventions (OPC). The XLSM filetype, almost
identical to XLSX, is used for files containing macros.
The format is standardized in ECMA-376 and later in ISO/IEC 29500. Excel does
not follow the specification, and there are additional documents discussing how
Excel deviates from the specification.
Excel 2.0-95 (BIFF2/BIFF3/BIFF4/BIFF5)
(click to show)
BIFF 2/3 XLS are single-sheet streams of binary records. Excel 4 introduced
the concept of a workbook (XLW
files) but also had single-sheet XLS
format.
The structure is largely similar to the Lotus 1-2-3 file formats. BIFF5/8/12
extended the format in various ways but largely stuck to the same record format.
There is no official specification for any of these formats. Excel 95 can write
files in these formats, so record lengths and fields were backsolved by writing
in all of the supported formats and comparing files. Excel 2016 can generate
BIFF5 files, enabling a full suite of file tests starting from XLSX or BIFF2.
Excel 97-2004 Binary (BIFF8)
(click to show)
BIFF8 exclusively uses the Compound File Binary container format, splitting some
content into streams within the file. At its core, it still uses an extended
version of the binary record format from older versions of BIFF.
The MS-XLS
specification covers the basics of the file format, and other
specifications expand on serialization of features like properties.
Excel 2003-2004 (SpreadsheetML)
(click to show)
Predating XLSX, SpreadsheetML files are simple XML files. There is no official
and comprehensive specification, although MS has released whitepapers on the
format. Since Excel 2016 can generate SpreadsheetML files, backsolving is
pretty straightforward.
Excel 2007+ Binary (XLSB, BIFF12)
(click to show)
Introduced in parallel with XLSX, the XLSB filetype combines BIFF architecture
with the content separation and ZIP container of XLSX. For the most part nodes
in an XLSX sub-file can be mapped to XLSB records in a corresponding sub-file.
The MS-XLSB
specification covers the basics of the file format, and other
specifications expand on serialization of features like properties.
Delimiter-Separated Values (CSV/TXT)
(click to show)
Excel CSV deviates from RFC4180 in a number of important ways. The generated
CSV files should generally work in Excel although they may not work in RFC4180
compatible readers. The parser should generally understand Excel CSV. The
writer proactively generates cells for formulae if values are unavailable.
Excel TXT uses tab as the delimiter and codepage 1200.
Other Workbook Formats
(click to show)
Support for other formats is generally far XLS/XLSB/XLSX support, due in large
part to a lack of publicly available documentation. Test files were produced in
the respective apps and compared to their XLS exports to determine structure.
The main focus is data extraction.
Lotus 1-2-3 (WKS/WK1/WK2/WK3/WK4/123)
(click to show)
The Lotus formats consist of binary records similar to the BIFF structure. Lotus
did release a whitepaper decades ago covering the original WK1 format. Other
features were deduced by producing files and comparing to Excel support.
Quattro Pro (WQ1/WQ2/WB1/WB2/WB3/QPW)
(click to show)
The Quattro Pro formats use binary records in the same way as BIFF and Lotus.
Some of the newer formats (namely WB3 and QPW) use a CFB enclosure just like
BIFF8 XLS.
OpenDocument Spreadsheet (ODS/FODS)
(click to show)
ODS is an XML-in-ZIP format akin to XLSX while FODS is an XML format akin to
SpreadsheetML. Both are detailed in the OASIS standard, but tools like LO/OO
add undocumented extensions. The parsers and writers do not implement the full
standard, instead focusing on parts necessary to extract and store raw data.
Uniform Office Spreadsheet (UOS1/2)
(click to show)
UOS is a very similar format, and it comes in 2 varieties corresponding to ODS
and FODS respectively. For the most part, the difference between the formats
lies in the names of tags and attributes.
Other Single-Worksheet Formats
Many older formats supported only one worksheet:
dBASE and Visual FoxPro (DBF)
(click to show)
DBF is really a typed table format: each column can only hold one data type and
each record omits type information. The parser generates a header row and
inserts records starting at the second row of the worksheet.
Multi-file extensions like external memos and tables are currently unsupported,
limited by the general ability to read arbitrary files in the web browser.
Symbolic Link (SYLK)
(click to show)
There is no real documentation. All knowledge was gathered by saving files in
various versions of Excel to deduce the meaning of fields. Notes:
- Plain formulae are stored in the RC form.
- Column widths are rounded to integral characters.
Lotus Formatted Text (PRN)
(click to show)
There is no real documentation, and in fact Excel treats PRN as an output-only
file format. Nevertheless we can guess the column widths and reverse-engineer
the original layout. Excel's 240-character width limitation is not enforced.
Data Interchange Format (DIF)
(click to show)
There is no unified definition. Visicalc DIF differs from Lotus DIF, and both
differ from Excel DIF. Where ambiguous, the parser/writer follows the expected
behavior from Excel. In particular, Excel extends DIF in incompatible ways:
- Since Excel automatically converts numbers-as-strings to numbers, numeric
string constants are converted to formulae:
"0.3" -> "=""0.3""
- DIF technically expects numeric cells to hold the raw numeric data, but Excel
permits formatted numbers (including dates)
- DIF technically has no support for formulae, but Excel will automatically
convert plain formulae. Array formulae are not preserved.
HTML
(click to show)
Excel HTML worksheets include special metadata encoded in styles. For example,
mso-number-format
is a localized string containing the number format. Despite
the metadata the output is valid HTML, although it does accept bare &
symbols.
Testing
Node
(click to show)
make test
will run the node-based tests. By default it runs tests on files in
every supported format. To test a specific file type, set FMTS
to the format
you want to test. Feature-specific tests are avaialble with make test_misc
$ make test_misc
$ make test
$ make test_xls
$ make test_xlsx
$ make test_xlsb
$ make test_xml
$ make test_ods
To enable all errors, set the environment variable WTF=1
:
$ make test
$ WTF=1 make test
Flow and eslint checks are available:
$ make lint
$ make flow
Browser
(click to show)
The core in-browser tests are available at tests/index.html
within this repo.
Start a local server and navigate to that directory to run the tests.
make ctestserv
will start a server on port 8000.
make ctest
will generate the browser fixtures. To add more files, edit the
tests/fixtures.lst
file and add the paths.
To run the full in-browser tests, clone the repo for
oss.sheetjs.com and replace
the xlsx.js file (then fire up the browser and go to stress.html
):
$ cp xlsx.js ../SheetJS.github.io
$ cd ../SheetJS.github.io
$ simplehttpserver
$ open -a Chromium.app http://localhost:8000/stress.html
Tested Environments
(click to show)
- NodeJS 0.8, 0.9, 0.10, 0.11, 0.12, 4.x, 5.x, 6.x, 7.x
- IE 6/7/8/9/10/11 (IE6-9 browsers require shims for interacting with client)
- Chrome 24+
- Safari 6+
- FF 18+
Tests utilize the mocha testing framework. Travis-CI and Sauce Labs links:
Test Files
Test files are housed in another repo.
Running make init
will refresh the test_files
submodule and get the files.
Contributing
Due to the precarious nature of the Open Specifications Promise, it is very
important to ensure code is cleanroom. Consult CONTRIBUTING.md
Tests
(click to show)
The test_misc
target (make test_misc
on Linux/OSX / make misc
on Windows)
runs the targeted feature tests. It should take 5-10 seconds to perform feature
tests without testing against the entire test battery. New features should be
accompanied with tests for the relevant file formats and features.
For tests involving the read side, an appropriate feature test would involve
reading an existing file and checking the resulting workbook object. If a
parameter is involved, files should be read with different values for the param
to verify that the feature is working as expected.
For tests involving a new write feature which can already be parsed, appropriate
feature tests would involve writing a workbook with the feature and then opening
and verifying that the feature is preserved.
For tests involving a new write feature without an existing read ability, please
add a feature test to the kitchen sink tests/write.js
.
OSX/Linux
(click to show)
The xlsx.js file is constructed from the files in the bits
subdirectory. The
build script (run make
) will concatenate the individual bits to produce the
script. Before submitting a contribution, ensure that running make will produce
the xlsx.js file exactly. The simplest way to test is to add the script:
$ git add xlsx.js
$ make clean
$ make
$ git diff xlsx.js
To produce the dist files, run make dist
. The dist files are updated in each
version release and should not be committed between versions.
Windows
(click to show)
The included make.cmd
script will build xlsx.js
from the bits
directory.
Building is as simple as:
> make
To prepare dev environment:
> make init
The full list of commands available in Windows are displayed in make help
:
make init -- install deps and global modules
make lint -- run eslint linter
make test -- run mocha test suite
make misc -- run smaller test suite
make book -- rebuild README and summary
make help -- display this message
The normal approach uses a variety of command line tools to grab the test files.
For windows users, please download the latest version of the test files snapshot
from github
Latest test files snapshot:
https://github.com/SheetJS/test_files/releases/download/20170409/test_files.zip
Download and unzip to the test_files
subdirectory.
License
Please consult the attached LICENSE file for details. All rights not explicitly
granted by the Apache 2.0 License are reserved by the Original Author.
References
OSP-covered Specifications (click to show)
- [MS-XLSB]: Excel (.xlsb) Binary File Format
- [MS-XLSX]: Excel (.xlsx) Extensions to the Office Open XML SpreadsheetML File Format
- [MS-OE376]: Office Implementation Information for ECMA-376 Standards Support
- [MS-CFB]: Compound File Binary File Format
- [MS-XLS]: Excel Binary File Format (.xls) Structure Specification
- [MS-ODATA]: Open Data Protocol (OData)
- [MS-OFFCRYPTO]: Office Document Cryptography Structure
- [MS-OLEDS]: Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) Data Structures
- [MS-OLEPS]: Object Linking and Embedding (OLE) Property Set Data Structures
- [MS-OSHARED]: Office Common Data Types and Objects Structures
- [MS-ODRAW]: Office Drawing Binary File Format
- [MS-ODRAWXML]: Office Drawing Extensions to Office Open XML Structure
- [MS-OVBA]: Office VBA File Format Structure
- [MS-CTXLS]: Excel Custom Toolbar Binary File Format
- [MS-XLDM]: Spreadsheet Data Model File Format
- [MS-EXSPXML3]: Excel Calculation Version 2 Web Service XML Schema
- [XLS]: Microsoft Office Excel 97-2007 Binary File Format Specification
- [MS-OI29500]: Office Implementation Information for ISO/IEC 29500 Standards Support
- ISO/IEC 29500:2012(E) "Information technology — Document description and processing languages — Office Open XML File Formats"
- Open Document Format for Office Applications Version 1.2 (29 September 2011)
- Worksheet File Format (From Lotus) December 1984