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writeexcel

Write to a cross-platform Excel binary file.

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Description

This library is converted from Spreadsheet::WriteExcel module of Perl. search.cpan.org/~jmcnamara/Spreadsheet-WriteExcel-2.38/

Original description is below:

The Spreadsheet::WriteExcel module can be used to create a cross-
platform Excel binary file. Multiple worksheets can be added to a
workbook and formatting can be applied to cells. Text, numbers,
formulas, hyperlinks, images and charts can be written to the cells.

TThe Excel file produced by this module is compatible with 97,
2000, 2002, 2003 and 2007.

The module will work on the majority of Windows, UNIX and
Macintosh platforms. Generated files are also compatible with the
spreadsheet applications Gnumeric and OpenOffice.org.

This module cannot be used to read an Excel file.

Installation

Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:

gem 'writeexcel'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install writeexcel

Usage

See Reference writeexcel.web.fc2.com/ . You must save source file in UTF8, and run ruby with -Ku option or set $KCODE=‘u’ in Ruby 1.8.

Example Code:

require 'writeexcel'

# Create a new Excel Workbook
workbook = WriteExcel.new('ruby.xls')

# Add worksheet(s)
worksheet  = workbook.add_worksheet
worksheet2 = workbook.add_worksheet

# Add and define a format
format = workbook.add_format
format.set_bold
format.set_color('red')
format.set_align('right')

# write a formatted and unformatted string.
worksheet.write(1, 1, 'Hi Excel.', format)  # cell B2
worksheet.write(2, 1, 'Hi Excel.')          # cell B3

# write a number and formula using A1 notation
worksheet.write('B4', 3.14159)
worksheet.write('B5', '=SIN(B4/4)')

# write to file
workbook.close

Difference with Perl module

  • WriteExcel.new()

    • accept default format parameter such as new(‘foo.xls’, :font => ‘Roman’, :size => 12)

  • Unary minus is supported, but it will be stored as ‘-1*’. ex) ‘=-1’ -> ‘=-1*1’, ‘=-SIN(PI()/2)’ => ‘=-1*SIN(PI()/2)’

  • Worksheet.write(row, col, token, format)

    • if token.kind_of?(Numeric) then call write_number, if token.kind_of?(String) then not call write_number().

  • Worksheet.keep_leading_zeros()

    • ignore. if write 0001, use string such as write(1,2, ‘0001’)

  • and .…..

Recent Change

v1.0.9

  • Fixed a bug: Can’t modify frozen String (RuntimeError)

v1.0.8

  • add nkf gem as runtime dependent gem for future Ruby 3.4.

v1.0.7

  • support Ruby 3.3

  • support Ruby 2.4 or later

v1.0.6

  • support Ruby 3.2

  • use minitest gem instead of test-unit.

v1.0.5

  • use test-unit gem instead of test/unit.

v1.0.4

  • put formula parsers classes in a module to avoid namespace conflicts. (thanks Kevin)

v1.0.3

  • Bug fix issue 29. bug in extern sheet reference.

v1.0.2

  • Bug fix issue 28. bug in non ascii worksheet names.

  • Bug fix in testcase issue 28. fail due to defferent timezone.

v1.0.1

  • Bug fix issue 25. bug in Chart#set_legend.

v1.0.0

  • Bug fix in Workbook#set_properties.

Author

Original was written in Perl by John McNamara ([email protected]).

Convert to ruby by Hideo Nakamura ([email protected]) Copyright © 2009-2024 Hideo NAKAMURA. See LICENSE.txt for details.

License

See LICENSE.txt

Contributing

  1. Fork it

  2. Create your feature branch (‘git checkout -b my-new-feature`)

  3. Commit your changes (‘git commit -am ’Add some feature’‘)

  4. Push to the branch (‘git push origin my-new-feature`)

  5. Create new Pull Request