Fast and memory efficient XLSX reader on top of Ox SAX parser.
It reads row by row and doesn't store the whole sheet in memory, so this approach is more suitable when parsing big files.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'saxlsx'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install saxlsx
Saxlsx::Workbook.open filename, auto_format: true do |w|
w.sheets.each do |s|
puts s.rows.count
s.rows.each do |r|
puts r.inspect
end
end
end
By default saxlsx
will try to convert General
type cells that look like
numbers to ruby floats or integers. You can disable this feature
using auto_format: false
.
$ rake bench
ruby 2.7 on OS X
Shared Strings
user system total real
creek 1.296539 0.029374 1.325913 ( 1.340820)
dullard 1.178981 0.025073 1.204054 ( 1.221381)
oxcelix 0.985258 0.025028 1.010286 ( 1.023730)
roo 0.971155 0.029964 1.001119 ( 1.016452)
rubyXL 2.979334 0.055708 3.035042 ( 3.079301)
saxlsx 0.473398 0.011342 0.484740 ( 0.490247)
simple_xlsx_reader 1.209074 0.024579 1.233653 ( 1.249957)
Inline Strings
user system total real
creek 1.471115 0.075182 1.546297 ( 1.567045)
dullard 1.338499 0.085116 1.423615 ( 1.443386)
oxcelix ERROR
roo 1.133878 0.052834 1.186712 ( 1.208369)
rubyXL 3.213630 0.070255 3.283885 ( 3.324428)
saxlsx 0.667601 0.024265 0.691866 ( 0.696603)
simple_xlsx_reader 1.350298 0.028411 1.378709 ( 1.396583)
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request