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SheetMapper

SheetMapper is about taking a google spreadsheet and converting a set of data rows into simple ruby objects.

Installation

Setup in Gemfile:

# Gemfile

gem 'sheet_mapper'

and then require 'sheet_mapper' and you are done!

Rationale

You may ask why you would need to have an object mapper from a Google Spreadsheet. Consider though that spreadsheets are collaborative, have revision tracking, securely authenticated, are accessible anywhere and are familiar to non-technical people.

If you ever needed a dead simple admin interface, configuration document, or basic content management system, a spreadsheet is a pretty great solution that requires very little engineering overhead. Next time you are in a position where non-technical people need to manage data, ask yourself if a spreadsheet might be a good first solution.

Usage

First, you describe how to map a spreadsheet into data rows with a sheet object mapper:

class SomeMapper < SheetMapper::Base
  # Defines each column for a row and maps each column to an attribute
  # Should be listed in the order the data appears in the spreadsheet
  columns :foo, :bar, :baz

  # Defines the condition for a row to be considered valid
  # Also have access to `pos` which is the row number in the worksheet
  def valid_row?
    self[:foo].present? && self.pos > 2
  end

  # Convert bar column to a boolean from raw string
  # Any method named after a column will override the default value
  def bar
    !!self[:bar].match(/true/i)
  end
end

The mapper describes the column mappings and transformations to turn a spreadsheet row into a ruby object. Then you can apply a mapper to any worksheet (collection):

# Access a particular spreadsheet by key
sheet = SheetMapper::Spreadsheet.new(:mapper=>SomeMapper, :key=>'k', :session => YourGoogleSession)
# Find a particular worksheet (collection) by title
collection = sheet.find_collection_by_title('title')
# Iterate over the records within the worksheet
records = collection.each do |record|
  p record.attributes
  # => { :foo => "...", :bar => false, ... }
end

You can then work with objects within the collection and access their attributes. You can also modify objects and persist the changes back to the collection (worksheet):

# Fetch the second data row from the spreadsheet
record = collection.records[1]
record[:foo] = "other"
# Persist change of value to worksheet
collection.save
# or more explicitly collection.save(record)

If you want to reset changes made to your records, just use the reload method:

# Fetch the second data row from the spreadsheet
record = collection.records[1]
record[:foo] = "other"
# Reset unsaved changes
collection.reload

You may also come across situations where you need access to 'meta' information associated with the collection. Use the 'cell' method to access arbitrary data points:

# Accesses row 1, column 2 within the worksheet
collection.cell(1, 2) => "foo"

Accessing Your Sheets

To access your Sheets, you'll need to authentication with Google's Google Drive service. There are several ways to do this, all described in the google_drive gem's documentation.

Once you have a successfully authentication Google Drive session, you can access your sheets by passing your session into SheetMapper:

sheet = SheetMapper::Spreadsheet.new(
  mapper: SomeMapper,
  key: SpreadsheetKey,
  session: google_drive_session
)
sheet.find_collection_by_title('worksheet title')

Contributors

SheetMapper was created by Nathan Esquenazi at Miso in 2012. The following users contributed to the project:

Tasks

SheetMapper is a new gem and I would love any feedback and/or pull requests. In particular:

  • Inserting a data row into a collection
  • Removing a data row from a collection
  • Callbacks
  • Validations
  • Column Type Casting

Please fork if you are inspired to add any of these or any other improvements.

Continuous Integration

Continuous Integration status

CI is hosted by travis-ci.org.

License

Check LICENSE but of course feel free to use this in any projects.

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Map spreadsheet rows to a ruby objects

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