Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Mar 9, 2021. It is now read-only.
/ xlrd Public archive
forked from python-excel/xlrd

Library for developers to extract data from Microsoft Excel (tm) spreadsheet files

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

IntuitiveWebSolutions/xlrd

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Build Status Coverage Status Documentation Status PyPI version

xlrd

Please read this before using this library: https://groups.google.com/d/msg/python-excel/P6TjJgFVjMI/g8d0eWxTBQAJ

Purpose: Provide a library for developers to use to extract data from Microsoft Excel (tm) spreadsheet files. It is not an end-user tool.

Author: John Machin, Lingfo Pty Ltd ([email protected])

Licence: BSD-style (see licences.py)

Versions of Python supported: 2.7, 3.4+.

External modules required:

The package itself is pure Python with no dependencies on modules or packages outside the standard Python distribution.

Outside the current scope: xlrd will safely and reliably ignore any of these if present in the file:

  • Charts, Macros, Pictures, any other embedded object. WARNING: currently this includes embedded worksheets.
  • VBA modules
  • Formulas (results of formula calculations are extracted, of course).
  • Comments
  • Hyperlinks
  • Autofilters, advanced filters, pivot tables, conditional formatting, data validation

Unlikely to be done:

  • Handling password-protected (encrypted) files.

Particular emphasis (refer docs for details):

  • Operability across OS, regions, platforms
  • Handling Excel's date problems, including the Windows / Macintosh four-year differential.
  • Providing access to named constants and named groups of cells (from version 0.6.0)
  • Providing access to "visual" information: font, "number format", background, border, alignment and protection for cells, height/width etc for rows/columns (from version 0.6.1)

Quick start:

import xlrd
book = xlrd.open_workbook("myfile.xls")
print("The number of worksheets is {0}".format(book.nsheets))
print("Worksheet name(s): {0}".format(book.sheet_names()))
sh = book.sheet_by_index(0)
print("{0} {1} {2}".format(sh.name, sh.nrows, sh.ncols))
print("Cell D30 is {0}".format(sh.cell_value(rowx=29, colx=3)))
for rx in range(sh.nrows):
    print(sh.row(rx))

Another quick start: This will show the first, second and last rows of each sheet in each file:

python PYDIR/scripts/runxlrd.py 3rows *blah*.xls

Installation:

  • On Windows: use the installer.
  • Any OS: Unzip the .zip file into a suitable directory, chdir to that directory, then do "python setup.py install".
  • If PYDIR is your Python installation directory: the main files are in PYDIR/Lib/site-packages/xlrd the docs are in the doc subdirectory, and there's a sample script: PYDIR/Scripts/runxlrd.py
  • If os.sep != "/": make the appropriate adjustments.

Acknowledgements:

  • This package started life as a translation from C into Python of parts of a utility called "xlreader" developed by David Giffin. "This product includes software developed by David Giffin [email protected]."
  • OpenOffice.org has truly excellent documentation of the Microsoft Excel file formats and Compound Document file format, authored by Daniel Rentz. See http://sc.openoffice.org
  • U+5F20 U+654F: over a decade of inspiration, support, and interesting decoding opportunities.
  • Ksenia Marasanova: sample Macintosh and non-Latin1 files, alpha testing
  • Backporting to Python 2.1 was partially funded by Journyx - provider of timesheet and project accounting solutions (http://journyx.com/).
  • Provision of formatting information in version 0.6.1 was funded by Simplistix Ltd (http://www.simplistix.co.uk/)

About

Library for developers to extract data from Microsoft Excel (tm) spreadsheet files

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 100.0%