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title | sidebar_position | hide_table_of_contents |
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Reading Files | 3 | true |
The main SheetJS method for reading files is read
. It expects developers to
supply the actual data in a supported representation.
The readFile
helper method accepts a filename and tries to read the specified
file using standard APIs. It does not work in web browsers!
Parse file data and generate a SheetJS workbook object
var wb = XLSX.read(data, opts);
read
attempts to parse data
and return a workbook object
The type
property of the opts
object controls how data
is
interpreted. For string data, the default interpretation is Base64.
Read a specified file and generate a SheetJS workbook object
var wb = XLSX.readFile(filename, opts);
readFile
attempts to read a local file with specified filename
.
:::caution pass
readFile
works in specific platforms. It does not support web browsers!
The NodeJS installation note includes additional instructions for non-standard use cases.
:::
Parsing Options
The read functions accept an options argument:
Option Name | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
type |
Input data representation | |
raw |
false |
If true, plain text parsing will not parse values ** |
dense |
false |
If true, use a dense sheet representation |
codepage |
If specified, use code page when appropriate ** | |
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 specified number of 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, generate VBA blob |
password |
"" |
If defined and file is encrypted, use password ** |
WTF |
false |
If true, throw errors on unexpected file features ** |
sheets |
If specified, only parse specified sheets ** | |
nodim |
false |
If true, calculate worksheet ranges |
PRN |
false |
If true, allow parsing of PRN files ** |
xlfn |
false |
If true, preserve prefixes in formulae |
FS |
DSV Field Separator override | |
UTC |
true |
If explicitly false, parse text dates in local time |
- 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. - Excel aggressively tries to interpret values from CSV and other plain text.
This leads to surprising behavior! The
raw
option suppresses value parsing. bookSheets
andbookProps
combine to give both sets of informationDeps
will be an empty object ifbookDeps
is falsebookFiles
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
- By default all worksheets are parsed.
sheets
restricts based on input type:- number: zero-based index of worksheet to parse (
0
is first worksheet) - string: name of worksheet to parse (case insensitive)
- array of numbers and strings to select multiple worksheets.
- number: zero-based index of worksheet to parse (
codepage
is applied to BIFF2 - BIFF5 files withoutCodePage
records and to CSV files without BOM intype:"binary"
. BIFF8 XLS always defaults to 1200.PRN
affects parsing of text files without a common delimiter character.- 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. SettingWTF:true
forces those errors to be thrown.UTC
applies to CSV, Text and HTML formats. When explicitly set tofalse
, the parsers will assume the files are specified in local time. By default, as is the case for other file formats, dates and times are interpreted in UTC.
Dense
The "Cell Storage" section of the SheetJS Data Model documentation explains the worksheet representation in more detail.
:::note pass
Utility functions that process SheetJS workbook objects typically process both sparse and dense worksheets.
:::
Range
Some file formats, including XLSX and XLS, can self-report worksheet ranges. The self-reported ranges are used by default.
If the sheetRows
option is set, up to sheetRows
rows will be parsed from the
worksheets. 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). The
!ref
property of the worksheet will hold the adjusted range. For formats that
self-report sheet ranges, the !fullref
property will hold the original range.
The nodim
option instructs the parser to ignore self-reported ranges and use
the actual cells in the worksheet to determine the range. This addresses known
issues with non-compliant third-party exporters.
Formulae
For some file formats, the cellFormula
option must be explicitly enabled to
ensure that formulae are extracted.
Newer Excel functions are serialized with the _xlfn.
prefix, hidden from the
user. SheetJS will strip _xlfn.
normally. The xlfn
option preserves them.
The "Formulae" docs
covers this in more detail.
"Formulae" covers the features in more detail.
VBA
When a macro-enabled file is parsed, if the bookVBA
option is true
, the raw
VBA blob will be stored in the vbaraw
property of the workbook.
"VBA and Macros" covers the features in more detail.
Implementation Details (click to show)
The bookVBA
merely exposes the raw VBA CFB object. It does not parse the data.
XLSM and XLSB store the VBA CFB object in xl/vbaProject.bin
. BIFF8 XLS mixes
the VBA entries alongside the core Workbook entry, so the library generates a
new blob from the XLS CFB container that works in XLSM and XLSB files.
Input Type
The type
parameter for read
controls how data is interpreted:
type |
expected input |
---|---|
"base64" |
string: Base64 encoding of the file |
"binary" |
string: binary string (byte n is data.charCodeAt(n) ) |
"string" |
string: JS string (only appropriate for UTF-8 text formats) |
"buffer" |
nodejs Buffer |
"array" |
array: array of 8-bit unsigned integers (byte n is data[n] ) |
"file" |
string: path of file that will be read (nodejs only) |
Some common types are automatically deduced from the data input type, including
NodeJS Buffer
objects, Uint8Array
and ArrayBuffer
objects, and arrays of
numbers.
When a JS string
is passed with no type
, the library assumes the data is a
Base64 string. FileReader#readAsBinaryString
or ASCII data requires "binary"
type. DOM strings including FileReader#readAsText
should use type "string"
.
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 protected XLSX/XLSB or WQ3/QPW or XLR |
0x09 |
BIFF Stream | BIFF 2/3/4/5 |
0x3C |
XML/HTML | SpreadsheetML / Flat ODS / UOS1 / HTML / plain text |
0x50 |
ZIP Archive | XLSB or XLSX/M or ODS or UOS2 or NUMBERS or text |
0x49 |
Plain Text | SYLK or plain text |
0x54 |
Plain Text | DIF or plain text |
0xEF |
UTF-8 Text | SpreadsheetML / Flat ODS / UOS1 / HTML / plain text |
0xFF |
UTF-16 Text | SpreadsheetML / Flat ODS / UOS1 / HTML / plain text |
0x00 |
Record Stream | Lotus WK* or Quattro Pro or plain text |
0x7B |
Plain text | RTF or plain text |
0x0A |
Plain text | SpreadsheetML / Flat ODS / UOS1 / HTML / plain text |
0x0D |
Plain text | SpreadsheetML / Flat ODS / UOS1 / HTML / plain text |
0x20 |
Plain text | SpreadsheetML / Flat ODS / UOS1 / HTML / plain text |
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)
Works for Windows files are detected based on the BOF
record with type 0xFF
Plain text format guessing follows the priority order:
Format | Test |
---|---|
XML | <?xml appears in the first 1024 characters |
HTML | starts with < and HTML tags appear in the first 1024 characters |
XML | starts with < and the first tag is valid |
RTF | starts with {\rt |
DSV | starts with sep= followed by field delimiter and line separator |
DSV | more unquoted | chars than ; \t or , in the first 1024 |
DSV | more unquoted ; chars than \t or , in the first 1024 |
TSV | more unquoted \t chars than , chars in the first 1024 |
CSV | one of the first 1024 characters is a comma "," |
ETH | starts with socialcalc:version: |
PRN | PRN option is set to true |
CSV | (fallback) |
HTML tags include html
, table
, head
, meta
, script
, style
, div
Why are random text files valid? (click to hide)
Excel is extremely aggressive in reading files. Adding the XLS extension to any text file (where the only characters are ANSI display chars) tricks Excel into processing the file as if it were a CSV or TSV file, even if the result is not useful! This library attempts to replicate that behavior.
The best approach is to validate the desired worksheet and ensure it has the expected number of rows or columns. Extracting the range is extremely simple:
var range = XLSX.utils.decode_range(worksheet['!ref']);
var ncols = range.e.c - range.s.c + 1, nrows = range.e.r - range.s.r + 1;