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Desktop Applications |
Web technologies like JavaScript and HTML have been adapted to the traditional app space. Typically these frameworks bundle a JavaScript engine as well as a windowing framework. SheetJS is compatible with many app frameworks.
NW.js
The Standalone scripts can be
referenced in a SCRIPT
tag from the entry point HTML page.
This demo was tested against NW.js 0.66.0.
Complete Example (click to show)
- Create a
package.json
file that specifies the entry point:
{
"name": "sheetjs-nwjs",
"author": "sheetjs",
"version": "0.0.0",
"main": "index.html",
"dependencies": {
"nw": "~0.66.0",
"xlsx": "https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/xlsx-latest.tgz"
}
}
- Download
index.html
into the same folder.
:::caution
Right-click the link and select "Save Link As...". Left-clicking the link will try to load the page in your browser. The goal is to save the file contents.
:::
-
Run
npm install
to install dependencies -
To verify the app works, run in the test environment:
npx nw .
The app will show and you should be able to verify reading and writing by using the file input element to select a spreadsheet and clicking the export button.
- To build a standalone app, run the builder:
npx -p nw-builder nwbuild --mode=build .
This will generate the standalone app in the build\sheetjs-nwjs\
folder.
Reading data
The standard HTML5 FileReader
techniques from the browser apply to NW.js!
NW.js handles the OS minutiae for dragging files into app windows. The drag and drop snippet apply to DIV elements on the page.
Similarly, file input elements automatically map to standard Web APIs.
For example, assuming a file input element on the page:
<input type="file" name="xlfile" id="xlf" />
The event handler would process the event as if it were a web event:
async function handleFile(e) {
const file = e.target.files[0];
const data = await file.arrayBuffer();
/* data is an ArrayBuffer */
const workbook = XLSX.read(data);
/* DO SOMETHING WITH workbook HERE */
}
document.getElementById("xlf").addEventListener("change", handleFile, false);
Writing data
File input elements with the attribute nwsaveas
show UI for saving a file. The
standard trick is to generate a hidden file input DOM element and "click" it.
Since NW.js does not present a writeFileSync
in the fs
package, a manual
step is required:
/* pre-build the hidden nwsaveas input element */
var input = document.createElement('input');
input.style.display = 'none';
input.setAttribute('nwsaveas', 'SheetJSNWDemo.xlsx');
input.setAttribute('type', 'file');
document.body.appendChild(input);
/* show a message if the save is canceled */
input.addEventListener('cancel',function(){ alert("Save was canceled!"); });
/* write to a file on the 'change' event */
input.addEventListener('change',function(e){
/* the `value` is the path that the program will write */
var filename = this.value;
/* use XLSX.write with type "buffer" to generate a buffer" */
/* highlight-next-line */
var wbout = XLSX.write(workbook, {type:'buffer', bookType:"xlsx"});
/* highlight-next-line */
fs.writeFile(filename, wbout, function(err) {
if(!err) return alert("Saved to " + filename);
alert("Error: " + (err.message || err));
});
});
input.click();
Electron
The NodeJS Module can be imported from the main or the renderer thread.
Electron presents a fs
module. The require('xlsx')
call loads the CommonJS
module, so XLSX.readFile
and XLSX.writeFile
work in the renderer thread.
This demo was tested against Electron 19.0.5 on an Intel Mac (darwin-x64
).
Complete Example (click to show)
This demo includes a drag-and-drop box as well as a file input box, mirroring the SheetJS Data Preview Live Demo
The core data in this demo is an editable HTML table. The readers build up the
table using sheet_to_html
(with editable:true
option) and the writers scrape
the table using table_to_book
.
The demo project is wired for electron-forge
to build the standalone binary.
- Download the demo files:
package.json
: project structuremain.js
: main process scriptindex.html
: window pageindex.js
: script loaded in render context
:::caution
Right-click each link and select "Save Link As...". Left-clicking a link will try to load the page in your browser. The goal is to save the file contents.
:::
-
Run
npm install
to install dependencies. -
To verify the app works, run in the test environment:
npx -y electron .
The app will show and you should be able to verify reading and writing by using the relevant buttons to open files and clicking the export button.
- To build a standalone app, run the builder:
npm run make
This will generate the standalone app in the out\sheetjs-electron-...
folder.
For a recent Intel Mac, the path will be out/sheetjs-electron-darwin-x64/
Writing Files
XLSX.writeFile
writes workbooks to the file system.
showSaveDialog
shows a Save As dialog and returns the selected file name:
/* from the renderer thread */
const electron = require('@electron/remote');
/* this function will show the save dialog and try to write the workbook */
async function exportFile(workbook) {
/* show Save As dialog */
const result = await electron.dialog.showSaveDialog({
title: 'Save file as',
filters: [{
name: "Spreadsheets",
extensions: ["xlsx", "xls", "xlsb", /* ... other formats ... */]
}]
});
/* write file */
// highlight-next-line
XLSX.writeFile(workbook, result.filePath);
}
:::note
In older versions of Electron, showSaveDialog
returned the path directly:
var dialog = require('electron').remote.dialog;
function exportFile(workbook) {
var result = dialog.showSaveDialog();
XLSX.writeFile(workbook, result);
}
:::
Reading Files
Electron offers 3 different ways to read files, two of which use Web APIs.
File Input Element
File input elements automatically map to standard Web APIs.
For example, assuming a file input element on the page:
<input type="file" name="xlfile" id="xlf" />
The event handler would process the event as if it were a web event:
async function handleFile(e) {
const file = e.target.files[0];
const data = await file.arrayBuffer();
/* data is an ArrayBuffer */
const workbook = XLSX.read(data);
/* DO SOMETHING WITH workbook HERE */
}
document.getElementById("xlf").addEventListener("change", handleFile, false);
Drag and Drop
The drag and drop snippet applies to DIV elements on the page.
For example, assuming a DIV on the page:
<div id="drop">Drop a spreadsheet file here to see sheet data</div>
The event handler would process the event as if it were a web event:
async function handleDrop(e) {
e.stopPropagation();
e.preventDefault();
const file = e.dataTransfer.files[0];
const data = await file.arrayBuffer();
/* data is an ArrayBuffer */
const workbook = XLSX.read(data);
/* DO SOMETHING WITH workbook HERE */
}
document.getElementById("drop").addEventListener("drop", handleDrop, false);
Electron API
XLSX.readFile
reads workbooks from the file system.
showOpenDialog
shows a Save As dialog and returns the selected file name.
Unlike the Web APIs, the showOpenDialog
flow can be initiated by app code:
/* from the renderer thread */
const electron = require('@electron/remote');
/* this function will show the open dialog and try to parse the workbook */
async function importFile() {
/* show Save As dialog */
const result = await electron.dialog.showOpenDialog({
title: 'Select a file',
filters: [{
name: "Spreadsheets",
extensions: ["xlsx", "xls", "xlsb", /* ... other formats ... */]
}]
});
/* result.filePaths is an array of selected files */
if(result.filePaths.length == 0) throw new Error("No file was selected!");
// highlight-next-line
return XLSX.readFile(result.filePaths[0]);
}
:::note
In older versions of Electron, showOpenDialog
returned the path directly:
var dialog = require('electron').remote.dialog;
function importFile(workbook) {
var result = dialog.showOpenDialog({ properties: ['openFile'] });
return XLSX.readFile(result[0]);
}
:::
Electron Breaking Changes
The first version of this demo used Electron 1.7.5. The current demo includes the required changes for Electron 19.0.5.
There are no Electron-specific workarounds in the library, but Electron broke backwards compatibility multiple times. A summary of changes is noted below.
:::caution
Electron 6.x changed the dialog
API. Methods like showSaveDialog
originally
returned an array of strings, but now returns a Promise
. This change was not
documented. Electron issue
Electron 9.0.0 and later require the preference nodeIntegration: true
in order
to require('xlsx')
in the renderer process.
Electron 12.0.0 and later also require worldSafeExecuteJavascript: true
and
contextIsolation: true
.
Electron 14+ must use @electron/remote
instead of remote
. An initialize
call is required to enable Developer Tools in the window.
:::
Tauri
The NodeJS Module can be imported from JavaScript code.
This demo was tested against Tauri 1.0.5 on 2022 August 13.
:::note
Tauri currently does not provide the equivalent of NodeJS fs
module. The raw
@tauri-apps/api
methods used in the examples are not expected to change.
:::
http
and dialog
must be explicitly allowed in tauri.conf.json
:
"allowlist": {
"all": true,
"http": {
"all": true,
"request": true,
"scope": ["https://**"]
},
"dialog": {
"all": true
}
The "Complete Example" creates an app that looks like the screenshot:
Complete Example (click to show)
-
Read Tauri "Getting Started" guide and install dependencies.
-
Create a new Tauri app:
npm create tauri-app
When prompted:
- App Name:
SheetJSTauri
- Window Title:
SheetJS + Tauri
- UI recipe:
create-vite
- Add "@tauri-apps/api":
Y
- ViteJS template:
vue-ts
- Enter the directory:
cd SheetJSTauri
Open package.json
with a text editor and add the highlighted lines:
{
"name": "SheetJSTauri",
"private": true,
"version": "0.0.0",
"type": "module",
"scripts": {
"dev": "vite",
"build": "vue-tsc --noEmit && vite build",
"preview": "vite preview",
"tauri": "tauri"
},
"dependencies": {
// highlight-next-line
"@tauri-apps/api": "^1.0.2",
"vue": "^3.2.37",
// highlight-next-line
"xlsx": "https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/xlsx-latest.tgz"
},
"devDependencies": {
// highlight-next-line
"@tauri-apps/cli": "^1.0.5",
"@vitejs/plugin-vue": "^3.0.3",
"typescript": "^4.6.4",
"vite": "^3.0.7",
"vue-tsc": "^0.39.5"
}
}
- Install dependencies:
npm install --save https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/xlsx-latest.tgz
- Enable operations by adding the highlighted lines to
tauri.conf.json
:
"tauri": {
"allowlist": {
// highlight-start
"http": {
"all": true,
"request": true,
"scope": ["https://**"]
},
"dialog": {
"all": true
},
// highlight-end
"all": true
}
In the same file, look for the "identifier"
key and replace the value with com.sheetjs.tauri
:
"icons/icon.ico"
],
// highlight-next-line
"identifier": "com.sheetjs.tauri",
"longDescription": "",
-
Download
App.vue
and replacesrc/App.vue
with the downloaded script. -
Build the app with
npm run tauri build
At the end, it will print the path to the generated program. Run the program!
Reading Files
There are two steps to reading files: obtaining a path and reading binary data:
import { read } from 'xlsx';
import { open } from '@tauri-apps/api/dialog';
import { readBinaryFile } from '@tauri-apps/api/fs';
const filters = [
{name: "Excel Binary Workbook", extensions: ["xlsb"]},
{name: "Excel Workbook", extensions: ["xlsx"]},
{name: "Excel 97-2004 Workbook", extensions: ["xls"]},
// ... other desired formats ...
];
async function openFile() {
/* show open file dialog */
const selected = await open({
title: "Open Spreadsheet",
multiple: false,
directory: false,
filters
});
/* read data into a Uint8Array */
const d = await readBinaryFile(selected);
/* parse with SheetJS */
const wb = read(d);
return wb;
}
Writing Files
There are two steps to writing files: obtaining a path and writing binary data:
import { write } from 'xlsx';
import { save } from '@tauri-apps/api/dialog';
import { writeBinaryFile } from '@tauri-apps/api/fs';
const filters = [
{name: "Excel Binary Workbook", extensions: ["xlsb"]},
{name: "Excel Workbook", extensions: ["xlsx"]},
{name: "Excel 97-2004 Workbook", extensions: ["xls"]},
// ... other desired formats ...
];
async function saveFile() {
/* show save file dialog */
const selected = await save({
title: "Save to Spreadsheet",
filters
});
/* Generate workbook */
const bookType = selected.slice(selected.lastIndexOf(".") + 1);
const d = write(wb, {type: "buffer", bookType});
/* save data to file */
await writeBinaryFile(selected, d);
}
Wails
The NodeJS Module can be imported from JavaScript code.
This demo was tested against Wails v2.0.0-beta.44.2
on 2022 August 31 using
the Svelte TypeScript starter.
:::caution
Wails currently does not provide the equivalent of NodeJS fs
module.
The HTML File Input Element does not show a file picker. This is a known bug.
All raw file operations must be performed in Go code.
:::
The "Complete Example" creates an app that looks like the screenshot:
Complete Example (click to show)
-
Read Wails "Getting Started" guide and install dependencies.
-
Create a new Wails app:
wails init -n sheetjs-wails -t svelte-ts
- Enter the directory:
cd sheetjs-wails
- Install front-end dependencies:
cd frontend
curl -L -o src/assets/logo.png https://sheetjs.com/sketch1024.png
npm i --save https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/xlsx-latest.tgz
cd ..
- Download source files:
- Download
app.go
and replaceapp.go
- Download
App.svelte
and replacefrontend/src/App.svelte
- Build the app with
wails build
At the end, it will print the path to the generated program. Run the program!
All operations must be run from Go code. This example passes Base64 strings.
Reading Files
The file picker and reading operations can be combined in one Go function.
Go
import (
"context"
// highlight-start
"encoding/base64"
"io/ioutil"
"github.com/wailsapp/wails/v2/pkg/runtime"
// highlight-end
)
type App struct {
ctx context.Context
}
// ReadFile shows an open file dialog and returns the data as Base64 string
func (a *App) ReadFile() string {
// highlight-next-line
selection, err := runtime.OpenFileDialog(a.ctx, runtime.OpenDialogOptions{
Title: "Select File",
Filters: []runtime.FileFilter{
{ DisplayName: "Excel Workbooks (*.xlsx)", Pattern: "*.xlsx", },
// ... more filters for more file types
},
})
if err != nil { return "" } // The demo app shows an error message
// highlight-next-line
data, err := ioutil.ReadFile(selection)
if err != nil { return "" } // The demo app shows an error message
// highlight-next-line
return base64.StdEncoding.EncodeToString(data)
}
JS
Wails will automatically create window.go.main.App.ReadFile
for use in JS:
import { read, utils } from 'xlsx';
async function importFile(evt) {
// highlight-start
const b64 = window['go']['main']['App']['ReadFile']();
const wb = read(b64, { type: "base64" });
// highlight-end
const ws = wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]; // get the first worksheet
html = utils.sheet_to_html(ws); // generate HTML and update state
}
Writing Files
There is a multi-part dance since the library needs the file extension.
-
Show the save file picker in Go, pass back to JS
-
Generate the file data in JS, pass the data back to Go
-
Write to file in Go
Go
Two Go functions will be exposed.
SaveFile
will show the file picker and return the path:
import (
"context"
// highlight-start
"github.com/wailsapp/wails/v2/pkg/runtime"
// highlight-end
)
type App struct {
ctx context.Context
}
func (a *App) SaveFile() string {
// highlight-next-line
selection, err := runtime.SaveFileDialog(a.ctx, runtime.SaveDialogOptions{
Title: "Select File",
DefaultFilename: "SheetJSWails.xlsx",
Filters: []runtime.FileFilter{
{ DisplayName: "Excel Workbooks (*.xlsx)", Pattern: "*.xlsx", },
// ... more filters for more file types
},
})
if err != nil { return "" } // The demo app shows an error message
return selection
}
WriteFile
performs the file write given a Base64 string and file path:
import (
"context"
// highlight-start
"encoding/base64"
"io/ioutil"
// highlight-end
)
type App struct {
ctx context.Context
}
func (a *App) WriteFile(b64 string, path string) {
// highlight-start
buf, _ := base64.StdEncoding.DecodeString(b64);
_ = ioutil.WriteFile(path, buf, 0644);
// highlight-end
}
JS
Wails will automatically create bindings for use in JS:
import { utils, write } from 'xlsx';
async function exportFile(wb) {
/* generate workbook */
const elt = tbl.getElementsByTagName("TABLE")[0];
const wb = utils.table_to_book(elt);
/* show save picker and get path */
const path = await window['go']['main']['App']['SaveFile']();
/* generate base64 string based on the path */
const b64 = write(wb, { bookType: path.slice(path.lastIndexOf(".")+1), type: "base64" });
/* write to file */
await window['go']['main']['App']['WriteFile'](b64, path);
// The demo shows a success message at this point
}