3.7 KiB
title | pagination_prev | pagination_next |
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Ruby + Bindings | demos/bigdata/index | solutions/input |
import current from '/version.js'; import CodeBlock from '@theme/CodeBlock';
ExecJS is a Ruby abstraction over a number of JS runtimes including V8.
The SheetJS Standalone scripts can be parsed and evaluated in every supported runtime.
Integration Details
Load SheetJS Scripts
The main library can be loaded and compiled in a new context:
require "execjs"
source = File.open("xlsx.full.min.js", "rb").read;
source.force_encoding("UTF-8");
context = ExecJS.compile(source);
To confirm the library is loaded, XLSX.version
can be inspected:
puts context.eval("XLSX.version");
Reading and Writing Files
The architecture of ExecJS forces users to combine reading and writing in one
function step. Base64 strings should be used for interchange. For example,
the following snippet reads data from pres.numbers
, generates an XLSB file,
and writes to sheetjsw.xlsb
:
require "base64"
# read and encode data to Base64
data = Base64.strict_encode64(File.open("pres.numbers", "rb").read);
# define function and call with the data
xlsb = context.call(<<EOF, data);
function(data) {
/* parse data -- the argument is the data from Ruby code */
var wb = XLSX.read(data, {type: 'base64'});
/* write XLSB data (encoded as base64) */
return XLSX.write(wb, {bookType: "xlsb", type: "base64"});
}
EOF
# at this point, `xlsb` is a Base64-encoded string
# decode and write to file
File.write("sheetjsw.xlsb", Base64.strict_decode64(xlsb), mode: "wb");
The strict_
variants ensure that no newlines are added to the strings.
Complete Example
:::note
This demo was tested in the following deployments:
Platform | Ruby | ExecJS | Date |
---|---|---|---|
darwin-x64 |
2.7.6 |
2.9.1 |
2023-09-24 |
darwin-arm |
2.7.4 |
2.9.1 |
2023-09-24 |
win10-x64 |
3.2.2 |
2.9.1 |
2023-09-24 |
win11-arm |
3.0.2 |
2.9.1 |
2023-09-24 |
linux-x64 |
3.0.4 |
2.9.1 |
2023-10-11 |
linux-arm |
2.7.4 |
2.9.1 |
2023-09-24 |
Note: The Windows 11 ARM64 test used the Ruby version that ships with WSL.
:::
- Install Ruby,
gem
(RubyGems), and the dependencies:
gem install execjs
:::note pass
The command may need to be run as an administrator or root user:
sudo gem install execjs
:::
- Download the SheetJS Standalone script and the test file. Save both files in the project directory:
- xlsx.full.min.js
- pres.numbers
{\ curl -LO https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/dist/xlsx.full.min.js curl -LO https://sheetjs.com/pres.numbers
}
- Download
ExecSheetJS.rb
:
curl -LO https://docs.sheetjs.com/execjs/ExecSheetJS.rb
- Run the demo:
ruby ExecSheetJS.rb pres.numbers
If the program succeeded, the CSV contents will be printed to console and the
file sheetjsw.xlsb
will be created. That file can be opened with Excel.
:::caution pass
If a JavaScript runtime is not available, the script will throw an error:
execjs/runtimes.rb:68:in `autodetect': Could not find a JavaScript runtime. See https://github.com/rails/execjs for a list of available runtimes. (ExecJS::RuntimeUnavailable)
ExecJS 2.9.1 supports the Bun runtime. Install the Bun runtime1, restart the terminal, and re-run the script.
:::
-
curl -fsSL https://bun.sh/install | bash
can be run from macOS, Linux, and Windows WSL. ↩︎