--- title: Sheets in VueJS Sites with NuxtJS sidebar_label: NuxtJS description: Make static websites from spreadsheets using NuxtJS. Seamlessly integrate data into the data layer using SheetJS. Create content without leaving the comfort of Excel. pagination_prev: demos/net/index pagination_next: demos/mobile/index --- import current from '/version.js'; import Tabs from '@theme/Tabs'; import TabItem from '@theme/TabItem'; import CodeBlock from '@theme/CodeBlock'; [Nuxt Content](https://content.nuxtjs.org/) is a file-based CMS for NuxtJS, enabling static-site generation and on-demand server rendering from data files. [SheetJS](https://sheetjs.com) is a JavaScript library for reading and writing data from spreadsheets. This demo uses NuxtJS and SheetJS to pull data from a spreadsheet and display the content in an HTML table. :::note pass There were breaking changes between VueJS 2.x and VueJS 3.x. Since many projects still use VueJS 2.x, this demo includes examples for both versions of VueJS. ::: The ["Nuxt Content v1"](#nuxt-content-v1) section explores "parsers" for NuxtJS Content v1 (paired with VueJS 2.x and NuxtJS 2.x) The ["Nuxt Content v2"](#nuxt-content-v2) section explores "transformers" for NuxtJS Content v2 (paired with VueJS 3.x and NuxtJS 3.x) :::info pass This demo focuses on server-side processing with NuxtJS and VueJS. The [VueJS demo](/docs/demos/frontend/vue) includes examples of NuxtJS sites that process spreadsheets in the browser. ::: :::note Tested Deployments This demo was tested in the following environments: | Nuxt Content | Nuxt | Date | |:-------------|:-----------|:-----------| | `1.15.1` | `2.18.1` | 2024-11-14 | | `2.13.4` | `3.14.159` | 2024-11-14 | ::: :::danger Telemetry Nuxt embeds telemetry. According to the docs, it can be disabled with: ```bash npx nuxt telemetry disable ``` **When the demo was last tested, this command did not work.** Disabling telemetry requires a few steps: 1) Set the environment variable `NUXT_TELEMETRY_DISABLED` to `1` Add the following line to `.profile`, `.bashrc` and `.zshrc`: ```bash export NUXT_TELEMETRY_DISABLED=1 ``` Close and restart the Terminal to load the changes. Type `env` in the search bar and select "Edit the system environment variables". In the new window, click the "Environment Variables..." button. In the new window, look for the "System variables" section and click "New..." Set the "Variable name" to `NUXT_TELEMETRY_DISABLED` and the value to `1`. Click "OK" in each window (3 windows) and restart your computer. 2) A global setting should be added to `.nuxtrc` in the user home directory: ```ini title="~/.nuxtrc" telemetry.enabled=false ``` The following command can be run in the Linux / MacOS terminal: ```bash cat >~/.nuxtrc < |nuxt.config.js\ncustom parser| buffer buffer --> |nuxt.config.js\ncustom parser| aoo aoo --> |index.vue\ntemplate| html ``` ### Installation The [SheetJS NodeJS Module](/docs/getting-started/installation/nodejs) can be imported from `nuxt.config.js` for build-time processing. ### Custom Parser :::info pass Custom parsers receive the file content interpreted as UTF-8 strings. For binary formats including XLSX and XLS, the data is corrupt and cannot be used. The workaround involves safely re-reading the spreadsheets. ::: The second argument passed to the parser is an object. The `path` property of the object is the path to the file. The SheetJS `readFile`[^1] method can locate and parse the spreadsheet files. The `sheet_to_json`[^2] utility function can generate arrays of row objects for use in NuxtJS pages: ```js title="Custom Parser (in nuxt.config.js)" import { readFile, utils } from 'xlsx'; /* This will be called when the files change */ const parseSheet = (file, { path }) => { /* `path` is a path that can be read with `XLSX.readFile` */ const wb = readFile(path); /* iterate through each worksheet name and generate row objects */ const o = wb.SheetNames.map(name => ({ name: name, data: utils.sheet_to_json(wb.Sheets[name]) })); /* The final result must be stored in the `data` key of an object */ return { data: o }; }; ``` ### Configuration Using `content.extendParser`[^3], Nuxt Content will use custom parsers. The property is expected to be an object whose keys are file extensions (with the `.` before the extension) and whose values are custom parser functions. The relevant part of the config is shown below. In this snippet, the custom parser `parseSheet` will be associated with XLSX, XLS and NUMBERS files: ```js title="nuxt.config.js" export default { // ... // content.extendParser allows us to hook into the parsing step content: { extendParser: { // the keys are the extensions that will be matched. The "." is required ".numbers": parseSheet, ".xlsx": parseSheet, ".xls": parseSheet, // can add other extensions like ".fods" as desired } }, // ... } ``` ### Template Use When a spreadsheet is placed in the `content` folder, Nuxt will find it. The data can be referenced in a view with `asyncData`. The name should not include the extension, so `"sheetjs.numbers"` would be referenced as `"sheetjs"`: ```js title="Script section of .vue VueJS page" async asyncData ({$content}) { return { // $content('sheetjs') will match files with extensions in nuxt.config.js data: await $content('sheetjs').fetch() }; } ``` In the template, `data.data` is an array of objects. Each object has a `name` property for the worksheet name and a `data` array of row objects. This maps neatly with nested `v-for`[^4]: ```xml title="Template section of .vue VueJS page"
{{ row.Name }} {{ row.Index }}
``` ### Nuxt Content Demo :::caution pass For some older versions, parts of the Nuxt dependency tree did not support NodeJS version 20. `EBADENGINE` warnings were displayed during app creation: ``` npm WARN EBADENGINE Unsupported engine { npm WARN EBADENGINE package: '@nuxt/types@2.16.3', npm WARN EBADENGINE required: { node: '^14.18.0 || ^16.10.0 || ^17.0.0 || ... npm WARN EBADENGINE current: { node: 'v20.2.0', npm: '9.6.6' } npm WARN EBADENGINE } ``` The recommended solution is to switch to Node 18. ::: 1) Create a stock app: ```bash npx create-nuxt-app@4.0.0 sheetjs-nuxt ``` When prompted, enter the following options: - `Project name`: press Enter (use default `sheetjs-nuxt`) - `Programming language`: press (`TypeScript` selected) then Enter - `Package manager`: select `Npm` and press Enter - `UI framework`: select `None` and press Enter - `Nuxt.js modules`: scroll to `Content`, select with Space, then press Enter - `Linting tools`: press Enter (do not select any Linting tools) - `Testing framework`: select `None` and press Enter - `Rendering mode`: select `Universal (SSR / SSG)` and press Enter - `Deployment target`: select `Static (Static/Jamstack hosting)` and press Enter - `Development tools`: press Enter (do not select any Development tools) - `What is your GitHub username?`: press Enter (use default) - `Version control system`: select `None` and press Enter The project will be configured and modules will be installed. 2) Install the SheetJS library and start the server: {`\ cd sheetjs-nuxt npm i --save https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/xlsx-${current}.tgz npm run dev`} When the build finishes, the terminal will display a URL like: ``` ℹ Listening on: http://localhost:64688/ ``` The server is listening on that URL. Open the link in a web browser. 3) Download https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.xlsx and move to the `content` folder. ```bash curl -L -o content/pres.xlsx https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.xlsx ``` 4) Modify `nuxt.config.js` as follows: - Add the following to the top of the script: ```js title="nuxt.config.js (add to top)" import { readFile, utils } from 'xlsx'; // This will be called when the files change const parseSheet = (file, { path }) => { // `path` is a path that can be read with `XLSX.readFile` const wb = readFile(path); const o = wb.SheetNames.map(name => ({ name, data: utils.sheet_to_json(wb.Sheets[name])})); return { data: o }; }; ``` - Look for the exported object. There should be a `content` property: ```js // Content module configuration: https://go.nuxtjs.dev/config-content content: {}, ``` Replace the property with the following definition: ```js title="nuxt.config.js (replace content key in object)" // content.extendParser allows us to hook into the parsing step content: { extendParser: { // the keys are the extensions that will be matched. The "." is required ".numbers": parseSheet, ".xlsx": parseSheet, ".xls": parseSheet, // can add other extensions like ".fods" as desired } }, ``` (If the property is missing, add it to the end of the exported object) 5) Replace `pages/index.vue` with the following: ```html title="pages/index.vue (replace contents)" ``` The browser should refresh to show the contents of the spreadsheet. If it does not, click Refresh manually or open a new browser window. ![Nuxt Demo end of step 5](pathname:///nuxt/nuxt5.png) 6) To verify that live reload works, open `pres.xlsx` from the `content` folder with Excel or another spreadsheet editor. Set cell `A7` to "SheetJS Dev" and set `B7` to `47`. Save the spreadsheet. ![Adding a new line to `pres.xlsx`](pathname:///nuxt/nuxl6.png) The server terminal window should show a line like: ``` ℹ Updated ./content/pres.xlsx @nuxt/content 05:43:37 ``` The page should automatically refresh with the new content: ![Nuxt Demo end of step 6](pathname:///nuxt/nuxt6.png) 7) Stop the server (press CTRL+C in the terminal window). 8) Build the static site: ```bash npm run generate ``` This will create a static site in the `dist` folder. 9) Serve the static site: ```bash npx http-server dist ``` Access the displayed URL (typically `http://localhost:8080`) in a web browser. To confirm that the spreadsheet data is added to the site, view the page source. Searching for `Bill Clinton` reveals the following encoded HTML row: ```html Bill Clinton 42 ``` ## Nuxt Content v2 Nuxt Content v2 is designed to work with NuxtJS v3 and VueJS v3. The following diagram depicts the workbook waltz: ```mermaid flowchart LR file[(workbook\nfile)] subgraph SheetJS operations buffer(NodeJS\nBuffer) aoo(array of\nobjects) end html{{HTML\nTABLE}} file --> |custom module\ntransformer| buffer buffer --> |custom module\ntransformer| aoo aoo --> |index.vue\nContentRenderer| html ``` ### Installation The [SheetJS NodeJS Module](/docs/getting-started/installation/nodejs) can be safely imported from `nuxt.config.js` or transformer or module scripts. As long as the SheetJS modules are not imported in the various `.vue` pages, the library will not be added to the final page bundle! ### Custom Transformer Nuxt Content `v2` supports custom transformers for controlling data. Although the library hard-codes UTF-8 interpretations, the `_id` field currently uses the pattern `content:` followed by the filename (if files are placed in the `content` folder directly). This enables a transformer to re-read the file. For example, if the file `pres.xlsx` is stored in the `content` folder, NuxtJS Content will use ID `"content:pres.xlsx"`. `"./content/" + _id.slice(8)` will be the original path `"./content/pres.xlsx"`. The NodeJS `resolve`[^5] method will return a file path. `readFileSync`[^6] will read the file and return a NodeJS `Buffer`. That `Buffer` object can be parsed with the SheetJS `read`[^7] method. The `sheet_to_json`[^8] utility function can generate arrays of row objects for use in NuxtJS pages. ```ts title="sheetformer.ts (Transformer)" // @ts-ignore import { defineTransformer } from "@nuxt/content/transformers/utils"; import { read, utils } from "xlsx"; import { readFileSync } from "node:fs"; import { resolve } from 'node:path'; export default defineTransformer({ name: 'sheetformer', /* list of file extensions */ extensions: ['.xlsx'], parse (_id: string, rawContent: string) { // highlight-start /* read the underlying file */ const buf = readFileSync(resolve("./content/" + _id.slice(8))); /* parse */ const wb = read(buf); // highlight-end /* generate JS objects for each worksheet */ const body = wb.SheetNames.map(name => ({ name: name, data: utils.sheet_to_json(wb.Sheets[name]) })); /* The final result must have the `_id` key and must store data in `body` */ return { _id, body }; } }); ``` The data object returned by the transformer must have the original `_id` key. The data is stored in the `body` property of the final object. :::danger pass When this demo was last tested, there were errors in the NuxtJS types. **As this affects the official examples, this is a bug in NuxtJS!** Until the bugs are fixed, type checking should be disabled. ::: ### Custom Modules NuxtJS modules are the main mechanism for adding transformers to the pipeline.
Module Details (click to show) Due to the structure of the NuxtJS system, modules must be defined in separate script files. The module script is expected to export a module configured with `defineNuxtModule`. The setup method is expected to do the following: - Register itself with the "Nitro" subsystem - Add the transformer to Nuxt Content in the `content:context` hook ```js title="sheetmodule.ts (Module)" import { resolve } from 'path' import { defineNuxtModule } from '@nuxt/kit' export default defineNuxtModule({ /* module setup method */ setup (_options, nuxt) { /* register with the nitro subsystem */ nuxt.options.nitro.externals = nuxt.options.nitro.externals || {}; nuxt.options.nitro.externals.inline = nuxt.options.nitro.externals.inline || []; nuxt.options.nitro.externals.inline.push(resolve('./sheetmodule')); /* add transformer in the content:context hook */ // @ts-ignore nuxt.hook('content:context', (contentContext) => { contentContext.transformers.push(resolve('./sheetformer.ts')); }); } }); ``` The module must be loaded in `nuxt.config.ts` and added to the `modules` array: ```ts title="nuxt.config.ts" // highlight-next-line import SheetJSModule from './sheetmodule' export default defineNuxtConfig({ // @ts-ignore telemetry: false, modules: [ // highlight-next-line SheetJSModule, /* it is recommended to load the custom modules before @nuxt/content */ '@nuxt/content' ], content: {} }); ```
### Rendering Data Pages can pull data using `useAsyncData` in the page setup: ```html title="Script section of .vue VueJS page" ``` Pages should use `ContentRenderer` to reference the data. The `data` variable from the script setup will be shaped like the return value from the transformer. `data.body` is an array of objects that holds the worksheet name and data. ```html title="Template section of .vue VueJS page" ``` ### Nuxt Content 2 Demo :::caution pass For some older versions, parts of the Nuxt dependency tree did not support NodeJS version 20. If the `yarn install` step fails with a message like ``` error @nuxt/kit@3.4.1: The engine "node" is incompatible with this module. ``` The recommended solution is to switch to Node 18. ::: 1) Create a stock app and install dependencies: ```bash npx -y nuxi init -t content --packageManager yarn --no-gitInit sheetjs-nc2 cd sheetjs-nc2 npx -y yarn install npx -y yarn add --dev @types/node ``` 2) Install the SheetJS library and start the server: {`\ npx -y yarn add https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/xlsx-${current}.tgz npx -y yarn dev`} When the build finishes, the terminal will display a URL like: ``` > Local: http://localhost:3000/ ``` The server is listening on that URL. Open the link in a web browser. 3) Download https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.xlsx and move to the `content` folder. ```bash curl -L -o content/pres.xlsx https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.xlsx ``` 4) Create the transformer. Two files must be saved at the root of the project: - [`sheetformer.ts`](https://docs.sheetjs.com/nuxt/3/sheetformer.ts) (raw transformer module) - [`sheetmodule.ts`](https://docs.sheetjs.com/nuxt/3/sheetmodule.ts) (Nuxt configuration module) ```bash curl -O https://docs.sheetjs.com/nuxt/3/sheetformer.ts curl -O https://docs.sheetjs.com/nuxt/3/sheetmodule.ts ``` After creating the source files, the module must be added to `nuxt.config.ts`: ```ts title="nuxt.config.ts (add highlighted lines)" // highlight-next-line import SheetJSModule from './sheetmodule' export default defineNuxtConfig({ // highlight-start // @ts-ignore telemetry: false, // highlight-end devtools: { enabled: true }, // highlight-start modules: [ SheetJSModule, '@nuxt/content' ], content: {} // highlight-end }); ``` Stop the dev server (CTRL+C) and run the following: ```bash npx -y nuxi clean npx -y nuxi cleanup npx -y nuxi typecheck npx -y yarn run dev ``` Loading `http://localhost:3000/pres` should show some JSON data: ```json { // ... "data": { "_path": "/pres", // ... "_id": "content:pres.xlsx", "body": [ { "name": "Sheet1", // <-- sheet name "data": [ // <-- array of data objects { "Name": "Bill Clinton", "Index": 42 }, ``` 5) Download [`pres.vue`](pathname:///nuxt/3/pres.vue) and save to `pages`: ```bash curl -o pages/pres.vue https://docs.sheetjs.com/nuxt/3/pres.vue ``` Stop the dev server (CTRL+C) and run the following: ```bash npx -y nuxi clean npx -y nuxi cleanup npx -y yarn run dev ``` The browser should now display an HTML table. 6) To verify that hot loading works, open `pres.xlsx` from the `content` folder with a spreadsheet editor. Set cell `A7` to "SheetJS Dev" and set `B7` to `47`. Save the spreadsheet. The page should automatically refresh with the new content. 7) Stop the server (press CTRL+C in the terminal window). 8) Build the static site: ```bash npx -y yarn run generate ``` This will create a static site in `.output/public`, which can be served with: ```bash npx -y http-server .output/public ``` Access the displayed URL (typically `http://localhost:8080`) in a web browser. To confirm that the spreadsheet data is added to the site, view the page source. Searching for `Bill Clinton` reveals the following encoded HTML row: ```html Bill Clinton42 ``` [^1]: See [`readFile` in "Reading Files"](/docs/api/parse-options) [^2]: See [`sheet_to_json` in "Utilities"](/docs/api/utilities/array#array-output) [^3]: See [`extendParser`](https://content.nuxtjs.org/v1/getting-started/configuration#extendparser) in the NuxtJS documentation. [^4]: See ["Array of Objects" in the VueJS demo](/docs/demos/frontend/vue#array-of-objects) [^5]: See [`resolve`](https://nodejs.org/api/path.html#pathresolvepaths) in the NodeJS `node:path` documentation [^6]: See [`readFileSync`](https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fsreadfilesyncpath-options) in the NodeJS `node:fs` documentation [^7]: See [`read` in "Reading Files"](/docs/api/parse-options) [^8]: See [`sheet_to_json` in "Utilities"](/docs/api/utilities/array#array-output)