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import current from '/version.js'; import CodeBlock from '@theme/CodeBlock';
Reading from and writing to files requires native platform support.
SheetJS readFile
and writeFile
methods include support for some platforms.
Due to sandboxing and security settings, readFile
does not work in the web
browser and writeFile
is not guaranteed to work in all cases.
This demo looks at various web APIs for reading and writing files. We'll explore how to pass data between SheetJS functions and various APIs.
:::note pass
Some snippets are also available in the "Common Use Cases" section:
Other demos cover APIs for local file access on special platforms:
- "iOS and Android Apps" covers mobile app frameworks
- "Desktop Apps" covers desktop apps
- "Command-Line Tools" covers standalone command-line tools
:::
Binary Data
JavaScript engines represent binary data in a number of structures.
The type
option for SheetJS read
function1 controls how the data should
be interpreted. This parameter distinguishes binary strings
from Base64 strings.
The type
option for SheetJS write
function2 controls the output storage.
Uint8Array
and Buffer
A Uint8Array
is a Typed Array where each value is a 8-bit unsigned integer.
Server-side platforms including NodeJS typically use Uint8Array
, or a subclass
such as Buffer
3, to represent data from files.
The SheetJS read
method can read data from Uint8Array
without any options:
const wb = XLSX.read(u8);
The SheetJS write
method can generate workbooks stored in
Uint8Array
structures with the option type: "buffer"
:
const u8 = XLSX.write(wb, {bookType: "xlsx", type: "buffer"});
:::note pass
In NodeJS, the write
method will generate a Buffer
instance.
:::
ArrayBuffer
An ArrayBuffer
represents an array of bytes. The Uint8Array
constructor can
synchronously create a view without copying the underlying data:
/* create a Uint8Array "view" */
const u8 = new Uint8Array(array_buffer);
The SheetJS read
method can read data from ArrayBuffer
without special
options, as it performs the aforementioned conversion. The SheetJS write
method can generate workbooks stored in ArrayBuffer
structures with the
option type: "array"
Blob
and File
Blob
is an opaque pointer to data. The data is not immediately accessible.
File
extends Blob
with support for storing file names and other metadata.
The SheetJS read
method does not handle Blob
or File
. The underlying data
must be pulled into an ArrayBuffer
before parsing. There are two approaches:
A) Modern browsers support the arrayBuffer
method. It returns a promise that
resolves to ArrayBuffer
:
// usage: const wb = await blob_to_wb(blob);
async function blob_to_wb(blob) {
const ab = await blob.arrayBuffer(); // pull data from Blob
return XLSX.read(ab); // parse ArrayBuffer
}
B) For broader browser support, the FileReader
API can pull ArrayBuffer
data
using the readAsArrayBuffer
method:
// usage: file_to_wb(file, function(wb) { /* wb is a workbook object */ });
function file_to_wb(file, callback) {
var reader = new FileReader();
reader.onload = function(e) {
/* e.target.result is an ArrayBuffer */
callback(XLSX.read(e.target.result));
};
reader.readAsArrayBuffer(file);
}
FileReaderSync in Web Workers (click to show)
FileReaderSync
is only available in Web Workers. It returns an ArrayBuffer
:
// assuming main thread called worker.postMessage({ file: file_object })
self.addEventListener('message', (e) => {
/* get file object from message */
var file = e.data.file;
/* Read file data */
const ab = new FileReaderSync().readAsArrayBuffer(file);
/* Parse file */
const wb = XLSX.read(ab);
/* DO SOMETHING WITH wb HERE */
});
"User-Submitted File" example includes a live demo.
The SheetJS write
method can generate a Uint8Array
which can be passed to
the Blob
constructor:
function wb_to_blob(wb, bookType) {
/* write workbook to Uint8Array */
const u8 = XLSX.write(wb, { bookType: bookType || "xlsx", type: "buffer" });
/* create array of parts */
const parts = [ u8 ]; // `Blob` constructor expects this
/* create Blob */
const blob = new Blob(parts, { type: "application/vnd.ms-excel" });
return blob;
}
The File
constructor accepts an additional name
argument:
function wb_to_file(wb, filename) {
/* impute bookType from file extension */
const ext = filename.slice(filename.lastIndexOf(".") + 1);
/* write workbook to Uint8Array */
const u8 = XLSX.write(wb, { bookType: ext, type: "buffer" });
/* create array of parts */
const parts = [ u8 ]; // `File` constructor expects this
/* create File */
const file = new File(parts, filename, { type: "application/vnd.ms-excel" });
return file;
}
Binary Strings
Binary strings are strings where each character code is between 0
and 255
.
This structure is generated from the FileReader#readAsBinaryString
method.
The SheetJS read
method supports binary strings with type: "binary"
. The
following snippet shows how readAsBinaryString
can be paired with SheetJS:
// usage: file_bs_to_wb(file, function(wb) { /* wb is a workbook object */ });
function file_bs_to_wb(file, callback) {
var reader = new FileReader();
reader.onload = function(e) {
/* e.target.result is a binary string */
callback(XLSX.read(e.target.result, { type: "binary" }));
};
reader.readAsBinaryString(file);
}
The SheetJS write
method can generate binary strings using type: "binary"
:
/* write workbook to binary string */
const bstr = XLSX.write(wb, { bookType: "xlsx", type: "binary" });
Base64 Strings
Base64 strings are encoded using 64 display ASCII characters. This structure is
generated from btoa
, the FileReader#readAsDataURL
method, and many platform
APIs in mobile and desktop app frameworks.
The SheetJS read
method supports Base64 strings with type: "base64"
. The
following snippet shows how readAsDataURL
can be paired with SheetJS:
// usage: file_b64_to_wb(file, function(wb) { /* wb is a workbook object */ });
function file_b64_to_wb(file, callback) {
var reader = new FileReader();
reader.onload = function(e) {
/* e.target.result is a base64 string */
callback(XLSX.read(e.target.result, { type: "base64" }));
};
reader.readAsDataURL(file);
}
The SheetJS write
method can generate Base64 strings using type: "base64"
:
/* write workbook to Base64 string */
const b64 = XLSX.write(wb, { bookType: "xlsx", type: "base64" });
Arrays of Numbers
Some platforms represent binary data as arrays of numbers, where each number represents one byte in the file.
The SheetJS read
method supports arrays of unsigned bytes (where each value
is between 0
and 255
) with type: "array"
.
:::caution Java and Signed Bytes
Google Sheets follows Java signed data type
conventions. Byte arrays include values from -128
to 127
.
How to Fix Signed Arrays (click to show)
The unsigned value for a negative byte can be calculated with a bitwise AND
(&
) operation against 0xFF
:
const unsigned_byte = signed_byte & 0xFF;
For legacy platforms including NetSuite 2.0, the
bitwise AND assignment operator (&=
) can rectify an array in place:
/* convert a signed byte array to an unsigned byte array in place */
for(var i = 0; i < array.length; ++i) array[i] &= 0xFF;
For modern platforms, the Uint8Array
constructor understands signed bytes:
/* copy data into a new Uint8Array */
const u8 = new Uint8Array(array);
:::
Web Browsers
:::warning pass
Not all web APIs are supported in all browsers. For example, Firefox does not support the "File System Access API".
Even when a browser technically supports a web API, it may be disabled in the client browser. Some APIs do not give any feedback.
:::
HTML5 Download Attribute
Writing Files
writeFile
will attempt a download in the browser using the attribute.
XLSX.writeFile(wb, "SheetJS.xlsx");
Implementation Details (click to show)
Under the hood, it creates a special URL and clicks a link. The library method includes a few workarounds for legacy browsers
XLSX.writeFile(wb, "SheetJS.xlsx");
is roughly equivalent to:
/* write data -- `writeFile` infers bookType from filename but `write` cannot */
const u8 = XLSX.write(wb, { bookType: "xlsx", type: "buffer" });
/* create Blob */
const blob = new Blob([u8]);
/* create object URL */
const url = URL.createObjectURL(blob);
/* create `A` DOM element */
const a = document.createElement("a");
/* set export file name */
a.download = "SheetJS.xlsx";
/* wire up the object URL to the DOM element */
a.href = url;
/* add to the page */
document.body.appendChild(a);
/* click the link */
a.click();
/* remove the element from the page */
document.body.removeChild(a);
:::caution Web Workers
XLSX.writeFile
requires DOM access and will not work in a Web Worker!
The workaround is to generate the file data from the Worker (using XLSX.write
)
and send the data back to the main context for the actual download action.
"Creating a Local File" includes a live demo.
:::
Google Tag Manager
:::caution pass
Google Tag Manager is known to intercept and corrupt links. This issue will
manifest as UUID file names like 01234567-89ab-cdef-0123-456789abcdef
.
:::
For sites using GTM, it is recommended to patch document.createElement
and
revert after performing the export.
GTM Workaround (click to show)
The workaround is to ensure new A
elements created by document.createElement
have the target
attribute set to _blank
.
After calling writeFile
, the old version of the method should be restored.
/* preparation */
document.createElement2 = document.createElement;
document.createElement = function(...args) {
if(args.length == 1 && args[0].toLowerCase() == "a") {
const a = document.createElement2("a");
a.target = "_blank";
return a;
}
return document.createElement2.call(this, ...args);
};
/* export (XLSX.writeFile) */
XLSX.writeFile(wb, "SheetJS.xlsx");
/* cleanup */
setTimeout(() => {
document.createElement = document.createElement2;
delete document.createElement2;
}, 1000);
File API
Reading Files
In the change
event of <input type="file">
, the event object will have a
target
property. The files
property of target
is a list of File
objects.
async function handleFileAsync(e) {
/* get first file */
const file = e.target.files[0];
/* get raw data */
const data = await file.arrayBuffer();
/* data is an ArrayBuffer */
const workbook = XLSX.read(data);
/* do something with the workbook here */
console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]));
}
input_dom_element.addEventListener("change", handleFileAsync, false);
HTML Drag and Drop API
Reading Files
The dataTransfer
property of the drop
event holds a list of File
objects:
/* suppress default behavior for drag and drop events */
function suppress(e) { e.stopPropagation(); e.preventDefault(); }
/* handle data from drop event */
async function handleDropAsync(e) {
suppress(e);
/* get first file */
const f = e.dataTransfer.files[0];
/* get raw data */
const data = await f.arrayBuffer();
/* data is an ArrayBuffer */
const wb = XLSX.read(data);
/* do something with the workbook here */
console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]));
}
drop_dom_element.addEventListener("drop", handleDropAsync, false);
drop_dom_element.addEventListener("dragover", suppress, false);
drop_dom_element.addEventListener("dragenter", suppress, false);
File System Access API
:::warning Limited Browser Support
At the time of writing, browser support was fairly limited. Chrome introduced the feature in version 86. Safari did not support File System Access API.
:::
:::caution pass
When this demo was last tested, Google Chrome did not add an entry to the "Downloads" list. Nevertheless the actual file was written correctly.
:::
:::note Tested Deployments
This browser demo was tested in the following environments:
Browser | Date |
---|---|
Chrome 122 | 2024-04-07 |
Some lesser-used browsers do not support File System Access API:
Browser | Date |
---|---|
Safari 17.4 | 2024-04-07 |
Firefox 124 | 2024-04-07 |
:::
Live Example (click to show)
This live example reads a file then tries to save as XLSX. If the File System Access API is not supported, the result will be a clear message.
function SheetJSRoundTripFileSystemAPI() { return window.showSaveFilePicker ? (
<button onClick={async () => {
/* Show picker and get data */
const [rFile] = await window.showOpenFilePicker({
types: [{
description: 'Spreadsheets',
accept: { 'application/vnd.ms-excel': ['.xlsx', '.xls', '.xlsb', /*...*/] }
}],
excludeAcceptAllOption: true,
multiple: false
});
const ab = await (await rFile.getFile()).arrayBuffer();
/* parse */
const wb = XLSX.read(ab);
/* Show picker and get handle to file */
const wFile = await window.showSaveFilePicker({
suggestedName: "SheetJSRT.xlsx",
types: [ { description: 'XLSX', accept: { 'application/vnd.ms-excel': ['.xlsx'] } } ]
});
const wstream = await wFile.createWritable();
/* write */
const buf = XLSX.write(wb, { bookType: "xlsx", type: "buffer" });
wstream.write(buf);
/* close stream to commit file */
wstream.close();
}}>Click to read then save as XLSX</button>
) : ( <b>This browser does not support File System Access API</b> ); }
Reading Files
window.showOpenFilePicker
shows a file picker and resolves to an array of
file handles. When multiple: false
is set, the array has one element.
The getFile
method resolves to a File
object whose data can be read with
the arrayBuffer
method:
/* Show picker and get data */
const [hFile] = await window.showOpenFilePicker({
types: [{
description: 'Spreadsheets',
accept: { 'application/vnd.ms-excel': ['.xlsx', '.xls', '.xlsb', /*...*/] }
}],
excludeAcceptAllOption: true,
multiple: false
});
const ab = await (await hFile.getFile()).arrayBuffer();
/* parse */
const wb = XLSX.read(ab);
/* do something with the workbook */
console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]));
Writing Files
window.showSaveFilePicker
shows a file picker and resolves to a file handle.
The createWritable
method resolves to a FileSystemWritableFileStream
, which
readily accepts Uint8Array
data from XLSX.write
:
/* Show picker and get handle to file */
const hFile = await window.showSaveFilePicker({
suggestedName: "SheetJS.xlsx",
types: [
{ description: 'Excel 2007+ (XLSX)', accept: { 'application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet': ['.xlsx'] } },
{ description: 'Excel 97-2004 (XLS)', accept: { 'application/vnd.ms-excel': ['.xls'] } },
{ description: 'Excel 2007+ Binary (XLSB)', accept: { 'application/vnd.ms-excel.sheet.binary.macroEnabled.12': ['.xlsb'] } },
/* note that each MIME type must be unique! */
]
});
const wstream = await hFile.createWritable();
/* get extension */
const ext = hFile.name.slice(hFile.name.lastIndexOf(".")+1)
/* write */
wstream.write(XLSX.write(wb, { bookType: ext, type: "buffer" }))
/* close stream to commit file */
wstream.close();
File and Directory Entries API
:::caution Deprecated
In the web browser, the File and Directory Entries API has been deprecated and is not recommended for new applications.
cordova-plugin-file
still uses the API patterns.
:::
Writing Files
The API is callback-based. At a high level:
-
window.requestFileSystem
requests access to the filesystem. The callback receives aFileSystem
object. -
A file is created using the
getFile
method. The callback receives aFileSystemFileEntry
object representing the file. -
A writer is created using the
createWriter
method of the file object. The callback receives aFileWriter
object representing a file handle for writing. -
Data is written using the
write
method of theFileWriter
object. Unlike the other methods, callbacks are attached to theFileWriter
object directly.
// Request File System Access
window.requestFileSystem(window.PERSISTENT, 0, (fs) => {
// Request a handle to "SheetJS.xlsx", making a new file if necessary
fs.root.getFile("SheetJS.xlsx", {create: true}, entry => {
// Request a FileWriter for writing data
entry.createWriter(writer => {
// The FileWriter API needs an actual Blob
const u8 = XLSX.write(wb, { type: "buffer", bookType: "xlsx" });
const data = new Blob([u8], { type: "application/vnd.ms-excel" });
// `onwriteend` is called on success, `onerror` called on error
writer.onwriteend = () => {}; writer.onerror = () => {};
// write the data
writer.write(data);
});
});
});
Internet Explorer
Internet Explorer offered proprietary APIs that were not adopted by Chromium.
Blob API
Writing Files
IE10 and IE11 support navigator.msSaveBlob
. XLSX.writeFile
will use this
method if it is available.
Implementation Details (click to show)
XLSX.writeFile(wb, "SheetJS.xlsx");
is roughly equivalent to:
/* write data -- `writeFile` infers bookType from filename but `write` cannot */
const u8 = XLSX.write(wb, { bookType: "xlsx", type: "buffer" });
/* create Blob */
const blob = new Blob([u8]);
/* call msSaveBlob */
navigator.msSaveBlob(blob, "SheetJS.xlsx");
VBScript
Reading and Writing Files
Internet Explorer 6-9 with VBScript support Scripting.FileSystemObject
. This
is not supported in modern browsers.
This approach is implemented in the library readFile
and writeFile
methods.
It requires the shim script to be loaded before the main library script:
<!-- load the shim script first -->
<script src="shim.min.js"></script>
<!-- then load the main script -->
<script src="xlsx.full.min.js"></script>
Other Platforms
NodeJS
fs.readFileSync
and fs.writeFileSync
allow for reading and writing files.
When using require
, these are supported in readFile
and writeFile
:
var XLSX = require("xlsx");
var wb = XLSX.readFile("sheetjs.numbers");
XLSX.writeFile(wb, "sheetjs.xls");
Installation has a special note for use with NodeJS ECMAScript Modules:
import { readFile, writeFile, set_fs } from 'xlsx';
import * as fs from 'fs';
set_fs(fs);
var wb = readFile("sheetjs.numbers");
writeFile(wb, "sheetjs.xlsx");
Implementation Details (click to show)
XLSX.readFile(filepath)
is equivalent to:
CommonJS
var fs = require("fs");
var buf = fs.readFileSync(filepath);
var wb = XLSX.read(buf);
ECMAScript Modules
import { read } from "xlsx";
import { readFileSync } from "fs";
var buf = readFileSync(filepath);
var wb = read(buf);
XLSX.writeFile(wb, filepath)
is equivalent to:
CommonJS
var fs = require("fs"), path = require("path");
var buf = XLSX.write(wb, { bookType: path.extname(filepath).slice(1), type: "buffer" });
fs.writeFileSync(filepath, buf);
ECMAScript Modules
import { write } from "xlsx";
import { writeFileSync } from "fs";
import { extname } from "path";
var buf = write(wb, { bookType: extname(filepath).slice(1), type: "buffer" });
writeFileSync(filepath, buf);
ExtendScript
In Photoshop and other Adobe apps, readFile
and writeFile
use the File
object under the hood:
#include "xlsx.extendscript.js"
var wb = XLSX.readFile("sheetjs.xlsx");
XLSX.writeFile(wb, "sheetjs.csv");
The ExtendScript demo also covers "Common Extensibility Platform" (CEP) and "Unified Extensibility Platform" (UXP) details.
Chrome Extensions
In Manifest v2 Chrome extensions, writeFile
calls chrome.downloads.download
.
This approach uses URL.createObjectURL
, an API that is not supported in a
Manifest v3 Background Service Worker. For small exports, raw Base64 URLs can be
generated and downloaded.
The Chromium demo covers the details.
Deno
readFile
uses Deno.readFileSync
and writeFile
uses Deno.writeFileSync
:
{\ // @deno-types="https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/types/index.d.ts" import * as XLSX from 'https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/xlsx.mjs'; \n\ const wb: XLSX.WorkBook = XLSX.readFile("sheetjs.numbers"); XLSX.writeFile(wb, "sheetjs.xlsx");
}
:::caution Deno entitlements
Any Deno script using XLSX.readFile
requires the --allow-read
entitlement.
Any Deno script using XLSX.writeFile
requires the --allow-write
entitlement.
:::
Implementation Details (click to show)
XLSX.readFile(filepath)
is equivalent to:
ECMAScript Modules
{\ // @deno-types="https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/types/index.d.ts" import * as XLSX from 'https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/xlsx.mjs'; \n\ const u8: Uint8Array = Deno.readFileSync(filepath); const wb: XLSX.WorkBook = XLSX.read(u8);
}
XLSX.writeFile(wb, filepath)
is equivalent to:
ECMAScript Modules
{\ // @deno-types="https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/types/index.d.ts" import * as XLSX from 'https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/xlsx.mjs'; \n\ const u8 = XLSX.write(wb, { bookType: filepath.slice(filepath.lastIndexOf(".")+1), type: "buffer" }); Deno.writeFileSync(filepath, u8);
}
Bun
Bun requires the fs
module:
import { readFile, writeFile, set_fs } from 'xlsx';
import * as fs from 'fs';
set_fs(fs);
var wb = readFile("sheetjs.numbers");
writeFile(wb, "sheetjs.xlsx");
The implementation is identical to NodeJS ECMAScript Modules.
Apps
Desktop and mobile apps have their own specific APIs covered in separate demos:
-
See "Buffers and TypedArrays" in the NodeJS documentation. ↩︎