--- title: Sheets with Deno Deploy sidebar_label: Deno Deploy pagination_prev: demos/local/index pagination_next: demos/extensions/index --- import current from '/version.js'; import CodeBlock from '@theme/CodeBlock'; [Deno Deploy](https://dash.deno.com/) offers distributed "Serverless Functions" powered by Deno. [SheetJS](https://sheetjs.com) is a JavaScript library for reading and writing data from spreadsheets. This demo covers integration details. We'll explore how to load and use SheetJS scripts in Deno Deploy functions. The ["Demo"](#demo) section builds a sample service that converts XLSX and other types of spreadsheets to HTML tables and CSV rows. :::caution pass When the demo was last tested, Deno Deploy required a GitHub account. ::: :::note Tested Deployments This demo was last tested by SheetJS users on 2025-01-15. ::: ## Integration Details The [SheetJS Deno module](/docs/getting-started/installation/deno) can be imported from Deno Deploy server scripts. ### Supported Frameworks :::danger pass Deno Deploy does not offer any sort of temporary file access in functions. This breaks web frameworks that use the filesystem in body parsing. ::: When the demo was last tested, the `drash` server framework used an in-memory approach for parsing POST request bodies. The [Drash demo](/docs/demos/net/server/drash) covers the framework in detail. ### Parsing Data When files are submitted via HTTP POST, the `bodyParam` method can fetch data. The `content` property of the returned object can be parsed with `XLSX.read`. The following example assumes the file is submitted at field name `file`: {`\ // @deno-types="https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/types/index.d.ts" import { read, utils } from 'https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/xlsx.mjs'; import * as Drash from "https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/drashland/drash@v2.8.1/mod.ts"; \n\ class SheetJSResource extends Drash.Resource { public paths = ["/"]; \n\ public POST(request: Drash.Request, response: Drash.Response) { // highlight-start /* get data from body */ const file = request.bodyParam("file"); /* parse */ var wb = read(file.content, {type: "buffer", dense: true}); // highlight-end /* generate HTML from first worksheet */ return response.html(utils.sheet_to_html(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]])); } }`} ## Demo 0) Create a new GitHub account or sign into an existing account. 1) Open the [main Deno Deploy portal](https://dash.deno.com/) in a browser. 2) If the account never signed into Deno Deploy, click "Continue with Github". In the next screen, review the prompt and click "Authorize Deno Deploy". If a welcome screen is displayed, click "I know what I'm doing". :::caution pass If a Terms and Conditions prompt is displayed, review the Terms and Conditions and the Privacy Policy before checking the box and clicking "Continue" ::: 3) Click "New Playground" to create a new Playground. 4) Download [`s2c.ts`](pathname:///deno/s2c.ts). 5) Open `s2c.ts` with a text editor and copy the contents of the source file into the playground editor (left pane in the browser). ![Deno Deploy Editor](pathname:///deno/editor.png) 6) Click "Save and Deploy". When the demo was last tested, it was a blue button. ![Save and Deploy](pathname:///deno/save-deploy.png) ### Testing 7) Wait until the server is deployed. When it is deployed, the right panel will show "SheetJS Spreadsheet Conversion Service": > ![Screenshot](pathname:///deno/sshot.png) 8) Download the test file https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.xlsx 9) In the browser window, click "Choose File" and select the downloaded file. 10) Click "Submit". The right panel will show the contents in a HTML TABLE. 11) Open a terminal window and download https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.numbers: ```bash curl -LO https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.numbers ``` 12) Copy the first `curl` line from the page and run in the terminal. For example, if the deployment is `clean-badger-69`, the command would be ```bash curl -X POST -F"file=@pres.numbers" https://clean-badger-69.deno.dev/ ``` The output will be an HTML table 13) Copy the second `curl` line from the page and run in the terminal. For example, if the deployment is `clean-badger-69`, the command would be ```bash curl -X POST -F"file=@pres.numbers" -F"type=csv" https://clean-badger-69.deno.dev/ ``` The output will be CSV.