--- title: AstroJS pagination_prev: demos/net/index pagination_next: demos/mobile/index --- import current from '/version.js'; import CodeBlock from '@theme/CodeBlock'; :::note This demo uses ["Base64 Loader"](/docs/demos/static/vitejs#base64-loader) from the ViteJS demo. ::: Astro is a site generator. Astro projects use ViteJS under the hood. They expose project configuration through the `vite` property in `astro.config.mjs`. The [ViteJS demo](/docs/demos/static/vitejs) examples work as expected! ## Integration :::note The ViteJS demo used the query `?b64` to identify files. To play nice with Astro, this demo matches the file extensions directly. ::: Since Astro performs per-page heavy lifting at build time, it is recommended to use the Base64 string loader to get file data and parse with the SheetJS library in the relevant pages. If the SheetJS operations are performed in frontmatter, only the results will be added to the generated pages! ### Loader The loader should be added to `astro.config.mjs` under the `vite` key. ```js title="astro.config.mjs" import { readFileSync } from 'fs'; import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config'; export default defineConfig({ vite: { // this tells astro which extensions to handle assetsInclude: ['**/*.numbers', '**/*.xlsx'], plugins: [ { // this plugin presents the data as a Base64 string name: "sheet-base64", transform(code, id) { if(!id.match(/\.(numbers|xlsx)$/)) return; var data = readFileSync(id, "base64"); return `export default '${data}'`; } } ] } }); ``` #### Types For VSCodium integration, types can be specified in `src/env.d.ts`. This data loader returns Base64 strings: ```ts title="src/env.d.ts" /// declare module '*.numbers' { const data: string; export default data; } declare module '*.xlsx' { const data: string; export default data; } ``` ### Astro Frontmatter Typically projects store files in `src/pages`. Assuming `pres.numbers` is stored in the `src/data` directory in the project, the relative import ```js import b64 from "../data/pres.numbers" ``` will return a Base64 string which can be parsed in the frontmatter. The workbook object can be post-processed using utility functions. The following example uses `sheet_to_json` to generate row objects that are rendered as table rows: ```jsx title="src/pages/index.astro" --- /* -- the code in the frontmatter is only run at build time -- */ import { read, utils } from "xlsx"; /* parse workbook */ import b64 from "../data/pres.numbers"; const wb = read(b64, {type: "base64"}); /* generate row objects */ interface IPresident { Name: string; Index: number; } const data = utils.sheet_to_json(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]); ---

Presidents

{/* Display each row object as a TR within the TBODY element */} {data.map(row => ( ))}
NameIndex
{row.Name}{row.Index}
``` When built using `npx astro build`, Astro will perform the conversion and emit a simple HTML table without any reference to the existing spreadsheet file! ## Complete Example :::note This demo was tested on 2023 February 21 using AstroJS `v2.0.14` ::: 0) Disable Astro telemetry: ```bash npx astro telemetry disable ``` 1) Create a new site using the `docs` template: ```bash npm create astro@latest -- --template docs --yes ./sheetjs-astro cd sheetjs-astro ``` 2) Fetch the example file [`pres.numbers`](https://sheetjs.com/pres.numbers): ```bash mkdir -p src/data curl -Lo src/data/pres.numbers https://sheetjs.com/pres.numbers ``` 3) Install the SheetJS library: {`\ npm i --save https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/xlsx-${current}.tgz`} 4) Replace `src/pages/index.astro` with the following: ```jsx title="src/pages/index.astro" --- /* -- the code in the frontmatter is only run at build time -- */ import { read, utils } from "xlsx"; /* parse workbook */ import b64 from "../data/pres.numbers"; const wb = read(b64, {type: "base64"}); /* generate row objects */ interface IPresident { Name: string; Index: number; } const data = utils.sheet_to_json(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]); ---

Presidents

{data.map(row => ())}
NameIndex
{row.Name}{row.Index}
``` 5) Append the following lines to `src/env.d.ts`: ```ts title="src/env.d.ts" /* add to the end of the file */ declare module '*.numbers' { const data: string; export default data; } declare module '*.xlsx' { const data: string; export default data; } ``` 6) Add the highlighted lines to `astro.config.mjs`: ```js title="astro.config.mjs" // highlight-start /* import `readFileSync` at the top of the script*/ import { readFileSync } from 'fs'; // highlight-end import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config'; export default defineConfig({ // highlight-start /* this vite section should be added as a property of the object */ vite: { // this tells astro which extensions to handle assetsInclude: ['**/*.numbers', '**/*.xlsx'], plugins: [ { // this plugin presents the data as a Base64 string name: "sheet-base64", transform(code, id) { if(!id.match(/\.(numbers|xlsx)$/)) return; var data = readFileSync(id, "base64"); return `export default '${data}'`; } } ] }, // highlight-end integrations: [ ``` 7) Build the static site: ```bash npx astro build ``` AstroJS will place the generated site in the `dist` subfolder. 8) Start a web server to host the static site: ```bash npx http-server dist ``` Open a web browser and access the displayed URL ( `http://localhost:8080` ). View the page source and confirm that no JS was added to the page. It only contains the content from the file in an HTML table.