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import current from '/version.js'; import CodeBlock from '@theme/CodeBlock';
:::info pass
This demo focuses on the Excel JavaScript API.
For reading and writing Excel spreadsheets, other demos cover a wide variety of use cases and deployments.
:::
SheetJS is a JavaScript library for reading and writing data from spreadsheets.
Office 2016 introduced a JavaScript API for interacting with the application. It offers solutions for custom functions as well as task panes.
Excel currently does not provide support for working with Apple Numbers files and some legacy file formats. SheetJS fills the gap.
In the "Complete Demo", we'll create a new custom function
SHEETJS.EXTERN()
which tries to fetch an external spreadsheet and insert the
data into the worksheet.
:::note Tested Deployments
This demo was last tested on 2024 August 11 against Excel 365 (version 2407).
:::
:::caution Excel Bugs
There was a binary data bug affecting fetch
and Excel. It was resolved in
version 2303. It is strongly encouraged to upgrade to the latest version of
Excel 365 before running the demo.
:::
:::danger Telemetry
The Office Add-in CLI collects telemetry by default. It can be disabled:
npx office-addin-usage-data off
The setting can be verified by running:
npx office-addin-usage-data list
:::
Integration Details
The SheetJS NodeJS module can be imported from scripts in an Excel Custom Functions project.
The sheet_to_json
helper function
can generate arrays of arrays of values based on the worksheet data. Excel
custom functions transparently treat arrays of arrays as Dynamic Arrays.
This example fetches a file using the fetch
API, parses the binary data using
the SheetJS read
1 method and returns data from the first worksheet.
flowchart LR
url[(Remote\nFile)]
ab[(File\nBytes)]
subgraph SheetJS Structures
wb(((SheetJS\nWorkbook)))
ws((SheetJS\nWorksheet))
end
aoo[[Array of\nObjects]]
xl>Excel\nWorksheet]
url --> |fetch\narrayBuffer| ab
ab --> |read\n\n| wb
wb --> |wb.Sheets\nselect sheet| ws
ws --> |sheet_to_json\n\n| aoo
aoo --> |return\nExcel| xl
linkStyle 1,2,3 color:blue,stroke:blue;
const XLSX = require("xlsx");
/**
* Download file and write data
* @customfunction
* @param {string} url URL to fetch and parse
* @returns {any[][]} Worksheet data
*/
export async function extern(url) {
try {
/* Fetch Data */
const res = await fetch(url);
/* Get Data */
const ab = await res.arrayBuffer();
/* Parse Data */
const wb = XLSX.read(ab);
/* Translate Data */
const ws = wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]; // get first worksheet
const aoa = XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(ws, { header: 1 }); // array of arrays
/* Return Data */
return aoa;
} catch(e) { return [[e.message || e]]; } // pass error back to Excel
}
Complete Demo
- Clear the functions cache. For the tested version of Excel:
- Open File Explorer
- Select the address bar and enter
%LOCALAPPDATA%\Microsoft\Office\16.0\Wef
- Delete the
CustomFunctions
folder (if it exists) and empty Recycle Bin.
:::caution pass
This will delete all custom functions associated with the user account!
To preserve the custom functions on the user account, rename the existing folder
to CustomFunctionsBackup
before testing and rename back to CustomFunctions
after testing is finished.
:::
-
Install NodeJS LTS.
-
After installing NodeJS, launch a new PowerShell window.
-
Disable telemetry:
npx office-addin-usage-data off
- Install dependencies:
npm i -g yo bower generator-office
Creating a new Add-in
- Run the generator:
npx yo office
The generator will ask a few questions:
-
"Choose a project type": "Excel Custom Functions using a Shared Runtime"
-
"Choose a script type": "JavaScript",
-
"What do you want to name your add-in?": "SheetJSImport"
The generator will create the project and install dependencies.
- Start the development process:
cd SheetJSImport
npm run build
npm start
If prompted to Allow localhost loopback for Microsoft Edge WebView
, type
N and press Enter.
If prompted to install "Developer CA for Microsoft Office Add-ins" certificate, select "Yes"
If Windows Firewall prompts to allow Node.js on private networks, select "Yes" A new terminal window running NodeJS will be created. Keep the window open.
A new Excel window with the loaded add-in will launch.
:::caution pass
In some tests, the taskpane showed an error:
Script error.
Webview2 should be installed manually.
:::
- In
manifest.xml
, search forFunctions.Namespace
. There will be an XML element with namebt:String
. Change theDefaultValue
attribute toSHEETJS
:
<bt:ShortStrings>
// highlight-next-line
<bt:String id="Functions.Namespace" DefaultValue="SHEETJS"/>
<bt:String id="GetStarted.Title" DefaultValue="Get started with your sample add-in!" />
-
Close the Excel window and the terminal window. Do not save the XLSX file.
-
In the PowerShell window, start the development process again:
npm start
Integrating the SheetJS Library
- Install the SheetJS library in the project
{\ npm i --save https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/xlsx-${current}.tgz
}
- Replace
src\functions\functions.js
with the following:
var XLSX = require("xlsx");
/**
* Print SheetJS Library Version
* @customfunction
* @returns {string[][]} The SheetJS Library Version.
*/
export function version() {
return [[XLSX.version]];
}
-
Close the terminal window and the Excel window. Do not save the Excel file.
-
In the PowerShell window, start the development process again:
npm start
- In the new Excel window, enter the formula
=SHEETJS.VERSION()
in cellE1
. You should see something similar to the following screenshot:
This indicates that the SheetJS library has been loaded.
Fetching Files from the Internet
- Add the following code snippet to
src\functions\functions.js
and save:
/**
* Download file and write data
* @customfunction
* @param {string} url URL to fetch and parse
* @returns {any[][]} Worksheet data
*/
export async function extern(url) {
try {
/* Fetch Data */
const res = await fetch(url);
/* Get Data */
const ab = await res.arrayBuffer();
/* Parse Data */
var wb = XLSX.read(ab);
/* get and return data */
var ws = wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]; // get first worksheet
var aoa = XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(ws, { header: 1 }); // get data as array of arrays
return aoa;
} catch(e) { return [[e.message || e]]; } // pass error back to Excel
}
-
Close the terminal window and the Excel window (do not save the Excel file).
-
In the PowerShell window, start the development process again:
npm start
- Enter the text
https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.numbers
in cellD1
. Enter the formula=SHEETJS.EXTERN(D1)
in cellD2
and press Enter.
Excel should pull in the data and generate a dynamic array. The worksheet should match the screenshot at the top of this page.
:::tip pass
SheetJS Pro offers additional features that can be used in Excel Custom Functions and Add-ins.
:::