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import current from '/version.js'; import CodeBlock from '@theme/CodeBlock';
ESBuild is a modern build tool for generating static sites. It has a robust JavaScript-powered plugin system1
SheetJS is a JavaScript library for reading and writing data from spreadsheets.
This demo uses ESBuild and SheetJS to pull data from a spreadsheet and display the content in an HTML table. We'll explore how to load SheetJS in a ESBuild loader and generate data for use in webpages.
The "Demo" creates a complete website powered by a XLSX spreadsheet.
:::info pass
This demo covers static asset imports. For processing files in the browser, the "Bundlers" demo includes an example of importing the SheetJS library in a browser script.
:::
ESBuild Loader
ESBuild releases starting from 0.9.1
support custom loader plugins. The loader
receives an absolute path to the spreadsheet on the filesystem.
The SheetJS NodeJS module can be imported from ESBuild loader plugins.
:::info pass
ESBuild loader plugins use ECMAScript Modules. The plugin ultimately receives
raw paths to files. fs
must be manually imported:
import * as XLSX from 'xlsx';
/* load 'fs' for readFile and writeFile support */
import * as fs from 'fs';
XLSX.set_fs(fs);
:::
The following diagram depicts the workbook waltz:
flowchart LR
subgraph ESBuild Custom Plugin in build.mjs
file[(workbook\nfile)]
wb(((SheetJS\nWorkbook)))
aoo(array of\nobjects)
end
html{{HTML\nTABLE}}
file --> |`readFile`\n\n| wb
wb --> |`sheet_to_json`\n\n| aoo
aoo --> |app.js\nfrontend code| html
ESBuild Configuration
Plugins can be referenced in the plugins
array of the build configuration:
import * as esbuild from 'esbuild'
// highlight-next-line
let sheetjsPlugin = {
name: 'sheetjs',
setup(build) {
// ...
}
};
await esbuild.build({
entryPoints: ['app.js'],
bundle: true,
outfile: 'out.js',
// highlight-next-line
plugins: [sheetjsPlugin],
})
Registering File Extensions
The setup
method receives the build options. Handlers for custom files should
be added using build.onLoad
.
The first argument to onLoad
is a configuration object. The filter
property
is expected to be a regular expression. The following regular expression matches
NUMBERS, XLSX, XLS, and XLSB files:
const EXTS = /.(numbers|xlsx|xls|xlsb)$/;
The second argument to onLoad
is a callback that receives an arguments object.
The path
property of the object is the absolute path to the file.
setup(build) {
build.onLoad({ filter: EXTS }, (args) => {
const path = args.path;
// ...
});
},
SheetJS Operations
The SheetJS readFile
method2 will directly read the file on the filesystem.
The return value is a SheetJS workbook object3.
The loader in this demo will parse the workbook, pull the first worksheet, and
generate an array of row objects using the sheet_to_json
method4.
:::caution pass
JSON does not natively support Dates! JSON.stringify
will generate strings.
Through a clever workaround, it is possible to encode dates separately and recover the Date objects in the generated code module.
:::
import * as XLSX from 'xlsx';
import * as fs from 'fs';
XLSX.set_fs(fs);
/* plugin */
let sheetjsPlugin = {
name: 'sheetjs',
setup(build) {
/* match NUMBERS, XLSX, XLS, and XLSB files */
const EXTS = /.(numbers|xlsx|xls|xlsb)$/;
/* this method will be called once for each referenced file */
build.onLoad({ filter: EXTS }, (args) => {
/* parse file from filesystem */
const wb = XLSX.readFile(args.path);
/* get first worksheet */
const ws = wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]];
/* workaround for JSON limitation */
Date.prototype.toJSON2 = Date.prototype.toJSON;
Date.prototype.toJSON = function() { return {d:this.toISOString()}; };
/* generate row objects */
const data = XLSX.utils.sheet_to_json(ws);
/* generate final module code */
const res = JSON.stringify(data);
Date.prototype.toJSON = Date.prototype.toJSON2;
const contents = `const data = ${res};
data.forEach(row => {
Object.keys(row).forEach(k => {
if(row[k]?.d) row[k] = new Date(row[k].d);
})
});
export default data;`
return { contents, loader: 'js' };
});
},
};
Asset Imports
Spreadsheets can be imported using the plugin. Assuming pres.xlsx
is stored
in the same folder as the script, ./pres.xlsx
will be a data module:
import data from './pres.xlsx';
/* `data` is an array of objects from ./pres.xlsx */
const elt = document.createElement('div');
elt.innerHTML = "<table><tr><th>Name</th><th>Index</th></tr>" +
data.map((row) => `<tr>
<td>${row.Name}</td>
<td>${row.Index}</td>
</tr>`).join("") +
"</table>";
document.body.appendChild(elt);
Demo
:::note Tested Deployments
This demo was tested in the following environments:
esbuild |
Date |
---|---|
0.20.2 |
2024-04-07 |
0.19.12 |
2024-04-07 |
0.18.20 |
2024-04-07 |
0.17.19 |
2024-04-07 |
0.16.17 |
2024-04-07 |
0.15.18 |
2024-04-07 |
0.14.54 |
2024-04-07 |
0.13.15 |
2024-04-07 |
0.12.29 |
2024-04-07 |
0.11.23 |
2024-04-07 |
0.10.2 |
2024-04-07 |
0.9.7 |
2024-04-07 |
0.9.1 |
2024-04-07 |
:::
Initial Setup
- Create a new skeleton project:
mkdir sheetjs-esb
cd sheetjs-esb
npm init -y
npm i --save esbuild@0.20.2
- Install the SheetJS NodeJS module:
{\ npm i --save https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/xlsx-${current}.tgz
}
- Save the following to
index.html
:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>SheetJS + ESBuild</title>
</head>
<body>
<script src="out.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
- Save the following to
app.js
:
import data from './pres.numbers'
const elt = document.createElement('div');
elt.innerHTML = "<table><tr><th>Name</th><th>Index</th></tr>" +
data.map((row) => `<tr>
<td>${row.Name}</td>
<td>${row.Index}</td>
</tr>`).join("") +
"</table>";
document.body.appendChild(elt);
- Download
build.mjs
to the project folder:
curl -LO https://docs.sheetjs.com/esbuild/build.mjs
- Download https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.numbers to the project folder:
curl -LO https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.numbers
Static Site Test
- Build the site:
node build.mjs
The final script will be saved to out.js
- Start a local web server to host the project folder:
npx http-server .
The command will print a list of URLs.
- Open one of the URLs printed in the previous step (
http://localhost:8080
) and confirm that the same data is displayed.
To verify that the data was added to the page, append out.js
to the URL
(http://localhost:8080/out.js
) and view the source. The source will include
president names. It will not include SheetJS library references!
In the last test, the generated source looked like the following snippet
(() => {
// pres.numbers
var data = [{ "Name": "Bill Clinton", "Index": 42 }, /* ... more data */];
data.forEach((row) => {
Object.keys(row).forEach((k) => {
if (row[k]?.d)
row[k] = new Date(row[k].d);
});
});
var pres_default = data;
// app.js
var elt = document.createElement("div");
elt.innerHTML = "<table><tr><th>Name</th><th>Index</th></tr>" + pres_default.map((row) => `<tr>
<td>${row.Name}</td>
<td>${row.Index}</td>
</tr>`).join("") + "</table>";
document.body.appendChild(elt);
})();
-
See "Workbook Object" ↩︎