docs.sheetjs.com/docz/docs/03-demos/01-frontend/02-vue.md
2023-01-09 19:57:01 -05:00

7.8 KiB

title pagination_prev pagination_next sidebar_position
VueJS demos/index demos/mobile/index 2

VueJS is a JS library for building user interfaces.

This demo covers common VueJS data flow ideas and strategies. Single-File Components (SFC) and VueJS familiarity is assumed.

Other demos cover general VueJS deployments, including:

Installation

The "Frameworks" section covers installation with Yarn and other package managers.

The library can be imported directly from JS or JSX code with:

import { read, utils, writeFile } from 'xlsx';

Internal State

The various SheetJS APIs work with various data shapes. The preferred state depends on the application.

Array of Objects

Typically, some users will create a spreadsheet with source data that should be loaded into the site. This sheet will have known columns. For example, our presidents sheet has "Name" / "Index" columns:

pres.xlsx data

This naturally maps to an array of typed objects, as in the TS example below:

import { read, utils } from 'xlsx';

interface President {
  Name: string;
  Index: number;
}

const f = await (await fetch("https://sheetjs.com/pres.xlsx")).arrayBuffer();
const wb = read(f);
const data = utils.sheet_to_json<President>(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]);
console.log(data);

data will be an array of objects:

[
  { Name: "Bill Clinton", Index: 42 },
  { Name: "GeorgeW Bush", Index: 43 },
  { Name: "Barack Obama", Index: 44 },
  { Name: "Donald Trump", Index: 45 },
  { Name: "Joseph Biden", Index: 46 }
]

A component will typically map over the data. The following example generates a TABLE with a row for each President:

<script setup>
import { ref, onMounted } from "vue";
import { read, utils, writeFileXLSX } from 'xlsx';

const rows = ref([]);

onMounted(async() => {
  /* Download from https://sheetjs.com/pres.numbers */
  const f = await fetch("https://sheetjs.com/pres.numbers");
  const ab = await f.arrayBuffer();

  /* parse workbook */
  const wb = read(ab);

  /* update data */
  rows.value = utils.sheet_to_json(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]);
});

/* get state data and export to XLSX */
function exportFile() {
  const ws = utils.json_to_sheet(rows.value);
  const wb = utils.book_new();
  utils.book_append_sheet(wb, ws, "Data");
  writeFileXLSX(wb, "SheetJSVueAoO.xlsx");
}
</script>

<template>
  <table><thead><th>Name</th><th>Index</th></thead><tbody>
    <tr v-for="(row, idx) in rows" :key="idx">
      <td>{{ row.Name }}</td>
      <td>{{ row.Index }}</td>
    </tr>
  </tbody><tfoot><td colSpan={2}>
    <button @click="exportFile">Export XLSX</button>
  </td></tfoot></table>
</template>
How to run the example (click to show)

:::note

This demo was last run on 2022 November 11 using vue@3.2.41. When running npm init, the package create-vue@3.4.0 was installed.

:::

  1. Run npm init vue@latest -- sheetjs-vue --default.

  2. Install the SheetJS dependency and start the dev server:

cd sheetjs-vue
npm install
npm i --save https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/xlsx-latest.tgz
npm run dev
  1. Open a web browser and access the displayed URL (http://localhost:5173)

  2. Replace src/App.vue with the src/SheetJSVueAoO.vue example.

The page will refresh and show a table with an Export button. Click the button and the page will attempt to download SheetJSVueAoA.xlsx. There may be a delay since Vite will try to optimize the SheetJS library on the fly.

  1. Build the site with npm run build, then test with npx http-server dist. Access http://localhost:8080 with a web browser to test the bundled site.

HTML

The main disadvantage of the Array of Objects approach is the specific nature of the columns. For more general use, passing around an Array of Arrays works. However, this does not handle merge cells well!

The sheet_to_html function generates HTML that is aware of merges and other worksheet features. VueJS v-html attribute allows assignment of innerHTML attribute, effectively inserting the code into the page:

<script setup>
import { ref, onMounted } from "vue";
import { read, utils, writeFileXLSX } from 'xlsx';

const html = ref("");
const tableau = ref();

onMounted(async() => {
  /* Download from https://sheetjs.com/pres.numbers */
  const f = await fetch("https://sheetjs.com/pres.numbers");
  const ab = await f.arrayBuffer();

  /* parse workbook */
  const wb = read(ab);

  /* update data */
  html.value = utils.sheet_to_html(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]);
});

/* get live table and export to XLSX */
function exportFile() {
  const wb = utils.table_to_book(tableau.value.getElementsByTagName("TABLE")[0])
  writeFileXLSX(wb, "SheetJSVueHTML.xlsx");
}
</script>

<template>
  <div ref="tableau" v-html="html"></div>
  <button @click="exportFile">Export XLSX</button>
</template>
How to run the example (click to show)

:::note

This demo was last run on 2022 November 11 using vue@3.2.41. When running npm init, the package create-vue@3.4.0 was installed.

:::

  1. Run npm init vue@latest -- sheetjs-vue --default.

  2. Install the SheetJS dependency and start the dev server:

cd sheetjs-vue
npm install
npm i --save https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/xlsx-latest.tgz
npm run dev
  1. Open a web browser and access the displayed URL (http://localhost:5173)

  2. Replace src/App.vue with the src/SheetJSVueHTML.vue example.

The page will refresh and show a table with an Export button. Click the button and the page will attempt to download SheetJSVueHTML.xlsx. There may be a delay since Vite will try to optimize the SheetJS library on the fly.

  1. Build the site with npm run build, then test with npx http-server dist. Access http://localhost:8080 with a web browser to test the bundled site.

Rows and Columns

Some data grids and UI components split worksheet state in two parts: an array of column attribute objects and an array of row objects. The former is used to generate column headings and for indexing into the row objects.

The safest approach is to use an array of arrays for state and to generate column objects that map to A1-Style column headers.

The vue3-table-lite demo generates rows and columns objects with the following structure:

/* rows are generated with a simple array of arrays */
rows.value = utils.sheet_to_json(worksheet, { header: 1 });

/* column objects are generated based on the worksheet range */
const range = utils.decode_range(ws["!ref"]||"A1");
columns.value = Array.from({ length: range.e.c + 1 }, (_, i) => ({
  /* for an array of arrays, the keys are "0", "1", "2", ... */
  field: String(i),
  /* column labels: encode_col translates 0 -> "A", 1 -> "B", 2 -> "C", ... */
  label: XLSX.utils.encode_col(i)
}));

Legacy Deployments

The Standalone Scripts play nice with legacy deployments that do not use a bundler.

The legacy demos show a simple VueJS component. It is written in ES5 syntax. The pages are not minified and "View Source" should be used to inspect.

There is a shared component SheetJS-vue.js

:::caution

The entire demo is designed to run in Internet Explorer and does not reflect modern design patterns.

:::