# Meteor This library is universal: outside of environment-specific features (parsing DOM tables in the browser, streaming write in nodejs), the core is ES3/ES5 and can be used in any reasonably compliant JS implementation. It should play nice with meteor out of the box. Using the npm module, the library can be imported from client or server side: ```js import XLSX from 'xlsx' ``` All of the functions and utilities are available in both realms. Since the core data representations are simple JS objects, the workbook object can be passed on the wire, enabling hybrid workflows where the server processes data and client finishes the work. ## This demonstration Note: this demo intentionally mixes logic between client and server code. Pure-client and pure-server examples are covered in other demos. ### Reading Data The parse demo: - accepts files from the client side - sends binary string to server - processes data on server side - sends workbook object to client - renders HTML and adds to a DOM element The logic from within the `FileReader` is split as follows: ```js // CLIENT SIDE const bstr = e.target.result; // SERVER SIDE const wb = XLSX.read(bstr, { type: 'binary' }); // CLIENT SIDE const ws = wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]; const html = XLSX.utils.sheet_to_html(ws, { editable: true }); document.getElementById('out').innerHTML = html; ``` ### Writing Data The write demo: - grabs HTML from the client side - sends HTML string to server - processes data on server side - sends workbook object to client - generates file on client side and triggers a download The logic from within the `click` event is split as follows: ```js // CLIENT SIDE const html = document.getElementById('out').innerHTML; // SERVER SIDE const wb = XLSX.read(html, { type: 'binary' }); // CLIENT SIDE XLSX.writeFile(wb, 'sheetjs.xlsx'); ``` ## Setup This tree does not include the `.meteor` structure. Rebuild the project with: ```bash meteor create . npm install babel-runtime meteor-node-stubs xlsx meteor ``` ## Environment-Specific Features File-related operations like `XLSX.readFile` and `XLSX.writeFile` will not be available in client-side code. If you need to read a local file from the client, use a file input or drag-and-drop. Browser-specific operations like `XLSX.utils.table_to_book` are limited to client side code. You should never have to read from DOM elements on the server side, but you can use a third-party virtual DOM to provide the required API. [![Analytics](https://ga-beacon.appspot.com/UA-36810333-1/SheetJS/js-xlsx?pixel)](https://github.com/SheetJS/js-xlsx)