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Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Utility(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Utility(3)

NAME

Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Utility - Utility functions for Spreadsheet::ParseExcel.

SYNOPSIS

    use Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Utility qw(ExcelFmt ExcelLocaltime LocaltimeExcel);
    # Convert localtime to Excel time
    my $datetime = LocaltimeExcel(11, 10, 12, 23, 2, 64); # 1964-3-23 12:10:11
    print $datetime, "\n"; # 23459.5070717593 (Excel date/time format)
    # Convert Excel Time to localtime
    my @time = ExcelLocaltime($datetime);
    print join(":", @time), "\n";   # 11:10:12:23:2:64:1:0
    # Formatting
    print ExcelFmt('yyyy-mm-dd', $datetime), "\n"; # 1964-3-23
    print ExcelFmt('m-d-yy',     $datetime), "\n"; # 3-23-64
    print ExcelFmt('#,##0',      $datetime), "\n"; # 23,460
    print ExcelFmt('#,##0.00',   $datetime), "\n"; # 23,459.51

DESCRIPTION

The "Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Utility" module provides utility functions for working with ParseExcel and Excel data.

Functions

"Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Utility" can export the following functions:

    ExcelFmt
    ExcelLocaltime
    LocaltimeExcel
    col2int
    int2col
    sheetRef
    xls2csv

These functions must be imported implicitly:

    # Just one function.
    use Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Utility 'col2int';
    # More than one.
    use Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Utility qw(ExcelFmt ExcelLocaltime LocaltimeExcel);

ExcelFmt($format_string, $number, $is_1904)

Excel stores data such as dates and currency values as numbers. The way these numbers are displayed is controlled by the number format string for the cell. For example a cell with a number format of '$#,##0.00' for currency and a value of 1234.567 would be displayed as follows:

    '$#,##0.00' + 1234.567 = '$1,234.57'.

The ExcelFmt() function tries to emulate this formatting so that the user can convert raw numbers returned by "Spreadsheet::ParseExel" to a desired format. For example:

    print ExcelFmt('$#,##0.00', 1234.567); # $1,234.57.

The syntax of the function is:

    my $text = ExcelFmt($format_string, $number, $is_1904);

Where $format_string is an Excel number format string, $number is a real or integer number and "is_1904" is an optional flag to indicate that dates should use Excel's 1904 epoch instead of the default 1900 epoch.

ExcelFmt() is also used internally to convert numbers returned by the Cell::unformatted() method to the formatted value returned by the Cell::value() method:

    my $cell = $worksheet->get_cell( 0, 0 );
    print $cell->unformatted(), "\n"; # 1234.567
    print $cell->value(),       "\n"; # $1,234.57

The most common usage for "ExcelFmt" is to convert numbers to dates. Dates and times in Excel are represented by real numbers, for example "1 Jan 2001 12:30 PM" is represented by the number 36892.521. The integer part of the number stores the number of days since the epoch and the fractional part stores the percentage of the day. By applying an Excel number format the number is converted to the desired string representation:

    print ExcelFmt('d mmm yyyy h:mm AM/PM', 36892.521);  # 1 Jan 2001 12:30 PM

$is_1904 is an optional flag to indicate that dates should use Excel's 1904 epoch instead of the default 1900 epoch. Excel for Windows generally uses 1900 and Excel for Mac OS uses 1904. The $is1904 flag isn't required very often by a casual user and can usually be ignored.

ExcelLocaltime($excel_datetime, $is_1904)

The ExcelLocaltime() function converts from an Excel date/time number to a localtime()-like array of values:

        my @time = ExcelLocaltime($excel_datetime);
        #    0     1     2      3     4       5      6      7
        my ( $sec, $min, $hour, $day, $month, $year, $wday, $msec ) = @time;

The array elements from "(0 .. 6)" are the same as Perl's localtime(). The last element $msec is milliseconds. In particular it should be noted that, in common with localtime(), the month is zero indexed and the year is the number of years since 1900. This means that you will usually need to do the following:

        $month++;
        $year += 1900;

See also Perl's documentation for localtime():

The $is_1904 flag is an optional. It is used to indicate that dates should use Excel's 1904 epoch instead of the default 1900 epoch.

LocaltimeExcel($sec, $min, $hour, $day, $month, $year, $wday, $msec, $is_1904)

The LocaltimeExcel() function converts from a localtime()-like array of values to an Excel date/time number:

    $excel_datetime = LocaltimeExcel($sec, $min, $hour, $day, $month, $year, $wday, $msec);

The array elements from "(0 .. 6)" are the same as Perl's localtime(). The last element $msec is milliseconds. In particular it should be noted that, in common with localtime(), the month is zero indexed and the year is the number of years since 1900. See also Perl's documentation for localtime():

The $wday and $msec elements are usually optional. This time elements can also be zeroed if they aren't of interest:

                                    # sec, min, hour, day, month, year
    $excel_datetime = LocaltimeExcel( 0,   0,   0,    1,   0,     101 );
    print ExcelFmt('d mmm yyyy', $excel_datetime);  # 1 Jan 2001

The $is_1904 flag is also optional. It is used to indicate that dates should use Excel's 1904 epoch instead of the default 1900 epoch.

col2int($column)

The col2int() function converts an Excel column letter to an zero-indexed column number:

    print col2int('A');  # 0
    print col2int('AA'); # 26

This function was contributed by Kevin Mulholland.

int2col($column_number)

The int2col() function converts an zero-indexed Excel column number to a column letter:

    print int2col(0);  # 'A'
    print int2col(26); # 'AA'

This function was contributed by Kevin Mulholland.

sheetRef($cell_string)

The sheetRef() function converts an Excel cell reference in 'A1' notation to a zero-indexed "(row, col)" pair.

    my ($row, $col) = sheetRef('A1'); # ( 0, 0 )
    my ($row, $col) = sheetRef('C2'); # ( 1, 2 )

This function was contributed by Kevin Mulholland.

xls2csv($filename, $region, $rotate)

The xls2csv() function converts a section of an Excel file into a CSV text string.

    $csv_text = xls2csv($filename, $region, $rotate);

Where:

    $region = "sheet-colrow:colrow"
    For example '1-A1:B2' means 'A1:B2' for sheet 1.
    and
    $rotate  = 0 or 1 (output is rotated/transposed or not)

This function requires "Text::CSV_XS" to be installed. It was contributed by Kevin Mulholland along with the "xls2csv" script in the "sample" directory of the distro.

See also the following xls2csv utilities: Ken Prows' "xls2csv": http://search.cpan.org/~ken/xls2csv/script/xls2csv and H.Merijn Brand's "xls2csv" (which is part of Spreadsheet::Read): http://search.cpan.org/~hmbrand/Spreadsheet-Read/

AUTHOR

Current maintainer 0.60+: Douglas Wilson dougw@cpan.org

Maintainer 0.40-0.59: John McNamara jmcnamara@cpan.org

Maintainer 0.27-0.33: Gabor Szabo szabgab@cpan.org

Original author: Kawai Takanori kwitknr@cpan.org

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2014 Douglas Wilson

Copyright (c) 2009-2013 John McNamara

Copyright (c) 2006-2008 Gabor Szabo

Copyright (c) 2000-2006 Kawai Takanori

All rights reserved.

You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file.

2024-03-08 perl v5.40.0