PhpSpreadsheet/docs/topics/reading-and-writing-to-file.md

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# Reading and writing to file
As you already know from the [architecture](./architecture.md#readers-and-writers),
reading and writing to a
persisted storage is not possible using the base PhpSpreadsheet classes.
For this purpose, PhpSpreadsheet provides readers and writers, which are
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implementations of `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReader` and
`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\IWriter`.
## \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory
The PhpSpreadsheet API offers multiple methods to create a
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`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReader` or
`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\IWriter` instance:
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Direct creation via `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory`. All examples
underneath demonstrate the direct creation method. Note that you can
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also use the `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory` class to do this.
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### Creating `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReader` using `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory`
There are 2 methods for reading in a file into PhpSpreadsheet: using
automatic file type resolving or explicitly.
Automatic file type resolving checks the different
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`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReader` distributed with
PhpSpreadsheet. If one of them can load the specified file name, the
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file is loaded using that `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReader`.
Explicit mode requires you to specify which
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`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReader` should be used.
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You can create a `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReader` instance using
`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory` in automatic file type resolving
mode using the following code sample:
``` php
$spreadsheet = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::load("05featuredemo.xlsx");
```
A typical use of this feature is when you need to read files uploaded by
your users, and you dont know whether they are uploading xls or xlsx
files.
If you need to set some properties on the reader, (e.g. to only read
data, see more about this later), then you may instead want to use this
variant:
``` php
$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReaderForFile("05featuredemo.xlsx");
$reader->setReadDataOnly(true);
$reader->load("05featuredemo.xlsx");
```
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You can create a `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReader` instance using
`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory` in explicit mode using the following
code sample:
``` php
$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader("Xlsx");
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("05featuredemo.xlsx");
```
Note that automatic type resolving mode is slightly slower than explicit
mode.
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### Creating `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\IWriter` using `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory`
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You can create a `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\IWriter` instance using
`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory`:
``` php
$writer = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createWriter($spreadsheet, "Xlsx");
$writer->save("05featuredemo.xlsx");
```
## Excel 2007 (SpreadsheetML) file format
Xlsx file format is the main file format of PhpSpreadsheet. It allows
outputting the in-memory spreadsheet to a .xlsx file.
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xlsx
#### Reading a spreadsheet
You can read an .xlsx file using the following code:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xlsx();
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("05featuredemo.xlsx");
```
#### Read data only
You can set the option setReadDataOnly on the reader, to instruct the
reader to ignore styling, data validation, … and just read cell data:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xlsx();
$reader->setReadDataOnly(true);
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("05featuredemo.xlsx");
```
#### Read specific sheets only
You can set the option setLoadSheetsOnly on the reader, to instruct the
reader to only load the sheets with a given name:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xlsx();
$reader->setLoadSheetsOnly(["Sheet 1", "My special sheet"]);
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("05featuredemo.xlsx");
```
#### Read specific cells only
You can set the option setReadFilter on the reader, to instruct the
reader to only load the cells which match a given rule. A read filter
can be any class which implements
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`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter`. By default, all cells are
read using the `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\DefaultReadFilter`.
The following code will only read row 1 and rows 20 30 of any sheet in
the Excel file:
``` php
class MyReadFilter implements \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter {
public function readCell($column, $row, $worksheetName = '') {
// Read title row and rows 20 - 30
if ($row == 1 || ($row >= 20 && $row <= 30)) {
return true;
}
return false;
}
}
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xlsx();
$reader->setReadFilter( new MyReadFilter() );
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("06largescale.xlsx");
```
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Xlsx
#### Writing a spreadsheet
You can write an .xlsx file using the following code:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Xlsx($spreadsheet);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.xlsx");
```
#### Formula pre-calculation
By default, this writer pre-calculates all formulas in the spreadsheet.
This can be slow on large spreadsheets, and maybe even unwanted. You can
however disable formula pre-calculation:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Xlsx($spreadsheet);
$writer->setPreCalculateFormulas(false);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.xlsx");
```
#### Office 2003 compatibility pack
Because of a bug in the Office2003 compatibility pack, there can be some
small issues when opening Xlsx spreadsheets (mostly related to formula
calculation). You can enable Office2003 compatibility with the following
code:
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Xlsx($spreadsheet);
$writer->setOffice2003Compatibility(true);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.xlsx");
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**Office2003 compatibility option should only be used when needed** because
it disables several Office2007 file format options, resulting in a
lower-featured Office2007 spreadsheet.
## Excel 5 (BIFF) file format
Xls file format is the old Excel file format, implemented in
PhpSpreadsheet to provide a uniform manner to create both .xlsx and .xls
files. It is basically a modified version of [PEAR
Spreadsheet\_Excel\_Writer](https://pear.php.net/package/Spreadsheet_Excel_Writer),
although it has been extended and has fewer limitations and more
features than the old PEAR library. This can read all BIFF versions that
use OLE2: BIFF5 (introduced with office 95) through BIFF8, but cannot
read earlier versions.
Xls file format will not be developed any further, it just provides an
additional file format for PhpSpreadsheet.
**Excel5 (BIFF) limitations** Please note that BIFF file format has some
limits regarding to styling cells and handling large spreadsheets via
PHP.
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xls
#### Reading a spreadsheet
You can read an .xls file using the following code:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xls();
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("05featuredemo.xls");
```
#### Read data only
You can set the option setReadDataOnly on the reader, to instruct the
reader to ignore styling, data validation, … and just read cell data:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xls();
$reader->setReadDataOnly(true);
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("05featuredemo.xls");
```
#### Read specific sheets only
You can set the option setLoadSheetsOnly on the reader, to instruct the
reader to only load the sheets with a given name:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xls();
$reader->setLoadSheetsOnly(["Sheet 1", "My special sheet"]);
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("05featuredemo.xls");
```
#### Read specific cells only
You can set the option setReadFilter on the reader, to instruct the
reader to only load the cells which match a given rule. A read filter
can be any class which implements
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`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter`. By default, all cells are
read using the `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\DefaultReadFilter`.
The following code will only read row 1 and rows 20 to 30 of any sheet
in the Excel file:
``` php
class MyReadFilter implements \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter {
public function readCell($column, $row, $worksheetName = '') {
// Read title row and rows 20 - 30
if ($row == 1 || ($row >= 20 && $row <= 30)) {
return true;
}
return false;
}
}
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xls();
$reader->setReadFilter( new MyReadFilter() );
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("06largescale.xls");
```
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Xls
#### Writing a spreadsheet
You can write an .xls file using the following code:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Xls($spreadsheet);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.xls");
```
## Excel 2003 XML file format
Excel 2003 XML file format is a file format which can be used in older
versions of Microsoft Excel.
**Excel 2003 XML limitations** Please note that Excel 2003 XML format
has some limits regarding to styling cells and handling large
spreadsheets via PHP.
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xml
#### Reading a spreadsheet
You can read an Excel 2003 .xml file using the following code:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xml();
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("05featuredemo.xml");
```
#### Read specific cells only
You can set the option setReadFilter on the reader, to instruct the
reader to only load the cells which match a given rule. A read filter
can be any class which implements
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`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter`. By default, all cells are
read using the `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\DefaultReadFilter`.
The following code will only read row 1 and rows 20 to 30 of any sheet
in the Excel file:
``` php
class MyReadFilter implements \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter {
public function readCell($column, $row, $worksheetName = '') {
// Read title row and rows 20 - 30
if ($row == 1 || ($row >= 20 && $row <= 30)) {
return true;
}
return false;
}
}
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xml();
$reader->setReadFilter( new MyReadFilter() );
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("06largescale.xml");
```
## Symbolic LinK (SYLK)
Symbolic Link (SYLK) is a Microsoft file format typically used to
exchange data between applications, specifically spreadsheets. SYLK
files conventionally have a .slk suffix. Composed of only displayable
ANSI characters, it can be easily created and processed by other
applications, such as databases.
**SYLK limitations** Please note that SYLK file format has some limits
regarding to styling cells and handling large spreadsheets via PHP.
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Slk
#### Reading a spreadsheet
You can read an .slk file using the following code:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Slk();
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("05featuredemo.slk");
```
#### Read specific cells only
You can set the option setReadFilter on the reader, to instruct the
reader to only load the cells which match a given rule. A read filter
can be any class which implements
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`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter`. By default, all cells are
read using the `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\DefaultReadFilter`.
The following code will only read row 1 and rows 20 to 30 of any sheet
in the SYLK file:
``` php
class MyReadFilter implements \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter {
public function readCell($column, $row, $worksheetName = '') {
// Read title row and rows 20 - 30
if ($row == 1 || ($row >= 20 && $row <= 30)) {
return true;
}
return false;
}
}
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Slk();
$reader->setReadFilter( new MyReadFilter() );
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("06largescale.slk");
```
## Open/Libre Office (.ods)
Open Office or Libre Office .ods files are the standard file format for
Open Office or Libre Office Calc files.
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Ods
#### Reading a spreadsheet
You can read an .ods file using the following code:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Ods();
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("05featuredemo.ods");
```
#### Read specific cells only
You can set the option setReadFilter on the reader, to instruct the
reader to only load the cells which match a given rule. A read filter
can be any class which implements
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`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter`. By default, all cells are
read using the `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\DefaultReadFilter`.
The following code will only read row 1 and rows 20 to 30 of any sheet
in the Calc file:
``` php
class MyReadFilter implements \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter {
public function readCell($column, $row, $worksheetName = '') {
// Read title row and rows 20 - 30
if ($row == 1 || ($row >= 20 && $row <= 30)) {
return true;
}
return false;
}
}
$reader = new PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Ods();
$reader->setReadFilter( new MyReadFilter() );
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("06largescale.ods");
```
## CSV (Comma Separated Values)
CSV (Comma Separated Values) are often used as an import/export file
format with other systems. PhpSpreadsheet allows reading and writing to
CSV files.
**CSV limitations** Please note that CSV file format has some limits
regarding to styling cells, number formatting, ...
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Csv
#### Reading a CSV file
You can read a .csv file using the following code:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Csv();
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("sample.csv");
```
#### Setting CSV options
Often, CSV files are not really "comma separated", or use semicolon (`;`)
as a separator. You can instruct
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`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Csv` some options before reading a CSV
file.
The separator will be auto-detected, so in most cases it should not be necessary
to specify it. But in cases where auto-detection does not fit the use-case, then
it can be set manually.
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Note that `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Csv` by default assumes that
the loaded CSV file is UTF-8 encoded. If you are reading CSV files that
were created in Microsoft Office Excel the correct input encoding may
rather be Windows-1252 (CP1252). Always make sure that the input
encoding is set appropriately.
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Csv();
$reader->setInputEncoding('CP1252');
$reader->setDelimiter(';');
$reader->setEnclosure('');
$reader->setSheetIndex(0);
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("sample.csv");
```
#### Read a specific worksheet
CSV files can only contain one worksheet. Therefore, you can specify
which sheet to read from CSV:
``` php
$reader->setSheetIndex(0);
```
#### Read into existing spreadsheet
When working with CSV files, it might occur that you want to import CSV
data into an existing `Spreadsheet` object. The following code loads a
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CSV file into an existing `$spreadsheet` containing some sheets, and
imports onto the 6th sheet:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Csv();
$reader->setDelimiter(';');
$reader->setEnclosure('');
$reader->setSheetIndex(5);
$reader->loadIntoExisting("05featuredemo.csv", $spreadsheet);
```
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Csv
#### Writing a CSV file
You can write a .csv file using the following code:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Csv($spreadsheet);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.csv");
```
#### Setting CSV options
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Often, CSV files are not really "comma separated", or use semicolon (`;`)
as a separator. You can instruct
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`\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Csv` some options before writing a CSV
file:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Csv($spreadsheet);
$writer->setDelimiter(';');
$writer->setEnclosure('');
$writer->setLineEnding("\r\n");
$writer->setSheetIndex(0);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.csv");
```
#### Write a specific worksheet
CSV files can only contain one worksheet. Therefore, you can specify
which sheet to write to CSV:
``` php
$writer->setSheetIndex(0);
```
#### Formula pre-calculation
By default, this writer pre-calculates all formulas in the spreadsheet.
This can be slow on large spreadsheets, and maybe even unwanted. You can
however disable formula pre-calculation:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Csv($spreadsheet);
$writer->setPreCalculateFormulas(false);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.csv");
```
#### Writing UTF-8 CSV files
CSV files are written in UTF-8. If they do not contain characters
outside the ASCII range, nothing else need be done.
However, if such characters are in the file,
it should explicitly include a BOM file header;
if it doesn't, Excel will not interpret those characters correctly.
This can be enabled by using the following code:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Csv($spreadsheet);
$writer->setUseBOM(true);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.csv");
```
#### Decimal and thousands separators
If the worksheet you are exporting contains numbers with decimal or
thousands separators then you should think about what characters you
want to use for those before doing the export.
By default PhpSpreadsheet looks up in the server's locale settings to
decide what characters to use. But to avoid problems it is recommended
to set the characters explicitly as shown below.
English users will want to use this before doing the export:
``` php
\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Shared\StringHelper::setDecimalSeparator('.');
\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Shared\StringHelper::setThousandsSeparator(',');
```
German users will want to use the opposite values.
``` php
\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Shared\StringHelper::setDecimalSeparator(',');
\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Shared\StringHelper::setThousandsSeparator('.');
```
Note that the above code sets decimal and thousand separators as global
options. This also affects how HTML and PDF is exported.
## HTML
PhpSpreadsheet allows you to read or write a spreadsheet as HTML format,
for quick representation of the data in it to anyone who does not have a
spreadsheet application on their PC, or loading files saved by other
scripts that simply create HTML markup and give it a .xls file
extension.
**HTML limitations** Please note that HTML file format has some limits
regarding to styling cells, number formatting, ...
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Html
#### Reading a spreadsheet
You can read an .html or .htm file using the following code:
``` php
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Html();
$spreadsheet = $reader->load("05featuredemo.html");
```
**HTML limitations** Please note that HTML reader is still experimental
and does not yet support merged cells or nested tables cleanly
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Html
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Please note that `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Html` only outputs the
first worksheet by default.
#### Writing a spreadsheet
You can write a .htm file using the following code:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Html($spreadsheet);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.htm");
```
#### Write all worksheets
HTML files can contain one or more worksheets. If you want to write all
sheets into a single HTML file, use the following code:
``` php
$writer->writeAllSheets();
```
#### Write a specific worksheet
HTML files can contain one or more worksheets. Therefore, you can
specify which sheet to write to HTML:
``` php
$writer->setSheetIndex(0);
```
#### Setting the images root of the HTML file
There might be situations where you want to explicitly set the included
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images root. For example, instead of:
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``` html
<img src="./images/logo.jpg">
```
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You might want to see:
``` html
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<img src="http://www.domain.com/images/logo.jpg">
```
You can use the following code to achieve this result:
``` php
$writer->setImagesRoot('http://www.example.com');
```
#### Formula pre-calculation
By default, this writer pre-calculates all formulas in the spreadsheet.
This can be slow on large spreadsheets, and maybe even unwanted. You can
however disable formula pre-calculation:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Html($spreadsheet);
$writer->setPreCalculateFormulas(false);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.htm");
```
#### Embedding generated HTML in a web page
There might be a situation where you want to embed the generated HTML in
an existing website. \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Html provides
support to generate only specific parts of the HTML code, which allows
you to use these parts in your website.
Supported methods:
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- `generateHTMLHeader()`
- `generateStyles()`
- `generateSheetData()`
- `generateHTMLFooter()`
Improve HTML Writer (#1464) There are a number of situations where HTML write was producing HTML which could not be validated. These include: - inconsistent use of backslash terminating META, IMG, and COL tags - @page style tags in body rather than header. Aside from being non-standard, HTML Reader treats those as spreadsheet data. - <div style="page-break-before:always" />, a construct which is usually better handled through css anyhow. - no alt tag for images (drawings and charts) Other problems: - Windows file names not handled correctly for images - Memory drawings not handled in extendRowsForChartsAndImages - No handling of different values for showing gridlines for screen and print - Mpdf and Dompdf do not require the use of inline css. Tcpdf remains a holdout in the use of this inferior approach. - no need to chunk base64 encoding of embedded images - support for colors in number format was buggy (html tags run through htmlspecialchars) Code has been refactored when practical to reduce the number of very large functions. Coverage is now 100% for the entire HTML Writer module, from 75% lines and 39% methods beforehand. All functions dealing only with charts are bypassed for coverage because the version of Jpgraph available in Composer is not suitable for PHP7. The code will, nevertheless, run successfully, but with warning messages. I have confirmed that the code is entirely covered, without warnings, when the current version of Jpgraph is used in lieu of the one available in Composer. I will be glad to revisit this when the Jpgraph problem is resolved. Directory PhpSpreadsheetTests/Writer/Html was created to house the new tests. It seemed logical to move HtmlCommentsTest to the new directory from PhpSpreadsheetTests/Functional. A function to generate all the HTML is useful, especially for testing, but also in lieu of the multiple other generate* functions. I have added and documented generateHTMLAll. The documentation for the generate* functions (a) produces invalid html, (b) produces html which cannot be handled correctly by HTML reader, and (c) even if those were correct, does not actually affect the display of the spreadsheet. The documentation has been replaced by a valid, and more instructive, example. The (undocumented) useEmbeddedCss property, and the functions to test and set it are no longer needed. Rather than breaking existing code by deleting them, I marked the functions deprecated. This change borrows a change to LocaleFloatsTest from pull request 1456, submitted a little over a week before this one. ## Improve NumberFormat Support First phase of this change included correcting NumberFormat handling in HTML Writer. Certain complex formats could not be handled without changes to Style/NumberFormat, and I did not wish to combine those changes. Once the original change had been pushed, I took this part of it back up. HTML Writer can now handle conditions in formats like: [Blue][>=3000.5]$#,##0.00;[Red][<0]$#,##0.00;$#,##0.00 In testing, I discovered several errors and omissions in handling of some other formats. These are now corrected, and tests added.
2020-05-18 03:43:18 +00:00
- `generateHTMLAll()`
Here's an example which retrieves all parts independently and merges
them into a resulting HTML page:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Html($spreadsheet);
Improve HTML Writer (#1464) There are a number of situations where HTML write was producing HTML which could not be validated. These include: - inconsistent use of backslash terminating META, IMG, and COL tags - @page style tags in body rather than header. Aside from being non-standard, HTML Reader treats those as spreadsheet data. - <div style="page-break-before:always" />, a construct which is usually better handled through css anyhow. - no alt tag for images (drawings and charts) Other problems: - Windows file names not handled correctly for images - Memory drawings not handled in extendRowsForChartsAndImages - No handling of different values for showing gridlines for screen and print - Mpdf and Dompdf do not require the use of inline css. Tcpdf remains a holdout in the use of this inferior approach. - no need to chunk base64 encoding of embedded images - support for colors in number format was buggy (html tags run through htmlspecialchars) Code has been refactored when practical to reduce the number of very large functions. Coverage is now 100% for the entire HTML Writer module, from 75% lines and 39% methods beforehand. All functions dealing only with charts are bypassed for coverage because the version of Jpgraph available in Composer is not suitable for PHP7. The code will, nevertheless, run successfully, but with warning messages. I have confirmed that the code is entirely covered, without warnings, when the current version of Jpgraph is used in lieu of the one available in Composer. I will be glad to revisit this when the Jpgraph problem is resolved. Directory PhpSpreadsheetTests/Writer/Html was created to house the new tests. It seemed logical to move HtmlCommentsTest to the new directory from PhpSpreadsheetTests/Functional. A function to generate all the HTML is useful, especially for testing, but also in lieu of the multiple other generate* functions. I have added and documented generateHTMLAll. The documentation for the generate* functions (a) produces invalid html, (b) produces html which cannot be handled correctly by HTML reader, and (c) even if those were correct, does not actually affect the display of the spreadsheet. The documentation has been replaced by a valid, and more instructive, example. The (undocumented) useEmbeddedCss property, and the functions to test and set it are no longer needed. Rather than breaking existing code by deleting them, I marked the functions deprecated. This change borrows a change to LocaleFloatsTest from pull request 1456, submitted a little over a week before this one. ## Improve NumberFormat Support First phase of this change included correcting NumberFormat handling in HTML Writer. Certain complex formats could not be handled without changes to Style/NumberFormat, and I did not wish to combine those changes. Once the original change had been pushed, I took this part of it back up. HTML Writer can now handle conditions in formats like: [Blue][>=3000.5]$#,##0.00;[Red][<0]$#,##0.00;$#,##0.00 In testing, I discovered several errors and omissions in handling of some other formats. These are now corrected, and tests added.
2020-05-18 03:43:18 +00:00
$hdr = $writer->generateHTMLHeader();
$sty = $writer->generateStyles(false); // do not write <style> and </style>
$newstyle = <<<EOF
<style type='text/css'>
$sty
Add ability to save edited Html/Pdf We give users the ability to edit Html/Pdf, but it's a little cumbersome to use the edited Html for an Html file, and difficult to use it for a Pdf. I believe we could make it fairly painless in both cases by allowing the user to set a callback to edit the generated Html. This can be accomplished with fewer than a dozen lines of very simple code. I think this would be easier than grabbing the Html in pieces, editing it, and reassembling it. I think it would also be simpler than an alternative I considered, namely the addition of a new method (e.g. saveEditedHtml) to each of the Html and Pdf writers. One edit that users might like to make when editing html is to add fallback fonts, something that is not currently available in PhpSpreadsheet, and might be difficult to add. A natural extension to that idea would be the use of webfonts, something which is guaranteed difficult to add. See samples/Basic/17b_Html for an example of this. None of the PDF writers support webfonts yet. That doesn't mean they won't do so in future, but, for now, samples/Pdf/21a_Pdf is a prosaic example of something you could do with this callback. In fact, this opens the door to letting the user replace the entire body with data of their choosing, effectively allowing PhpSpreadsheet (where you can set things like paper size and orientation) to be used as a front-end to the Pdf processor without the user having to be be overly familiar with the vagaries of the PDF processor. I think this is actually a pretty nice idea. YMMV. See samples/Basic/21b_Pdf for an example.
2020-05-31 04:27:35 +00:00
body {
Improve HTML Writer (#1464) There are a number of situations where HTML write was producing HTML which could not be validated. These include: - inconsistent use of backslash terminating META, IMG, and COL tags - @page style tags in body rather than header. Aside from being non-standard, HTML Reader treats those as spreadsheet data. - <div style="page-break-before:always" />, a construct which is usually better handled through css anyhow. - no alt tag for images (drawings and charts) Other problems: - Windows file names not handled correctly for images - Memory drawings not handled in extendRowsForChartsAndImages - No handling of different values for showing gridlines for screen and print - Mpdf and Dompdf do not require the use of inline css. Tcpdf remains a holdout in the use of this inferior approach. - no need to chunk base64 encoding of embedded images - support for colors in number format was buggy (html tags run through htmlspecialchars) Code has been refactored when practical to reduce the number of very large functions. Coverage is now 100% for the entire HTML Writer module, from 75% lines and 39% methods beforehand. All functions dealing only with charts are bypassed for coverage because the version of Jpgraph available in Composer is not suitable for PHP7. The code will, nevertheless, run successfully, but with warning messages. I have confirmed that the code is entirely covered, without warnings, when the current version of Jpgraph is used in lieu of the one available in Composer. I will be glad to revisit this when the Jpgraph problem is resolved. Directory PhpSpreadsheetTests/Writer/Html was created to house the new tests. It seemed logical to move HtmlCommentsTest to the new directory from PhpSpreadsheetTests/Functional. A function to generate all the HTML is useful, especially for testing, but also in lieu of the multiple other generate* functions. I have added and documented generateHTMLAll. The documentation for the generate* functions (a) produces invalid html, (b) produces html which cannot be handled correctly by HTML reader, and (c) even if those were correct, does not actually affect the display of the spreadsheet. The documentation has been replaced by a valid, and more instructive, example. The (undocumented) useEmbeddedCss property, and the functions to test and set it are no longer needed. Rather than breaking existing code by deleting them, I marked the functions deprecated. This change borrows a change to LocaleFloatsTest from pull request 1456, submitted a little over a week before this one. ## Improve NumberFormat Support First phase of this change included correcting NumberFormat handling in HTML Writer. Certain complex formats could not be handled without changes to Style/NumberFormat, and I did not wish to combine those changes. Once the original change had been pushed, I took this part of it back up. HTML Writer can now handle conditions in formats like: [Blue][>=3000.5]$#,##0.00;[Red][<0]$#,##0.00;$#,##0.00 In testing, I discovered several errors and omissions in handling of some other formats. These are now corrected, and tests added.
2020-05-18 03:43:18 +00:00
background-color: yellow;
}
</style>
Improve HTML Writer (#1464) There are a number of situations where HTML write was producing HTML which could not be validated. These include: - inconsistent use of backslash terminating META, IMG, and COL tags - @page style tags in body rather than header. Aside from being non-standard, HTML Reader treats those as spreadsheet data. - <div style="page-break-before:always" />, a construct which is usually better handled through css anyhow. - no alt tag for images (drawings and charts) Other problems: - Windows file names not handled correctly for images - Memory drawings not handled in extendRowsForChartsAndImages - No handling of different values for showing gridlines for screen and print - Mpdf and Dompdf do not require the use of inline css. Tcpdf remains a holdout in the use of this inferior approach. - no need to chunk base64 encoding of embedded images - support for colors in number format was buggy (html tags run through htmlspecialchars) Code has been refactored when practical to reduce the number of very large functions. Coverage is now 100% for the entire HTML Writer module, from 75% lines and 39% methods beforehand. All functions dealing only with charts are bypassed for coverage because the version of Jpgraph available in Composer is not suitable for PHP7. The code will, nevertheless, run successfully, but with warning messages. I have confirmed that the code is entirely covered, without warnings, when the current version of Jpgraph is used in lieu of the one available in Composer. I will be glad to revisit this when the Jpgraph problem is resolved. Directory PhpSpreadsheetTests/Writer/Html was created to house the new tests. It seemed logical to move HtmlCommentsTest to the new directory from PhpSpreadsheetTests/Functional. A function to generate all the HTML is useful, especially for testing, but also in lieu of the multiple other generate* functions. I have added and documented generateHTMLAll. The documentation for the generate* functions (a) produces invalid html, (b) produces html which cannot be handled correctly by HTML reader, and (c) even if those were correct, does not actually affect the display of the spreadsheet. The documentation has been replaced by a valid, and more instructive, example. The (undocumented) useEmbeddedCss property, and the functions to test and set it are no longer needed. Rather than breaking existing code by deleting them, I marked the functions deprecated. This change borrows a change to LocaleFloatsTest from pull request 1456, submitted a little over a week before this one. ## Improve NumberFormat Support First phase of this change included correcting NumberFormat handling in HTML Writer. Certain complex formats could not be handled without changes to Style/NumberFormat, and I did not wish to combine those changes. Once the original change had been pushed, I took this part of it back up. HTML Writer can now handle conditions in formats like: [Blue][>=3000.5]$#,##0.00;[Red][<0]$#,##0.00;$#,##0.00 In testing, I discovered several errors and omissions in handling of some other formats. These are now corrected, and tests added.
2020-05-18 03:43:18 +00:00
EOF;
echo preg_replace('@</head>@', "$newstyle\n</head>", $hdr);
echo $writer->generateSheetData();
echo $writer->generateHTMLFooter();
```
Add ability to save edited Html/Pdf We give users the ability to edit Html/Pdf, but it's a little cumbersome to use the edited Html for an Html file, and difficult to use it for a Pdf. I believe we could make it fairly painless in both cases by allowing the user to set a callback to edit the generated Html. This can be accomplished with fewer than a dozen lines of very simple code. I think this would be easier than grabbing the Html in pieces, editing it, and reassembling it. I think it would also be simpler than an alternative I considered, namely the addition of a new method (e.g. saveEditedHtml) to each of the Html and Pdf writers. One edit that users might like to make when editing html is to add fallback fonts, something that is not currently available in PhpSpreadsheet, and might be difficult to add. A natural extension to that idea would be the use of webfonts, something which is guaranteed difficult to add. See samples/Basic/17b_Html for an example of this. None of the PDF writers support webfonts yet. That doesn't mean they won't do so in future, but, for now, samples/Pdf/21a_Pdf is a prosaic example of something you could do with this callback. In fact, this opens the door to letting the user replace the entire body with data of their choosing, effectively allowing PhpSpreadsheet (where you can set things like paper size and orientation) to be used as a front-end to the Pdf processor without the user having to be be overly familiar with the vagaries of the PDF processor. I think this is actually a pretty nice idea. YMMV. See samples/Basic/21b_Pdf for an example.
2020-05-31 04:27:35 +00:00
#### Editing HTML During Save Via a Callback
You can also add a callback function to edit the generated html
before saving. For example, you could add a webfont
(not currently supported for Pdf) as follows:
``` php
function webfont(string $html): string
{
$linktag = <<<EOF
<link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Poiret+One&display=swap" rel="stylesheet" />
EOF;
$html = preg_replace('@<style@', "$linktag<style", $html, 1);
$html = str_replace("font-family:'Calibri';",
"font-family:'Poiret One','Calibri',sans-serif;",
$html);
return $html;
}
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Html($spreadsheet);
$writer->setEditHtmlCallback('webfont');
$writer->save($filename);
```
#### Writing UTF-8 HTML files
A HTML file can be marked as UTF-8 by writing a BOM file header. This
can be enabled by using the following code:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Html($spreadsheet);
$writer->setUseBOM(true);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.htm");
```
#### Decimal and thousands separators
2017-12-30 10:44:32 +00:00
See section `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Csv` how to control the
appearance of these.
## PDF
PhpSpreadsheet allows you to write a spreadsheet into PDF format, for
fast distribution of represented data.
**PDF limitations** Please note that PDF file format has some limits
regarding to styling cells, number formatting, ...
### \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Pdf
PhpSpreadsheets PDF Writer is a wrapper for a 3rd-Party PDF Rendering
library such as TCPDF, mPDF or Dompdf. You must now install a PDF
rendering library yourself; but PhpSpreadsheet will work with a number
of different libraries.
Currently, the following libraries are supported:
Library | Downloadable from | PhpSpreadsheet writer
--------|-------------------------------------|----------------------
TCPDF | https://github.com/tecnickcom/tcpdf | Tcpdf
mPDF | https://github.com/mpdf/mpdf | Mpdf
Dompdf | https://github.com/dompdf/dompdf | Dompdf
The different libraries have different strengths and weaknesses. Some
generate better formatted output than others, some are faster or use
less memory than others, while some generate smaller .pdf files. It is
the developers choice which one they wish to use, appropriate to their
own circumstances.
You can instantiate a writer with its specific name, like so:
``` php
$writer = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createWriter($spreadsheet, 'Mpdf');
```
Or you can register which writer you are using with a more generic name,
so you don't need to remember which library you chose, only that you want
to write PDF files:
``` php
$class = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Pdf\Mpdf::class;
\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::registerWriter('Pdf', $class);
$writer = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createWriter($spreadsheet, 'Pdf');
```
Or you can instantiate directly the writer of your choice like so:
``` php
$writer = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Pdf\Mpdf($spreadsheet);
```
#### Custom implementation or configuration
If you need a custom implementation, or custom configuration, of a supported
PDF library. You can extends the PDF library, and the PDF writer like so:
``` php
class My_Custom_TCPDF extends TCPDF
{
// ...
}
class My_Custom_TCPDF_Writer extends \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Pdf\Tcpdf
{
protected function createExternalWriterInstance($orientation, $unit, $paperSize)
{
$instance = new My_Custom_TCPDF($orientation, $unit, $paperSize);
// more configuration of $instance
return $instance;
}
}
\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::registerWriter('Pdf', MY_TCPDF_WRITER::class);
```
#### Writing a spreadsheet
Once you have identified the Renderer that you wish to use for PDF
generation, you can write a .pdf file using the following code:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Pdf\Mpdf($spreadsheet);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.pdf");
```
Please note that `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Pdf` only outputs the
first worksheet by default.
#### Write all worksheets
PDF files can contain one or more worksheets. If you want to write all
sheets into a single PDF file, use the following code:
``` php
$writer->writeAllSheets();
```
#### Write a specific worksheet
PDF files can contain one or more worksheets. Therefore, you can specify
which sheet to write to PDF:
``` php
$writer->setSheetIndex(0);
```
#### Formula pre-calculation
By default, this writer pre-calculates all formulas in the spreadsheet.
This can be slow on large spreadsheets, and maybe even unwanted. You can
however disable formula pre-calculation:
``` php
$writer = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Pdf\Mpdf($spreadsheet);
$writer->setPreCalculateFormulas(false);
$writer->save("05featuredemo.pdf");
```
Add ability to save edited Html/Pdf We give users the ability to edit Html/Pdf, but it's a little cumbersome to use the edited Html for an Html file, and difficult to use it for a Pdf. I believe we could make it fairly painless in both cases by allowing the user to set a callback to edit the generated Html. This can be accomplished with fewer than a dozen lines of very simple code. I think this would be easier than grabbing the Html in pieces, editing it, and reassembling it. I think it would also be simpler than an alternative I considered, namely the addition of a new method (e.g. saveEditedHtml) to each of the Html and Pdf writers. One edit that users might like to make when editing html is to add fallback fonts, something that is not currently available in PhpSpreadsheet, and might be difficult to add. A natural extension to that idea would be the use of webfonts, something which is guaranteed difficult to add. See samples/Basic/17b_Html for an example of this. None of the PDF writers support webfonts yet. That doesn't mean they won't do so in future, but, for now, samples/Pdf/21a_Pdf is a prosaic example of something you could do with this callback. In fact, this opens the door to letting the user replace the entire body with data of their choosing, effectively allowing PhpSpreadsheet (where you can set things like paper size and orientation) to be used as a front-end to the Pdf processor without the user having to be be overly familiar with the vagaries of the PDF processor. I think this is actually a pretty nice idea. YMMV. See samples/Basic/21b_Pdf for an example.
2020-05-31 04:27:35 +00:00
#### Editing Pdf During Save Via a Callback
You can also add a callback function to edit the html used to
generate the Pdf before saving.
[See under Html](#editing-html-during-save-via-a-callback).
#### Decimal and thousands separators
2017-12-30 10:44:32 +00:00
See section `\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Writer\Csv` how to control the
appearance of these.
## Generating Excel files from templates (read, modify, write)
Readers and writers are the tools that allow you to generate Excel files
from templates. This requires less coding effort than generating the
Excel file from scratch, especially if your template has many styles,
page setup properties, headers etc.
Here is an example how to open a template file, fill in a couple of
fields and save it again:
``` php
$spreadsheet = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::load('template.xlsx');
$worksheet = $spreadsheet->getActiveSheet();
$worksheet->getCell('A1')->setValue('John');
$worksheet->getCell('A2')->setValue('Smith');
$writer = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createWriter($spreadsheet, 'Xls');
$writer->save('write.xls');
```
Notice that it is ok to load an xlsx file and generate an xls file.
## Generating Excel files from HTML content
If you are generating an Excel file from pre-rendered HTML content you can do so
automatically using the HTML Reader. This is most useful when you are generating
Excel files from web application content that would be downloaded/sent to a user.
For example:
```php
$htmlString = '<table>
<tr>
<td>Hello World</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Hello<br />World</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Hello<br>World</td>
</tr>
</table>';
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Html();
$spreadsheet = $reader->loadFromString($htmlString);
$writer = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createWriter($spreadsheet, 'Xls');
$writer->save('write.xls');
```
Suppose you have multiple worksheets you'd like created from html. This can be
accomplished as follows.
```php
$firstHtmlString = '<table>
<tr>
<td>Hello World</td>
</tr>
</table>';
$secondHtmlString = '<table>
<tr>
<td>Hello World</td>
</tr>
</table>';
$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Html();
$spreadsheet = $reader->loadFromString($firstHtmlString);
$reader->setSheetIndex(1);
$spreadhseet = $reader->loadFromString($secondHtmlString, $spreadsheet);
$writer = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createWriter($spreadsheet, 'Xls');
$writer->save('write.xls');
```