Difference between revisions of "Generating Excel Spreadsheets Programatically"
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$ ls -l example.xls | $ ls -l example.xls | ||
-rw-r--r-- 1 user group 5632 2007-12-15 17:47 example.xls | -rw-r--r-- 1 user group 5632 2007-12-15 17:47 example.xls | ||
The first argument is the separator character. To convert the passwd file to a spreadsheet use the folloing command: | |||
$ ./txt2xls ":" /etc/passwd |
Revision as of 17:51, 15 December 2007
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Perl
Python
Examples
PERL
Translate CSV to Excel Format
Here is the script:
#!/usr/bin/env perl # #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- use strict; use Spreadsheet::WriteExcel; #------------------------------------------------------------------------------- if ($#ARGV ne 1) { print "\n Usage: txt2xls \n Example: txt2xls \"|\" *.psv\n\n"; } my $token; my $file; my $del; my $wb; my $separator = quotemeta($ARGV[0]); my @files = @ARGV[1..$#ARGV]; foreach $file (@files){ open (TXTFILE, "$file") or die; my $wb = Spreadsheet::WriteExcel->new("$file.xls"); my $excel = $wb->addworksheet(); my $row = 0; my $col; while (<TXTFILE>) { chomp; my @Fld = split(/$separator/, $_); $col = 0; foreach $token (@Fld) { $excel->write($row, $col, $token); $col++; } $row++; } } #-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here is how it is used:
$ cat example aaa,bbb,ccc,ddd aaa,bbb,ccc,ddd aaa,bbb,ccc,ddd aaa,bbb,ccc,ddd aaa,bbb,ccc,ddd $ ./txt2xls "," example $ ls -l example.xls -rw-r--r-- 1 user group 5632 2007-12-15 17:47 example.xls
The first argument is the separator character. To convert the passwd file to a spreadsheet use the folloing command:
$ ./txt2xls ":" /etc/passwd