HTTP client must be configured via `Settings::setHttpClient()`. This is
a small breaking change, but only for the very few people who started using
WEBSERVICE from last version.
Fixes#1562Closes#1568
If BIFF5 excel 95 file doesn't have codepage record, the default codepage CP1252 is used and can't be change.
That causes to problems with decoding cyrillic text.
If row or column dimensions are accessed, then HTML writer would
still generate lots of empty cells, to show nothing at all. This
now ignore row and column dimensions to only output cell that
actually exists (even if those cells are empty).
Fixes#1235Close#1537
Fixes a bug when doing a HLOOKUP on a single row.
```php
<?php
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
use PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Spreadsheet;
$spreadsheet = new Spreadsheet();
$sheet = $spreadsheet->getActiveSheet();
/**
* Single row.
*/
$singleRow = "=HLOOKUP(10, {5, 10, 15}, 1, 0)";
$sheet->getCell('A1')->setValue($singleRow);
// Should echo 10, but echos '#N/A' and some PHP notices and warnings.
echo $sheet->getCell('A1')->getCalculatedValue() . PHP_EOL;
/**
* Multiple rows.
*/
$multipleRows = "=HLOOKUP(10, {5, 10, 15; 20, 25, 30}, 1, 0)";
$sheet->getCell('A2')->setValue($multipleRows);
// Should echo: 10 and also does.
echo $sheet->getCell('A2')->getCalculatedValue() . PHP_EOL;
```
Co-authored-by: Mark Baker <mark@lange.demon.co.uk>
For functions introduced in Excel 2010 and beyond, Excel saves them
in formulas with the xlfn_ prefix. PhpSpreadsheet does not do this;
as a result, when a spreadsheet so created is opened, the cells
which use the new functions display a #NAME? error.
This the cause of bug report 1246:
https://github.com/PHPOffice/PhpSpreadsheet/issues/1246
This change corrects that problem when the Xlsx writer encounters
a 2010+ formula for a cell or a conditional style. A new class
Writer/Xlsx/Xlfn, with 2 static methods,
is introduced to facilitate this change.
As part of the testing for this, I found some additional problems.
When an unknown function name is used, Excel generates a #NAME? error.
However, when an unknown function is used in PhpSpreadsheet:
- if there are no parameters, it returns #VALUE!, which is wrong
- if there are parameters, it throws an exception, which is horrible
Both of these situations will now return #NAME?
Tests have been added for these situations.
The MODE (and MODE.SNGL) function is not quite in alignment with Excel.
MODE(3, 3, 4, 4) returns 3 in both Excel and PhpSpreadsheet.
However, MODE(4, 3, 3, 4) returns 4 in Excel, but 3 in PhpSpreadsheet.
Both situations will now match Excel's result.
Also, Excel allows its parameters for MODE to be an array,
but PhpSpreadsheet did not; it now will.
There had not been any tests for MODE. Now there are.
The SHEET and SHEETS functions were introduced in Excel 2013,
but were not introduced in PhpSpreadsheet. They are now introduced
as DUMMY functions so that they can be parsed appropriately.
Finally, in common with the "rate" changes for which I am
creating a pull request at the same time as this one:
samples/Basic/13_CalculationCyclicFormulae
PhpUnit started reporting an error like "too much regression".
The test deals with an infinite cyclic formula, and allowed
the calculation engine to run for 100 cycles. The actual number of cycles
seems irrelevant for the purpose of this test. I changed it to 15,
and PhpUnit no longer complains.
All chart examples passed the displayBlanksAs parameter as 0 instead of 'gap'.
I added a constants EMPTY_AS_GAP, EMPTY_AS_ZERO and EMPTY_AS_SPAN to the
DataSeries and then change all chart samples to use this new constant.
Fixes#1337Closes#1448
While there is value in providing those, they also clutter IDE auto-complete feature.
Now they users can opt-in to download them via `--prefer-source` flag.
Closes#908Closes#1424
Returns #N/A, unless the element searched for is at the end of the array.
The problem is in Calculation.php line 4231:
if (!is_array($functionCall)) {
foreach ($args as &$arg) {
$arg = Functions::flattenSingleValue($arg);
}
unset($arg);
}
I believe this code is intended to handle functions where PhpSpreadsheet just passes
the call on to PHP without implementing the code on its own, e.g. for atan or acos.
In the bug report, the following code fails:
$flat_rate = "=MATCH(6,{4,5,6,2}, 0)";
$sheet->getCell('A1')->setValue($flat_rate);
The expected value is 3, but the actual result is "#N/A".
The reason for this result is that the parser replaces the braces with calls
to the MKMATRIX internal function, whose value for functioncall was:
'self::MKMATRIX'. Since this isn't an array, the flattening code is executed,
and the unintended result occurs. The fix is to change the definition for
functioncall in that case to [__CLASS__, 'mkMatrix'], avoiding the flattening.
However, there is also another part to this bug. The flattening should be
returning the first entry in the array, but is in fact returning the last.
This explains why the bug report specified "unless ... end of the array".
I confirmed that Excel does use the first item in the array rather than the last,
e.g. =atan({1,2,3}) entered into a cell will return atan(1), not atan(3).
The problem here is that flattenSingleValue, which says in its comments that
it is supposed to be returning the first item, uses array_pop rather than array_shift.
I have changed that as well. The same mistake was also present in
Cell.php function getCalculatedValue. The correct behavior can be verified
by entering =minverse({-2.5,1.5;2,-1}) into an Excel cell'
Excel flattens the result ({2,3;4,5}) to 2, and so should PhpSpreadsheet.
Fixes#1271Closes#1332
`$highestRow = $this->getHighestDataRow();` was calculated after `$this->getCellCollection()->removeRow($pRow + $r);` - this is the root reason for incorrect rows removal because removing last row will change '$this->getHighestDataRow()' value, but removing row from the middle will not change it. So, removing last row causes incorrect `$highestRow` value that is used for wiping out empty rows from the bottom of the table:
```php
for ($r = 0; $r < $pNumRows; ++$r) {
$this->getCellCollection()->removeRow($highestRow);
--$highestRow;
}
```
To prevent this incorrect behavior I've moved highest row calculation before row removal.
But this still doesn't solve another problem when trying remove non existing rows: in this case the code above will remove `$pNumRows` rows from below of the table, e.g. if `$highestRow=4` and `$pNumRows=6`, than rows 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, -1 will be deleted. Obviously, this is not good, that is why I've added `$removedRowsCounter` to fix this issue.
And finally, moved Exception to early if statement to get away from unnecessary 'if-else'.
Fixes#1364Closes#1365
Indentation in the xml leaves spaces in style string even after
replacing newlines. Replacing the spaces ensures no spaces in keys
of the resulting style-array
Fixes#1347
Fluent methods, especially setters, return the object on which are
called. This is documented in PHPDoc using the `$this` keyword, which
is equivalent to `static` with the additional notion of object identity.
This helps IDEs and static analysis tools provide more meaningful output.