692 lines
26 KiB
Markdown
692 lines
26 KiB
Markdown
# Reading Files
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## Security
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XML-based formats such as OfficeOpen XML, Excel2003 XML, OASIS and
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Gnumeric are susceptible to XML External Entity Processing (XXE)
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injection attacks (for an explanation of XXE injection see
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http://websec.io/2012/08/27/Preventing-XEE-in-PHP.html) when reading
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spreadsheet files. This can lead to:
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- Disclosure whether a file is existent
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- Server Side Request Forgery
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- Command Execution (depending on the installed PHP wrappers)
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To prevent this, PhpSpreadsheet sets `libxml_disable_entity_loader` to
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`true` for the XML-based Readers by default.
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## Loading a Spreadsheet File
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The simplest way to load a workbook file is to let PhpSpreadsheet's IO
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Factory identify the file type and load it, calling the static load()
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method of the \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory class.
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``` php
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$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
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/** Load $inputFileName to a Spreadsheet Object **/
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$spreadsheet = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::load($inputFileName);
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader01.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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The load() method will attempt to identify the file type, and
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instantiate a loader for that file type; using it to load the file and
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store the data and any formatting in a `Spreadsheet` object.
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The method makes an initial guess at the loader to instantiate based on
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the file extension; but will test the file before actually executing the
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load: so if (for example) the file is actually a CSV file or contains
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HTML markup, but that has been given a .xls extension (quite a common
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practise), it will reject the Xls loader that it would normally use for
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a .xls file; and test the file using the other loaders until it finds
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the appropriate loader, and then use that to read the file.
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While easy to implement in your code, and you don't need to worry about
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the file type; this isn't the most efficient method to load a file; and
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it lacks the flexibility to configure the loader in any way before
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actually reading the file into a `Spreadsheet` object.
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## Creating a Reader and Loading a Spreadsheet File
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If you know the file type of the spreadsheet file that you need to load,
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you can instantiate a new reader object for that file type, then use the
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reader's load() method to read the file to a `Spreadsheet` object. It is
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possible to instantiate the reader objects for each of the different
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supported filetype by name. However, you may get unpredictable results
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if the file isn't of the right type (e.g. it is a CSV with an extension
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of .xls), although this type of exception should normally be trapped.
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``` php
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$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
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/** Create a new Xls Reader **/
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$reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xls();
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// $reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xlsx();
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// $reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Xml();
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// $reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Ods();
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// $reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Slk();
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// $reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Gnumeric();
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// $reader = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Csv();
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/** Load $inputFileName to a Spreadsheet Object **/
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$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader02.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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Alternatively, you can use the IO Factory's createReader() method to
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instantiate the reader object for you, simply telling it the file type
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of the reader that you want instantiating.
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``` php
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$inputFileType = 'Xls';
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// $inputFileType = 'Xlsx';
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// $inputFileType = 'Xml';
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// $inputFileType = 'Ods';
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// $inputFileType = 'Slk';
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// $inputFileType = 'Gnumeric';
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// $inputFileType = 'Csv';
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$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
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/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/
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$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
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/** Load $inputFileName to a Spreadsheet Object **/
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$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader03.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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If you're uncertain of the filetype, you can use the IO Factory's
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identify() method to identify the reader that you need, before using the
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createReader() method to instantiate the reader object.
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``` php
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$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
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/** Identify the type of $inputFileName **/
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$inputFileType = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::identify($inputFileName);
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/** Create a new Reader of the type that has been identified **/
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$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
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/** Load $inputFileName to a Spreadsheet Object **/
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$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader04.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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## Spreadsheet Reader Options
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Once you have created a reader object for the workbook that you want to
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load, you have the opportunity to set additional options before
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executing the load() method.
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### Reading Only Data from a Spreadsheet File
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If you're only interested in the cell values in a workbook, but don't
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need any of the cell formatting information, then you can set the reader
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to read only the data values and any formulae from each cell using the
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setReadDataOnly() method.
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``` php
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$inputFileType = 'Xls';
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$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
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/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/
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$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
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/** Advise the Reader that we only want to load cell data **/
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$reader->setReadDataOnly(true);
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/** Load $inputFileName to a Spreadsheet Object **/
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$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader05.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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It is important to note that Workbooks (and PhpSpreadsheet) store dates
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and times as simple numeric values: they can only be distinguished from
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other numeric values by the format mask that is applied to that cell.
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When setting read data only to true, PhpSpreadsheet doesn't read the
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cell format masks, so it is not possible to differentiate between
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dates/times and numbers.
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The Gnumeric loader has been written to read the format masks for date
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values even when read data only has been set to true, so it can
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differentiate between dates/times and numbers; but this change hasn't
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yet been implemented for the other readers.
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Reading Only Data from a Spreadsheet File applies to Readers:
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Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |
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----------|:---:|--------|:---:|--------------|:---:|
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Xlsx | YES | Xls | YES | Xml | YES |
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Ods | YES | SYLK | NO | Gnumeric | YES |
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CSV | NO | HTML | NO
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### Reading Only Named WorkSheets from a File
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If your workbook contains a number of worksheets, but you are only
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interested in reading some of those, then you can use the
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setLoadSheetsOnly() method to identify those sheets you are interested
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in reading.
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To read a single sheet, you can pass that sheet name as a parameter to
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the setLoadSheetsOnly() method.
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``` php
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$inputFileType = 'Xls';
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$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
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$sheetname = 'Data Sheet #2';
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/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/
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$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
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/** Advise the Reader of which WorkSheets we want to load **/
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$reader->setLoadSheetsOnly($sheetname);
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/** Load $inputFileName to a Spreadsheet Object **/
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$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader07.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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If you want to read more than just a single sheet, you can pass a list
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of sheet names as an array parameter to the setLoadSheetsOnly() method.
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``` php
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$inputFileType = 'Xls';
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$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
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$sheetnames = array('Data Sheet #1','Data Sheet #3');
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/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/
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$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
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/** Advise the Reader of which WorkSheets we want to load **/
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$reader->setLoadSheetsOnly($sheetnames);
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/** Load $inputFileName to a Spreadsheet Object **/
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$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader08.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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To reset this option to the default, you can call the setLoadAllSheets()
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method.
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``` php
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$inputFileType = 'Xls';
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$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
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/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/
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$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
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/** Advise the Reader to load all Worksheets **/
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$reader->setLoadAllSheets();
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/** Load $inputFileName to a Spreadsheet Object **/
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$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader06.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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Reading Only Named WorkSheets from a File applies to Readers:
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Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |
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----------|:---:|--------|:---:|--------------|:---:|
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Xlsx | YES | Xls | YES | Xml | YES |
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Ods | YES | SYLK | NO | Gnumeric | YES |
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CSV | NO | HTML | NO
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### Reading Only Specific Columns and Rows from a File (Read Filters)
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If you are only interested in reading part of a worksheet, then you can
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write a filter class that identifies whether or not individual cells
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should be read by the loader. A read filter must implement the
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\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter interface, and contain a
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readCell() method that accepts arguments of \$column, \$row and
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\$worksheetName, and return a boolean true or false that indicates
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whether a workbook cell identified by those arguments should be read or
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not.
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``` php
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$inputFileType = 'Xls';
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$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
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$sheetname = 'Data Sheet #3';
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/** Define a Read Filter class implementing \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter */
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class MyReadFilter implements \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter
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{
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public function readCell($column, $row, $worksheetName = '') {
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// Read rows 1 to 7 and columns A to E only
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if ($row >= 1 && $row <= 7) {
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if (in_array($column,range('A','E'))) {
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return true;
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}
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}
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return false;
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}
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}
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/** Create an Instance of our Read Filter **/
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$filterSubset = new MyReadFilter();
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/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/
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$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
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/** Tell the Reader that we want to use the Read Filter **/
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$reader->setReadFilter($filterSubset);
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/** Load only the rows and columns that match our filter to Spreadsheet **/
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$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader09.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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This example is not particularly useful, because it can only be used in
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a very specific circumstance (when you only want cells in the range
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A1:E7 from your worksheet. A generic Read Filter would probably be more
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useful:
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``` php
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/** Define a Read Filter class implementing \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter */
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class MyReadFilter implements \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter
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{
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private $_startRow = 0;
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private $_endRow = 0;
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private $_columns = array();
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/** Get the list of rows and columns to read */
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public function __construct($startRow, $endRow, $columns) {
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$this->_startRow = $startRow;
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$this->_endRow = $endRow;
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$this->_columns = $columns;
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}
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public function readCell($column, $row, $worksheetName = '') {
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// Only read the rows and columns that were configured
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if ($row >= $this->_startRow && $row <= $this->_endRow) {
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if (in_array($column,$this->_columns)) {
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return true;
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}
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}
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return false;
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}
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}
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/** Create an Instance of our Read Filter, passing in the cell range **/
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$filterSubset = new MyReadFilter(9,15,range('G','K'));
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader10.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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This can be particularly useful for conserving memory, by allowing you
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to read and process a large workbook in “chunks”: an example of this
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usage might be when transferring data from an Excel worksheet to a
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database.
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``` php
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$inputFileType = 'Xls';
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$inputFileName = './sampleData/example2.xls';
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/** Define a Read Filter class implementing \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter */
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class chunkReadFilter implements \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\IReadFilter
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{
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private $_startRow = 0;
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private $_endRow = 0;
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/** Set the list of rows that we want to read */
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public function setRows($startRow, $chunkSize) {
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$this->_startRow = $startRow;
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$this->_endRow = $startRow + $chunkSize;
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}
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public function readCell($column, $row, $worksheetName = '') {
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// Only read the heading row, and the configured rows
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if (($row == 1) || ($row >= $this->_startRow && $row < $this->_endRow)) {
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return true;
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}
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return false;
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}
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}
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/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/
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$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
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/** Define how many rows we want to read for each "chunk" **/
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$chunkSize = 2048;
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/** Create a new Instance of our Read Filter **/
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$chunkFilter = new chunkReadFilter();
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/** Tell the Reader that we want to use the Read Filter **/
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$reader->setReadFilter($chunkFilter);
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/** Loop to read our worksheet in "chunk size" blocks **/
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for ($startRow = 2; $startRow <= 65536; $startRow += $chunkSize) {
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/** Tell the Read Filter which rows we want this iteration **/
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$chunkFilter->setRows($startRow,$chunkSize);
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/** Load only the rows that match our filter **/
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$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
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// Do some processing here
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}
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader12.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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Using Read Filters applies to:
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Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |
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----------|:---:|--------|:---:|--------------|:---:|
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Xlsx | YES | Xls | YES | Xml | YES |
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Ods | YES | SYLK | NO | Gnumeric | YES |
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CSV | YES | HTML | NO | | |
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### Combining Multiple Files into a Single Spreadsheet Object
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While you can limit the number of worksheets that are read from a
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workbook file using the setLoadSheetsOnly() method, certain readers also
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allow you to combine several individual "sheets" from different files
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into a single `Spreadsheet` object, where each individual file is a
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single worksheet within that workbook. For each file that you read, you
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need to indicate which worksheet index it should be loaded into using
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the setSheetIndex() method of the \$reader, then use the
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loadIntoExisting() method rather than the load() method to actually read
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the file into that worksheet.
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``` php
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$inputFileType = 'Csv';
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$inputFileNames = array('./sampleData/example1.csv',
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'./sampleData/example2.csv'
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'./sampleData/example3.csv'
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);
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/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/
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$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
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/** Extract the first named file from the array list **/
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$inputFileName = array_shift($inputFileNames);
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/** Load the initial file to the first worksheet in a `Spreadsheet` Object **/
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$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
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/** Set the worksheet title (to the filename that we've loaded) **/
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$spreadsheet->getActiveSheet()
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->setTitle(pathinfo($inputFileName,PATHINFO_BASENAME));
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/** Loop through all the remaining files in the list **/
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foreach($inputFileNames as $sheet => $inputFileName) {
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/** Increment the worksheet index pointer for the Reader **/
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$reader->setSheetIndex($sheet+1);
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/** Load the current file into a new worksheet in Spreadsheet **/
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$reader->loadIntoExisting($inputFileName,$spreadsheet);
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/** Set the worksheet title (to the filename that we've loaded) **/
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$spreadsheet->getActiveSheet()
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->setTitle(pathinfo($inputFileName,PATHINFO_BASENAME));
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}
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```
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> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader13.php for a working example of this
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> code.
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Note that using the same sheet index for multiple sheets won't append
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files into the same sheet, but overwrite the results of the previous
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load. You cannot load multiple CSV files into the same worksheet.
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Combining Multiple Files into a Single Spreadsheet Object applies to:
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Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |
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----------|:---:|--------|:---:|--------------|:---:|
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Xlsx | NO | Xls | NO | Xml | NO |
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Ods | NO | SYLK | YES | Gnumeric | NO |
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CSV | YES | HTML | NO
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### Combining Read Filters with the setSheetIndex() method to split a large CSV file across multiple Worksheets
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An Xls BIFF .xls file is limited to 65536 rows in a worksheet, while the
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Xlsx Microsoft Office Open XML SpreadsheetML .xlsx file is limited to
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1,048,576 rows in a worksheet; but a CSV file is not limited other than
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by available disk space. This means that we wouldn’t ordinarily be able
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to read all the rows from a very large CSV file that exceeded those
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limits, and save it as an Xls or Xlsx file. However, by using Read
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Filters to read the CSV file in “chunks” (using the chunkReadFilter
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Class that we defined in section REF \_Ref275604563 \r \p 5.3 above),
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and the setSheetIndex() method of the \$reader, we can split the CSV
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file across several individual worksheets.
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``` php
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$inputFileType = 'Csv';
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$inputFileName = './sampleData/example2.csv';
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echo 'Loading file ',pathinfo($inputFileName,PATHINFO_BASENAME),' using IOFactory with a defined reader type of ',$inputFileType,'<br />';
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/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/
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$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
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/** Define how many rows we want to read for each "chunk" **/
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$chunkSize = 65530;
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/** Create a new Instance of our Read Filter **/
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$chunkFilter = new chunkReadFilter();
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/** Tell the Reader that we want to use the Read Filter **/
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/** and that we want to store it in contiguous rows/columns **/
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$reader->setReadFilter($chunkFilter)
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->setContiguous(true);
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/** Instantiate a new Spreadsheet object manually **/
|
||
$spreadsheet = new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Spreadsheet();
|
||
|
||
/** Set a sheet index **/
|
||
$sheet = 0;
|
||
/** Loop to read our worksheet in "chunk size" blocks **/
|
||
/** $startRow is set to 2 initially because we always read the headings in row #1 **/
|
||
for ($startRow = 2; $startRow <= 1000000; $startRow += $chunkSize) {
|
||
/** Tell the Read Filter which rows we want to read this loop **/
|
||
$chunkFilter->setRows($startRow,$chunkSize);
|
||
|
||
/** Increment the worksheet index pointer for the Reader **/
|
||
$reader->setSheetIndex($sheet);
|
||
/** Load only the rows that match our filter into a new worksheet **/
|
||
$reader->loadIntoExisting($inputFileName,$spreadsheet);
|
||
/** Set the worksheet title for the sheet that we've justloaded) **/
|
||
/** and increment the sheet index as well **/
|
||
$spreadsheet->getActiveSheet()->setTitle('Country Data #'.(++$sheet));
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader14.php for a working example of this
|
||
> code.
|
||
|
||
This code will read 65,530 rows at a time from the CSV file that we’re
|
||
loading, and store each "chunk" in a new worksheet.
|
||
|
||
The setContiguous() method for the Reader is important here. It is
|
||
applicable only when working with a Read Filter, and identifies whether
|
||
or not the cells should be stored by their position within the CSV file,
|
||
or their position relative to the filter.
|
||
|
||
For example, if the filter returned true for cells in the range B2:C3,
|
||
then with setContiguous set to false (the default) these would be loaded
|
||
as B2:C3 in the `Spreadsheet` object; but with setContiguous set to
|
||
true, they would be loaded as A1:B2.
|
||
|
||
Splitting a single loaded file across multiple worksheets applies to:
|
||
|
||
Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |
|
||
----------|:---:|--------|:---:|--------------|:---:|
|
||
Xlsx | NO | Xls | NO | Xml | NO |
|
||
Ods | NO | SYLK | NO | Gnumeric | NO |
|
||
CSV | YES | HTML | NO
|
||
|
||
### Pipe or Tab Separated Value Files
|
||
|
||
The CSV loader defaults to loading a file where comma is used as the
|
||
separator, but you can modify this to load tab- or pipe-separated value
|
||
files using the setDelimiter() method.
|
||
|
||
``` php
|
||
$inputFileType = 'Csv';
|
||
$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.tsv';
|
||
|
||
/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/ $reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
|
||
/** Set the delimiter to a TAB character **/
|
||
$reader->setDelimiter("\t");
|
||
// $reader->setDelimiter('|');
|
||
|
||
/** Load the file to a Spreadsheet Object **/
|
||
$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader15.php for a working example of this
|
||
> code.
|
||
|
||
In addition to the delimiter, you can also use the following methods to
|
||
set other attributes for the data load:
|
||
|
||
setEnclosure() | default is " setLineEnding() | default is PHP\_EOL
|
||
setInputEncoding() | default is UTF-8
|
||
|
||
Setting CSV delimiter applies to:
|
||
|
||
Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |
|
||
----------|:---:|--------|:---:|--------------|:---:|
|
||
Xlsx | NO | Xls | NO | Xml | NO |
|
||
Ods | NO | SYLK | NO | Gnumeric | NO |
|
||
CSV | YES | HTML | NO
|
||
|
||
### A Brief Word about the Advanced Value Binder
|
||
|
||
When loading data from a file that contains no formatting information,
|
||
such as a CSV file, then data is read either as strings or numbers
|
||
(float or integer). This means that PhpSpreadsheet does not
|
||
automatically recognise dates/times (such as "16-Apr-2009" or "13:30"),
|
||
booleans ("TRUE" or "FALSE"), percentages ("75%"), hyperlinks
|
||
("http://www.phpexcel.net"), etc as anything other than simple strings.
|
||
However, you can apply additional processing that is executed against
|
||
these values during the load process within a Value Binder.
|
||
|
||
A Value Binder is a class that implement the
|
||
\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Cell\IValueBinder interface. It must contain a
|
||
bindValue() method that accepts a \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Cell and a
|
||
value as arguments, and return a boolean true or false that indicates
|
||
whether the workbook cell has been populated with the value or not. The
|
||
Advanced Value Binder implements such a class: amongst other tests, it
|
||
identifies a string comprising "TRUE" or "FALSE" (based on locale
|
||
settings) and sets it to a boolean; or a number in scientific format
|
||
(e.g. "1.234e-5") and converts it to a float; or dates and times,
|
||
converting them to their Excel timestamp value – before storing the
|
||
value in the cell object. It also sets formatting for strings that are
|
||
identified as dates, times or percentages. It could easily be extended
|
||
to provide additional handling (including text or cell formatting) when
|
||
it encountered a hyperlink, or HTML markup within a CSV file.
|
||
|
||
So using a Value Binder allows a great deal more flexibility in the
|
||
loader logic when reading unformatted text files.
|
||
|
||
``` php
|
||
/** Tell PhpSpreadsheet that we want to use the Advanced Value Binder **/
|
||
\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Cell::setValueBinder( new \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Cell\AdvancedValueBinder() );
|
||
|
||
$inputFileType = 'Csv';
|
||
$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.tsv';
|
||
|
||
$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
|
||
$reader->setDelimiter("\t");
|
||
$spreadsheet = $reader->load($inputFileName);
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader15.php for a working example of this
|
||
> code.
|
||
|
||
Loading using a Value Binder applies to:
|
||
|
||
Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N |Reader | Y/N
|
||
----------|:---:|--------|:---:|--------------|:---:
|
||
Xlsx | NO | Xls | NO | Xml | NO
|
||
Ods | NO | SYLK | NO | Gnumeric | NO
|
||
CSV | YES | HTML | YES
|
||
|
||
## Error Handling
|
||
|
||
Of course, you should always apply some error handling to your scripts
|
||
as well. PhpSpreadsheet throws exceptions, so you can wrap all your code
|
||
that accesses the library methods within Try/Catch blocks to trap for
|
||
any problems that are encountered, and deal with them in an appropriate
|
||
manner.
|
||
|
||
The PhpSpreadsheet Readers throw a
|
||
\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Exception.
|
||
|
||
``` php
|
||
$inputFileName = './sampleData/example-1.xls';
|
||
|
||
try {
|
||
/** Load $inputFileName to a Spreadsheet Object **/
|
||
$spreadsheet = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::load($inputFileName);
|
||
} catch(\PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\Reader\Exception $e) {
|
||
die('Error loading file: '.$e->getMessage());
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader16.php for a working example of this
|
||
> code.
|
||
|
||
## Helper Methods
|
||
|
||
You can retrieve a list of worksheet names contained in a file without
|
||
loading the whole file by using the Reader’s `listWorksheetNames()`
|
||
method; similarly, a `listWorksheetInfo()` method will retrieve the
|
||
dimensions of worksheet in a file without needing to load and parse the
|
||
whole file.
|
||
|
||
### listWorksheetNames
|
||
|
||
The `listWorksheetNames()` method returns a simple array listing each
|
||
worksheet name within the workbook:
|
||
|
||
``` php
|
||
$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
|
||
|
||
$worksheetNames = $reader->listWorksheetNames($inputFileName);
|
||
|
||
echo '<h3>Worksheet Names</h3>';
|
||
echo '<ol>';
|
||
foreach ($worksheetNames as $worksheetName) {
|
||
echo '<li>', $worksheetName, '</li>';
|
||
}
|
||
echo '</ol>';
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader18.php for a working example of this
|
||
> code.
|
||
|
||
### listWorksheetInfo
|
||
|
||
The `listWorksheetInfo()` method returns a nested array, with each entry
|
||
listing the name and dimensions for a worksheet:
|
||
|
||
``` php
|
||
$reader = \PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheet\IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
|
||
|
||
$worksheetData = $reader->listWorksheetInfo($inputFileName);
|
||
|
||
echo '<h3>Worksheet Information</h3>';
|
||
echo '<ol>';
|
||
foreach ($worksheetData as $worksheet) {
|
||
echo '<li>', $worksheet['worksheetName'], '<br />';
|
||
echo 'Rows: ', $worksheet['totalRows'],
|
||
' Columns: ', $worksheet['totalColumns'], '<br />';
|
||
echo 'Cell Range: A1:',
|
||
$worksheet['lastColumnLetter'], $worksheet['totalRows'];
|
||
echo '</li>';
|
||
}
|
||
echo '</ol>';
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
> See Examples/Reader/exampleReader19.php for a working example of this
|
||
> code.
|