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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. |
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README.md
PhpSpreadsheet
PhpSpreadsheet is a library written in pure PHP and providing a set of classes that allow you to read from and to write to different spreadsheet file formats, like Excel and LibreOffice Calc.
Documentation
Read more about it, including install instructions, in the official documentation. Or check out the API documentation.
Please ask your support questions on StackOverflow, or have a quick chat on Gitter.
PHPExcel vs PhpSpreadsheet ?
PhpSpreadsheet is the next version of PHPExcel. It breaks compatibility to dramatically improve the code base quality (namespaces, PSR compliance, use of latest PHP language features, etc.).
Because all efforts have shifted to PhpSpreadsheet, PHPExcel will no longer be maintained. All contributions for PHPExcel, patches and new features, should target PhpSpreadsheet master
branch.
Do you need to migrate? There is an automated tool for that.
License
PhpSpreadsheet is licensed under MIT.