/xls2xlsx

Convert xls file to xlsx (in python 3)

Primary LanguagePythonMIT LicenseMIT

xls2xlsx

Documentation Status

Convert xls file to xlsx

Features

  • Convert .xls files to .xlsx using xlrd and openpyxl.
  • Convert .htm and .mht files containing tables or excel contents to .xlsx using beautifulsoup4 and openpyxl.

We attempt to support anything that the underlying packages used will support. For example, the following are supported for both input types:

  • Multiple worksheets
  • Text, Numbers, Dates/Times, Unicode
  • Fonts, text color, bold, italic, underline, double underline, strikeout
  • Solid and Pattern Fills with color
  • Borders: Solid, Hair, Thin, Thick, Double, Dashed, Dotted; with color
  • Alignment: Horizontal, Vertical, Rotated, Indent, Shrink To Fit
  • Number Formats, including unicode currency symbols
  • Hidden Rows and Columns
  • Merged Cells
  • Hyperlinks (only 1 per cell)
  • Comments

These features are additionally supported by the .xls input format:

  • Freeze panes

These features are additional supported by the .htm and .mht input formats:

  • Images

Not supported by either format:

  • Conditional Formatting (the current stylings are preserved)
  • Formulas (the calculated values are preserved)
  • Charts (the image of the chart is handled by .htm and .mht input formats)
  • Drawings (the image of the drawing is handled by .htm and .mht input formats)
  • Pivot tables (the current data is preserved)
  • Text boxes (converted to an image by .htm and .mht input formats)
  • Shapes and Clip Art (converted to an image by .htm and .mht input formats)
  • Autofilter (the current filtered out rows are preserved)
  • Rich text in cells (openpyxl doesn't support this: only styles applied to the entire cell are preserved)
  • Named Ranges
  • Macros (VBA)

Installation

To install xls2xlsx, run this command in your terminal:

$ pip install xls2xlsx

This is the preferred method to install xls2xlsx, as it will always install the most recent stable release.

Usage

To use xls2xlsx from the command line:

$ xls2xlsx [-v] file.xls ...

This will create file.xlsx in the current folder. file.xls can be any .xls, .htm, or .mht file and can also be a URL. The -v flag will print the input and output filename.

To use xls2xlsx in a project:

from xls2xlsx import XLS2XLSX
x2x = XLS2XLSX("spreadsheet.xls")
x2x.to_xlsx("spreadsheet.xlsx")

Alternatively:

from xls2xlsx import XLS2XLSX
x2x = XLS2XLSX("spreadsheet.xls")
wb = x2x.to_xlsx()

The xls2xlsx.to_xlsx method returns the filename given. If no filename is provided, the method returns the openpyxl workbook.

The input file can be in any of the following formats:

  • Excel 97-2003 workbook (.xls)
  • Web page (.htm, .html), optionally including a _Files folder
  • Single file web page (.mht, .mhtml)

The input specified can also be any of the following:

  • A filename / pathname
  • A url
  • A file-like object (opened in Binary mode for .xls and either Binary or Text mode otherwise)
  • The contents of a .xls file as a bytes object
  • The contents of a .htm or .mht file as a str object

Note: The file format is determined by examining the file contents, not by looking at the file extension.

Dependencies

Python >= 3.6 is required.

These packages are also required: xlrd, openpyxl, requests, beautifulsoup4, Pillow, python-dateutil, cssutils, webcolors, currency-symbols, fonttools, PyYAML.

Implementation Notes

The .htm and .mht input format conversion uses ImageFont from Pillow to measure the size (width and height) of cell contents. The first time you use it, it will look for font files in standard places on your system and create a Font Name to filename mapping. If the proper font files are not found on your system corresponding to the fonts used in the input file, then as a backup, an estimation algorithm is used.

If passed a .mht file (or url), the temporary folder name specified in the file will be used to unpack the contents for processing, then this folder will be removed when done.

Credits

Development Lead

Contributors

None yet. Why not be the first?

Acknowledgements

A portion of the code is based on the work of John Ricco (johnricco226@gmail.com), Apr 4, 2017: https://johnricco.github.io/2017/04/04/python-html/

This package was created with Cookiecutter and the audreyr/cookiecutter-pypackage project template.