Accelerated Excel XLSX writing library for Python
master: build-status-master dev: build-status-dev test coverage: coverage-status
- Authors: Kevin Wang and Kevin Zhang
- Copyright 2015 Kevin Wang, Kevin Zhang. Portions copyright Google, Inc.
- License: Simplified BSD License
- Source repository
- PyPI page
PyExcelerate is a Python for writing Excel-compatible XLSX spreadsheet files, with an emphasis on speed.
Benchmark code located in pyexcelerate/tests/benchmark.py
Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, Core i5-3450, 8GB DDR3, Python 2.7.3
| TEST_NAME | NUM_ROWS | NUM_COLS | TIME_IN_SECONDS |
|-----------------------------|----------|----------|-----------------|
| pyexcelerate value fastest | 1000 | 100 | 0.47 |
| pyexcelerate value faster | 1000 | 100 | 0.51 |
| pyexcelerate value fast | 1000 | 100 | 1.53 |
| xlsxwriter value | 1000 | 100 | 0.84 |
| openpyxl | 1000 | 100 | 2.74 |
| pyexcelerate style cheating | 1000 | 100 | 1.23 |
| pyexcelerate style fastest | 1000 | 100 | 2.40 |
| pyexcelerate style faster | 1000 | 100 | 2.75 |
| pyexcelerate style fast | 1000 | 100 | 6.15 |
| xlsxwriter style cheating | 1000 | 100 | 1.21 |
| xlsxwriter style | 1000 | 100 | 4.85 |
| openpyxl | 1000 | 100 | 6.32 |
* cheating refers to pregeneration of styles
PyExcelerate is supported on Python 2.6, 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, and 3.5.
pip install pyexcelerate
from pyexcelerate import Workbook data = [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9]] # data is a 2D array wb = Workbook() wb.new_sheet("sheet name", data=data) wb.save("output.xlsx")
PyExcelerate also permits you to write data to ranges directly, which is faster than writing cell-by-cell.
from pyexcelerate import Workbook wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("test") ws.range("B2", "C3").value = [[1, 2], [3, 4]] wb.save("output.xlsx")
from datetime import datetime from pyexcelerate import Workbook wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws.set_cell_value(1, 1, 15) # a number ws.set_cell_value(1, 2, 20) ws.set_cell_value(1, 3, "=SUM(A1,B1)") # a formula ws.set_cell_value(1, 4, datetime.now()) # a date wb.save("output.xlsx")
from datetime import datetime from pyexcelerate import Workbook wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws[1][1].value = 15 # a number ws[1][2].value = 20 ws[1][3].value = "=SUM(A1,B1)" # a formula ws[1][4].value = datetime.now() # a date wb.save("output.xlsx")
from pyexcelerate import Workbook wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws.cell("A1").value = 12 wb.save("output.xlsx")
from pyexcelerate import Workbook wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws[1][1].value = 15 ws.range("A1", "B1").merge() wb.save("output.xlsx")
Styling cells causes non-negligible overhead. It will increase your execution time (up to 10x longer if done improperly!). Only style cells if absolutely necessary.
from pyexcelerate import Workbook, Color, Style, Font, Fill, Format from datetime import datetime wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws.set_cell_value(1, 1, 1) ws.set_cell_style(1, 1, Style(font=Font(bold=True))) ws.set_cell_style(1, 1, Style(font=Font(italic=True))) ws.set_cell_style(1, 1, Style(font=Font(underline=True))) ws.set_cell_style(1, 1, Style(font=Font(strikethrough=True))) ws.set_cell_style(1, 1, Style(fill=Fill(background=Color(255,0,0,0)))) ws.set_cell_value(1, 2, datetime.now()) ws.set_cell_style(1, 1, Style(format=Format('mm/dd/yy'))) wb.save("output.xlsx")
Note that in this example, subsequent calls to set_cell_style() override the previous styles and they are not merged in. To have a combined style, create a single Style object with multiple properties, for example
ws.set_cell_style(1, 1, Style(font=Font(bold=True), format=Format('mm/dd/yy')))
from pyexcelerate import Workbook, Color from datetime import datetime wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws.set_cell_value(1, 1, 1) ws.get_cell_style(1, 1).font.bold = True ws.get_cell_style(1, 1).font.italic = True ws.get_cell_style(1, 1).font.underline = True ws.get_cell_style(1, 1).font.strikethrough = True ws.get_cell_style(1, 1).fill.background = Color(0, 255, 0, 0) ws.set_cell_value(1, 2, datetime.now()) ws.get_cell_style(1, 1).format.format = 'mm/dd/yy' wb.save("output.xlsx")
from pyexcelerate import Workbook, Color from datetime import datetime wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws[1][1].value = 1 ws[1][1].style.font.bold = True ws[1][1].style.font.italic = True ws[1][1].style.font.underline = True ws[1][1].style.font.strikethrough = True ws[1][1].style.fill.background = Color(0, 255, 0, 0) ws[1][2].value = datetime.now() ws[1][2].style.format.format = 'mm/dd/yy' wb.save("output.xlsx")
Note that .style.format.format's repetition is due to planned support for conditional formatting and other related features. The formatting syntax may be improved in the future.
from pyexcelerate import Workbook, Color from datetime import datetime wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("test") ws.range("A1","C3").value = 1 ws.range("A1","C1").style.font.bold = True ws.range("A2","C3").style.font.italic = True ws.range("A3","C3").style.fill.background = Color(255, 0, 0, 0) ws.range("C1","C3").style.font.strikethrough = True
A simpler (and faster) way to style an entire row.
from pyexcelerate import Workbook, Color, Style, Fill from datetime import datetime wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws.set_row_style(1, Style(fill=Fill(background=Color(255,0,0,0)))) wb.save("output.xlsx")
from pyexcelerate import Workbook, Color from datetime import datetime wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws.get_row_style(1).fill.background = Color(255, 0, 0) wb.save("output.xlsx")
from pyexcelerate import Workbook, Color from datetime import datetime wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws[1].style.fill.background = Color(255, 0, 0) wb.save("output.xlsx")
from pyexcelerate import Workbook, Color, Style, Fill from datetime import datetime wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws.set_col_style(1, Style(fill=Fill(background=Color(255,0,0,0)))) wb.save("output.xlsx")
Consistent with the implementation patterns above, the following style parameters are available:
ws[1][1].style.font.bold = True ws[1][1].style.font.italic = True ws[1][1].style.font.underline = True ws[1][1].style.font.strikethrough = True ws[1][1].style.font.color = Color(255, 0, 255) ws[1][1].style.fill.background = Color(0, 255, 0) ws[1][1].style.alignment.vertical = 'top' ws[1][1].style.alignment.horizontal = 'right' ws[1][1].style.alignment.rotation = 90 ws[1][1].style.alignment.wrap_text = True ws[1][1].style.borders.top.color = Color(255, 0, 0) ws[1][1].style.borders.right.style = '-.'
Each attribute also has constructors for implementing via set_cell_style().
The following border styles are available: .-, ..-, --, .., =, ., medium -., medium -.., medium --, /-., _
Row heights and column widths are set using the size attribute in Style. Appropriate values are:
-1for auto-fit0for hidden- Any other value for the appropriate size.
For example, to hide column B:
from pyexcelerate import Workbook, Color, Style, Fill from datetime import datetime wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws.set_col_style(2, Style(size=0))) wb.save("output.xlsx")
PyExcelerate supports using style objects instead manually setting each attribute as well. This permits you to modify the style at a later time.
from pyexcelerate import Workbook, Font wb = Workbook() ws = wb.new_sheet("sheet name") ws[1][1].value = 1 font = Font(bold=True, italic=True, underline=True, strikethrough=True) ws[1][1].style.font = font wb.save("output.xlsx")
PyInstaller is the only packager officially supported by PyExcelerate. Copy hook-pyexcelerate.Writer.py to your PyInstaller hooks directory.
Please use the GitHub Issue Tracker and pull request system to report bugs/issues and submit improvements/changes, respectively. Pull requests must be based against the dev branch - if not, we will reject the PR and ask you to rebase against the correct branch. All nontrivial changes to code should be accompanied by a test when appropriate. We use the Nose testing framework.