Creek is a Ruby gem that provides a fast, simple and efficient method of parsing large Excel (xlsx and xlsm) files.
Creek can be used from the command line or as part of a Ruby web framework. To install the gem using terminal, run the following command:
gem install creek
To use it in Rails, add this line to your Gemfile:
gem 'creek'
Creek can simply parse an Excel file by looping through the rows enumerator:
require 'creek'
creek = Creek::Book.new 'spec/fixtures/sample.xlsx'
sheet = creek.sheets[0]
sheet.rows.each do |row|
puts row # => {"A1"=>"Content 1", "B1"=>nil, "C1"=>nil, "D1"=>"Content 3"}
end
sheet.simple_rows.each do |row|
puts row # => {"A"=>"Content 1", "B"=>nil, "C"=>nil, "D"=>"Content 3"}
end
sheet.rows_with_meta_data.each do |row|
puts row # => {"collapsed"=>"false", "customFormat"=>"false", "customHeight"=>"true", "hidden"=>"false", "ht"=>"12.1", "outlineLevel"=>"0", "r"=>"1", "cells"=>{"A1"=>"Content 1", "B1"=>nil, "C1"=>nil, "D1"=>"Content 3"}}
end
sheet.simple_rows_with_meta_data.each do |row|
puts row # => {"collapsed"=>"false", "customFormat"=>"false", "customHeight"=>"true", "hidden"=>"false", "ht"=>"12.1", "outlineLevel"=>"0", "r"=>"1", "cells"=>{"A"=>"Content 1", "B"=>nil, "C"=>nil, "D"=>"Content 3"}}
end
sheet.state # => 'visible'
sheet.name # => 'Sheet1'
sheet.rid # => 'rId2'
By default, Creek will ensure that the file extension is either *.xlsx or *.xlsm, but this check can be circumvented as needed:
path = 'sample-as-zip.zip'
Creek::Book.new path, :check_file_extension => false
By default, the Rails file_field_tag uploads to a temporary location and stores the original filename with the StringIO object. (See this section of the Rails Guides for more information.)
Creek can parse this directly without the need for file upload gems such as Carrierwave or Paperclip by passing the original filename as an option:
# Import endpoint in Rails controller
def import
file = params[:file]
Creek::Book.new file.path, check_file_extension: false
end
Creek does not parse images by default. If you want to parse the images,
use with_images
method before iterating over rows to preload images information. If you don't call this method, Creek will not return images anywhere.
Cells with images will be an array of Pathname objects. If an image is spread across multiple cells, same Pathname object will be returned for each cell.
sheet.with_images.rows.each do |row|
puts row # => {"A1"=>[#<Pathname:/var/folders/ck/l64nmm3d4k75pvxr03ndk1tm0000gn/T/creek__drawing20161101-53599-274q0vimage1.jpeg>], "B2"=>"Fluffy"}
end
Images for a specific cell can be obtained with images_at method:
puts sheet.images_at('A1') # => [#<Pathname:/var/folders/ck/l64nmm3d4k75pvxr03ndk1tm0000gn/T/creek__drawing20161101-53599-274q0vimage1.jpeg>]
# no images in a cell
puts sheet.images_at('C1') # => nil
Creek will most likely return nil for a cell with images if there is no other text cell in that row - you can use images_at method for retrieving images in that cell.
remote_url = 'http://dev-builds.libreoffice.org/tmp/test.xlsx'
Creek::Book.new remote_url, remote: true
Contributions are welcomed. You can fork a repository, add your code changes to the forked branch, ensure all existing unit tests pass, create new unit tests which cover your new changes and finally create a pull request.
After forking and then cloning the repository locally, install the Bundler and then use it to install the development gem dependencies:
gem install bundler
bundle install
Once this is complete, you should be able to run the test suite:
rake
Please use the Issues page to report bugs or suggest new enhancements.
Creek has been published under MIT License