Skip to content

A PHP spreadsheet reader (Excel XLS and XLSX, OpenOffice ODS, and variously separated text files) with a singular goal of getting the data out, efficiently

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

ManifestWebDesign/spreadsheet-reader

 
 

Repository files navigation

spreadsheet-reader is a PHP spreadsheet reader that differs from others in that the main goal for it was efficient data extraction that could handle large (as in really large) files. So far it may not definitely be CPU, time or I/O-efficient but at least it won't run out of memory (except maybe for XLS files).

So far XLSX, ODS and text/CSV file parsing should be memory-efficient. XLS file parsing is done with php-excel-reader from http://code.google.com/p/php-excel-reader/ which, sadly, has memory issues with bigger spreadsheets, as it reads the data all at once and keeps it all in memory.

Requirements:

Usage:

All data is read from the file sequentially, with each row being returned as a numeric array. This is about the easiest way to read a file:

<?php
	// If you need to parse XLS files, include php-excel-reader
	require('php-excel-reader/excel_reader2.php');

	require('SpreadsheetReader.php');

	$Reader = new SpreadsheetReader('example.xlsx');
	foreach ($Reader as $Row)
	{
		print_r($Row);
	}
?>

However, now also multiple sheet reading is supported for file formats where it is possible. (In case of CSV, it is handled as if it only has one sheet.)

You can retrieve information about sheets contained in the file by calling the Sheets() method which returns an array with sheet indexes as keys and sheet names as values. Then you can change the sheet that's currently being read by passing that index to the ChangeSheet($Index) method.

Example:

<?php
	$Reader = new SpreadsheetReader('example.xlsx');
	$Sheets = $Reader -> Sheets();

	foreach ($Sheets as $Index => $Name)
	{
		echo 'Sheet #'.$Index.': '.$Name;

		$Reader -> ChangeSheet($Index);

		foreach ($Reader as $Row)
		{
			print_r($Row);
		}
	}
?>

If a sheet is changed to the same that is currently open, the position in the file still reverts to the beginning, so as to conform to the same behavior as when changed to a different sheet.

Testing

From the command line:

php test.php path-to-spreadsheet.xls

In the browser:

http://path-to-library/test.php?File=/path/to/spreadsheet.xls

Notes about library performance

  • CSV and text files are read strictly sequentially so performance should be O(n);
  • When parsing XLS files, all of the file content is read into memory so large XLS files can lead to "out of memory" errors;
  • XLSX files use so called "shared strings" internally to optimize for cases where the same string is repeated multiple times. Internally XLSX is an XML text that is parsed sequentially to extract data from it, however, in some cases these shared strings are a problem - sometimes Excel may put all, or nearly all of the strings from the spreadsheet in the shared string file (which is a separate XML text), and not necessarily in the same order. Worst case scenario is when it is in reverse order - for each string we need to parse the shared string XML from the beginning, if we want to avoid keeping the data in memory. To that end, the XLSX parser has a cache for shared strings that is used if the total shared string count is not too high. In case you get out of memory errors, you can try adjusting the SHARED_STRING_CACHE_LIMIT constant in SpreadsheetReader_XLSX to a lower one.

TODOs:

  • ODS date formats;

Licensing

All of the code in this library is licensed under the MIT license as included in the LICENSE file, however, for now the library relies on php-excel-reader library for XLS file parsing which is licensed under the PHP license.

About

A PHP spreadsheet reader (Excel XLS and XLSX, OpenOffice ODS, and variously separated text files) with a singular goal of getting the data out, efficiently

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • PHP 100.0%