I'm having difficulties in reading a particular cell value from Excel in xlrd. Whatever value I'm reading (date value) is getting converted to a number. I know there are solutions to convert it into a python date format, but can I read directly the string value in xlrd?
xlrd does NOT convert dates to float. Excel stores dates as floats.
Quoting from the xlrd documentation (scroll down a page):
Dates in Excel spreadsheets
In reality, there are no such things. What you have are floating point numbers and pious hope. There are several problems with Excel dates:
(1) Dates are not stored as a separate data type; they are stored as floating point numbers and you have to rely on (a) the "number format" applied to them in Excel and/or (b) knowing which cells are supposed to have dates in them. This module helps with (a) by inspecting the format that has been applied to each number cell; if it appears to be a date format, the cell is classified as a date rather than a number.
(2) ... When using this package’s
xldate_as_tuple()
function to convert numbers from a workbook, you must use thedatemode
attribute of theBook
object.
See also the section on the Cell class to learn about the type of cells, and the various Sheet methods which extract the type of a cell (text, number, date, boolean, etc).
Check out python-excel.org for info on other Python Excel packages.
well, as you say:
# reading from a xls file (no .xlsx files, no writing!)
import xlrd # install xlrd from http://pypi.python.org/pypi/xlrd
wb = xlrd.open_workbook("YOUR_FILE.xls") # xls file to read from
sh1 = wb.sheet_by_index(0) # first sheet in workbook
sh2 = wb.sheet_by_name('colors') # sheet called colors
# print all rows in first sheet
print "content of", sh1.name # name of sheet
for rownum in range(sh1.nrows): # sh1.nrows -> number of rows (ncols -> num columns)
print sh1.row_values(rownum)
# rowx and colx (x for Excel) start at 1!
print "row3 col 2:", sh1.cell(rowx=3,colx=2).value
col = sh1.col_values(0) # column 0 as a list of string or numbers
print '"A" column content:' # python index 0, 1.colunm, called A
for cell in col: print cell
print sh1.col_values(1) # 2. column, note mix of string (header) and numbers!
FOR THIS EXAMPLE THE XLS is:
sheet 1:listing
name latitude longitude status color date
Mount Hood 45.3736 121.6925 active red 01-ene-01
Mount Jefferson 44.6744 121.7978 dormant yellow 23-sep-05
Three-Fingered 44.478 121.8442 extinct green
Mount Washington 4.3325 121.8372 extinct green
South Sister 44.1036 121.7681 active red
Diamond Peak 43.5206 122.1486 extinct green
Mount Thielsen 43.1531 122.0658 extinct green
Mount Scott 42.923 122.0163 dormant yellow
Mount McLoughlin 2.445 122.3142 dormant yellow
sheet 2:colors
status color
active red
dormant yellow
extinct green
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