C#, NPOI
Good evening, i'm trying to fill in an empty template with values(numbers, but in string variable), that needs to be in cells.
So, when it came to formatting, i've stuck with styling. That means, when i wrote the value inside(in pre-formatted cell) i get just the string value, that was in array.
But, when i open file, click "edit cell", then apply without any changes, then cell is formatted, with the format, which was in a template
I tried to apply previous style in cell(basically just copy style in var, before setting a value, then re-apply style), but, it didnt help.
Here is the video of my doings
var cr = new CellReference(cellAndValue[i, 0]);
var row = sheet?.GetRow(cr.Row);
var cell = row?.GetCell(cr.Col);
var prevtype = cell.CellType;
var prevstyle = cell.CellStyle;
var dataformat = cell.CellStyle.DataFormat;
CellType type = cell.CellType;
cell.SetCellValue(cellAndValue[i, 0]);
How to resolve that?)
It was required to convert incoming data to int, before inserting it XD
int n;
if (Int32.TryParse(cellAndValue[i, 1], out n))
{
cell.SetCellValue(n);
}
else
{
cell.SetCellValue(cellAndValue[i, 1]);
}
Related
Im trying to change number format with epplus in excel to this format ([h]:mm:ss), and it seems to change the cells format correctly. But the cells value doesnt update after the format...
As the picture shows the correct way of the text should be like the first cell on the picture. It works if I click on the cells and presses enter againPicture
var sheet = package.Workbook.Worksheets.Add(filename);
var tableRange = sheet.Cells["A1"].LoadFromCollection(list);
var table = sheet.Tables.GetFromRange(tableRange);
package.Save();
NumberFormat
[EpplusTableColumn(Order = 2, NumberFormat = "[h]:mm:ss")]
public string timeWorked { get; set; }
In the end, I want to use the SUM function in excel to calculate the total timeworked, but it doesnt work when the cells doesnt change to the format I have sat for it
Firstly, change type from string to TimeSpan
public TimeSpan TimeWorked { get; set; } = new TimeSpan(2, 18, 19);
Secondly, set printHeader to true
var tableRange = sheet.Cells["A1"].LoadFromCollection(actors, true);
For some reason column when using EpplusTableColumn attribute headers need to be included in excel otherwise cell formatting doesn't work. I'm not sure if it's a bug or am I missing something.
Would love if someone can give me more explanation.
If you really don't want headers to show there is a workaround. Before saving remove first row from excel.
sheet.DeleteRow(1);
package.Save();
I am losing the leading zeros when I copy values from a datatable to an Excel sheet. That's because probably Excel treats the values as a number instead of text.
I am copying the values like so:
myWorksheet.Cells[i + 2, j] = dtCustomers.Rows[i][j - 1].ToString();
How do I format a whole column or each cell as Text?
A related question, how to cast myWorksheet.Cells[i + 2, j] to show a style property in Intellisense?
Below is some code to format columns A and C as text in SpreadsheetGear for .NET which has an API which is similar to Excel - except for the fact that SpreadsheetGear is frequently more strongly typed. It should not be too hard to figure out how to convert this to work with Excel / COM:
IWorkbook workbook = Factory.GetWorkbook();
IRange cells = workbook.Worksheets[0].Cells;
// Format column A as text.
cells["A:A"].NumberFormat = "#";
// Set A2 to text with a leading '0'.
cells["A2"].Value = "01234567890123456789";
// Format column C as text (SpreadsheetGear uses 0 based indexes - Excel uses 1 based indexes).
cells[0, 2].EntireColumn.NumberFormat = "#";
// Set C3 to text with a leading '0'.
cells[2, 2].Value = "01234567890123456789";
workbook.SaveAs(#"c:\tmp\TextFormat.xlsx", FileFormat.OpenXMLWorkbook);
Disclaimer: I own SpreadsheetGear LLC
If you set the cell formatting to Text prior to adding a numeric value with a leading zero, the leading zero is retained without having to skew results by adding an apostrophe. If you try and manually add a leading zero value to a default sheet in Excel and then convert it to text, the leading zero is removed. If you convert the cell to Text first, then add your value, it is fine. Same principle applies when doing it programatically.
// Pull in all the cells of the worksheet
Range cells = xlWorkBook.Worksheets[1].Cells;
// set each cell's format to Text
cells.NumberFormat = "#";
// reset horizontal alignment to the right
cells.HorizontalAlignment = XlHAlign.xlHAlignRight;
// now add values to the worksheet
for (i = 0; i <= dataGridView1.RowCount - 1; i++)
{
for (j = 0; j <= dataGridView1.ColumnCount - 1; j++)
{
DataGridViewCell cell = dataGridView1[j, i];
xlWorkSheet.Cells[i + 1, j + 1] = cell.Value.ToString();
}
}
Solution that worked for me for Excel Interop:
myWorksheet.Columns[j].NumberFormat = "#"; // column as a text
myWorksheet.Cells[i + 2, j].NumberFormat = "#"; // cell as a text
This code should run before putting data to Excel. Column and row numbers are 1-based.
A bit more details. Whereas accepted response with reference for SpreadsheetGear looks almost correct, I had two concerns about it:
I am not using SpreadsheetGear. I was interested in regular Excel
communication thru Excel interop without any 3rdparty libraries,
I was searching for the way to format column by number, not using
ranges like "A:A".
Before your write to Excel need to change the format:
xlApp = New Excel.Application
xlWorkSheet = xlWorkBook.Sheets("Sheet1")
Dim cells As Excel.Range = xlWorkSheet.Cells
'set each cell's format to Text
cells.NumberFormat = "#"
'reset horizontal alignment to the right
cells.HorizontalAlignment = Excel.XlHAlign.xlHAlignRight
I've recently battled with this problem as well, and I've learned two things about the above suggestions.
Setting the numberFormatting to # causes Excel to left-align the value, and read it as if it were text, however, it still truncates the leading zero.
Adding an apostrophe at the beginning results in Excel treating it as text and retains the zero, and then applies the default text format, solving both problems.
The misleading aspect of this is that you now have a different value in the cell. Fortuately, when you copy/paste or export to CSV, the apostrophe is not included.
Conclusion: use the apostrophe, not the numberFormatting in order to retain the leading zeros.
Use your WorkSheet.Columns.NumberFormat, and set it to string "#", here is the sample:
Excel._Worksheet workSheet = (Excel._Worksheet)_Excel.Worksheets.Add();
//set columns format to text format
workSheet.Columns.NumberFormat = "#";
Note: this text format will apply for your hole excel sheet!
If you want a particular column to apply the text format, for example, the first column, you can do this:
workSheet.Columns[0].NumberFormat = "#";
or this will apply the specified range of woorkSheet to text format:
workSheet.get_Range("A1", "D1").NumberFormat = "#";
if (dtCustomers.Columns[j - 1].DataType != typeof(decimal) && dtCustomers.Columns[j - 1].DataType != typeof(int))
{
myWorksheet.Cells[i + 2, j].NumberFormat = "#";
}
I know this question is aged, still, I would like to contribute.
Applying Range.NumberFormat = "#" just partially solve the problem:
Yes, if you place the focus on a cell of the range, you will read text in the format menu
Yes, it align the data to the left
But if you use the type formula to check the type of the value in the cell, it will return 1 meaning number
Applying the apostroph behave better. It sets the format to text, it align data to left and if you check the format of the value in the cell using the type formula, it will return 2 meaning text
//where [1] - column number which you want to make text
ExcelWorksheet.Columns[1].NumberFormat = "#";
//If you want to format a particular column in all sheets in a workbook - use below code. Remove loop for single sheet along with slight changes.
//path were excel file is kept
string ResultsFilePath = #"C:\\Users\\krakhil\\Desktop\\TGUW EXCEL\\TEST";
Excel.Application ExcelApp = new Excel.Application();
Excel.Workbook ExcelWorkbook = ExcelApp.Workbooks.Open(ResultsFilePath);
ExcelApp.Visible = true;
//Looping through all available sheets
foreach (Excel.Worksheet ExcelWorksheet in ExcelWorkbook.Sheets)
{
//Selecting the worksheet where we want to perform action
ExcelWorksheet.Select(Type.Missing);
ExcelWorksheet.Columns[1].NumberFormat = "#";
}
//saving excel file using Interop
ExcelWorkbook.Save();
//closing file and releasing resources
ExcelWorkbook.Close(Type.Missing, Type.Missing, Type.Missing);
Marshal.FinalReleaseComObject(ExcelWorkbook);
ExcelApp.Quit();
Marshal.FinalReleaseComObject(ExcelApp);
You need to format the column to be a string.
You can use the link https://supportcenter.devexpress.com/ticket/details/t679279/import-from-excel-to-gridview
For converting the ExcelDataSource, you can also refer to https://supportcenter.devexpress.com/ticket/details/t468253/how-to-convert-exceldatasource-to-datatable
This seems silly, but I haven't been able to get my values in the format of #/#### to write as the literal string rather than becoming formatted as a date within excel.
I'm using ClosedXML to write to excel, and using the following:
// snip
IXLRangeRow tableRow = tableRowRange.Row(1);
tableRow.Cell(1).DataType = XLCellValues.Text;
tableRow.Cell(1).Value = "2/1997";
// snip
Looking at the output excel sheet I get in the cell 2/1/1997 - even though I'm setting the format as text in code, I'm getting it as a "Date" in the excel sheet - I checked this by right clicking the cell, format cell, seeing "date" as the format.
If I change things up to:
// snip
IXLRangeRow tableRow = tableRowRange.Row(1);
tableRow.Cell(1).Value = "2/1997";
tableRow.Cell(1).DataType = XLCellValues.Text;
// snip
I instead get 35462 as my output.
I just want my literal value of 2/1997 to be displayed on the worksheet. Please advise on how to correct.
try this
ws.Cell(rowCounter, colCounter).SetValue<string>(Convert.ToString(fieldValue));
Not sure about from ClosedXML, but maybe try Range.NumberFormat (MSDN Link)
For example...
Range("A1").NumberFormat = "#"
Or
Selection.NumberFormat = "#/####"
Consider:
tableRow.Cell(1).Value = "'2/1997";
Note the single quote.
ws.Cell(rowCounter, colCounter).Value="'"+Convert.ToString(fieldValue));
Formatting has to be done before you write values to the cells.
I had following mechanism, run after I make worksheet, right before I save it:
private void SetColumnFormatToText(IXLWorksheet worksheet)
{
var wholeSheet = worksheet.Range(FirstDataRowIndexInExcel, StartCellIndex, RowCount, HeaderCount);
wholeSheet.Style.NumberFormat.Format = "#";
}
which didn't do squat.
Doing it before I write values to the cells in a row did it.
worksheet.Range(RowIndex, StartCellIndex, RowIndex, EndCellIndex).Style.NumberFormat.Format = "#";
with cell value assignments following immediately after.
I've been trying to figure out how to insert 2 different formats into the same paragraph using interop.word in c# like this:
hello planet earth here's what I want to do
Assuming you have your document defined as oDoc, the following code should get you the desired result:
Word.Paragraph oPara = oDoc.Content.Paragraphs.Add(ref oMissing);
oPara.Range.Text = "hello planet earth here's what I want to do";
object oStart = oPara.Range.Start + 13;
object oEnd = oPara.Range.Start + 18;
Word.Range rBold = oDoc.Range(ref oStart, ref oEnd);
rBold.Bold = 1;
I had to modify Dennis' answer a little to get it to work for me.
What I'm doing it totally automated, so I have to only work with variables.
private void InsertMultiFormatParagraph(string text, int size, int spaceAfter = 10) {
var para = docWord.Content.Paragraphs.Add(ref objMissing);
para.Range.Text = text;
// Explicitly set this to "not bold"
para.Range.Font.Bold = 0;
para.Range.Font.Size = size;
para.Format.SpaceAfter = spaceAfter;
var start = para.Range.Start;
var end = para.Range.Start + text.IndexOf(":");
var rngBold = docWord.Range(ref objStart, ref objEnd);
rngBold.Bold = 1;
para.Range.InsertParagraphAfter();
}
The main difference that made me want to make this post was that the Paragraph should be inserted AFTER the font is changed. My initial thought was to insert it after setting the SpaceAfter property, but then the objStart and objEnd values were tossing "OutOfRange" Exceptions. It was a little counter-intuitive, so I wanted to make sure everyone knew.
The following code seemed to work the best for me when formatting a particular selection within a paragraph. Using Word's built in "find" function to make a selection, then formatting only the selected text. This approach would only work well if the text to select is a unique string within the selection. But for most situations I have run across, this seems to work.
oWord.Selection.Find.Text = Variable_Containing_Text_to_Select; // sets the variable for find and select
oWord.Selection.Find.Execute(); // Executes find and select
oWord.Selection.Font.Bold = 1; // Modifies selection
oWord.Selection.Collapse(); // Clears selection
Hope this helps someone!
I know this post is old, but it came out in almost all my searches. The answer below is in case someone, like me, wants to do this for more than one word in a sentence. In this case, I loop through a string array of variables that contain strings and change that text to bold--modifing #joshman1019
string[] makeBold = new string[4] {a, b, c, d};
foreach (string s in makeBold)
{
wApp.Selection.Find.Text = s; //changes with each iteration
wApp.Selection.Find.Execute();
wApp.Selection.Font.Bold = 1;
wApp.Selection.Collapse(); //used to 'clear' the selection
wApp.Selection.Find.ClearFormatting();
}
So, each string represented by the variable will be bold. So if a = "hello world", then Hello World is made bold in the Word doc. Hope it saves someone some time.
I know this is an old thread, but I thought I'd post here anyway for those that come across it via Google (like I did). I got most of the way to a solution with krillgar's approach, but I had trouble because some of my text contains newlines. Accordingly, this modification worked best for me:
private void WriteText(string text)
{
var para = doc.Content.Paragraphs.Add();
var start = para.Range.Start;
var end = para.Range.Start + text.IndexOf(":");
para.Range.Text = text;
para.Range.Font.Bold = 0;
para.Range.InsertParagraphAfter();
if(text.Contains(":")){
var rngBold = doc.Range(start, end);
rngBold.Bold = 1;
}
}
The key difference is that I calculate start and end earlier in the function. I can't quite put my finger on it, but I think if your new text has newlines in it, the later calculation of start/end messes something up.
And obviously my solution is intended for text with the format:
Label: Data
where Label is to be bolded.
Consider usage of Range.Collapse eventually with Microsoft.Office.Interop.Word.WdCollapseDirection.wdCollapseEnd as parameter.
That would allow next text to have formatting different than previous text (and next text formatting will not affect formatting of previous one).
I am trying to create double and number format cells in excel using NPOI library. I used code like
Dim cell As HSSFCell = row.CreateCell(j)
cell.SetCellValue(Double.Parse(dr(col).ToString))
In excel numbers are aligning right but when I check format it is showing in "General"
then I changed my code to like below
Dim cell As HSSFCell = row.CreateCell(j)
cell.SetCellValue(Double.Parse(dr(col).ToString))
Dim cellStyle As HSSFCellStyle = hssfworkbook.CreateCellStyle
cellStyle.DataFormat = HSSFDataFormat.GetBuiltinFormat("#,#0.0")
cell.CellStyle = cellStyle
Then While opening file it is giving error and also taking so long to open. But Excel format showing in "Number"
error showing is like below.
How to fix this?
Take a look at this, are you creating a cellStyle object for each cell? If so don't. Try creating just a couple of styles before creating your cells and then apply these pre-defined styles to the cells you create.
To fix the too many different cell styles declare all styles outside of any loop you may be running.
I'm presumeing you 'j' would be the enumerator so i'll drop what you had in a corrected format for you.
Dim cellStyle As HSSFCellStyle = hssfworkbook.CreateCellStyle
cellStyle.DataFormat = HSSFDataFormat.GetBuiltinFormat("#,#0.0")
For col = 0 To ColoumCounter
For j = 0 To Counter
Dim cell As HSSFCell = row.CreateCell(j)
cell.SetCellValue(Double.Parse(dr(col).ToString))
cell.CellStyle = cellStyle
Next
Next
This should work a bit better, by limiting the number of "New" styles.
Hare is a simple way to create double format in Excel Document USING NPOI.
//make NUMERIC Format in Excel Document // Author: Akavrelishvili
var eRow = sheet.CreateRow(rowIndex); //create new Row , rowIndex - it's integer, like : 1,2,3
eRow.CreateCell(0).SetCellValue(row["ProvidName"].ToString()); //create cell and set string value
double Amount = Convert.ToDouble(row["Amount"].ToString()); //convert string to double
eRow.CreateCell(1).SetCellValue(Amount); // create cell and set double value.
This is working version, I have used it a lots of projects.
Very Hard is to insert DateTime format in Excel, There no good example in Internet and I think it helps people to do it right way.
I show you code example:
//make Date Time Format in Excel Document // Author: Akavrelishvili
var eRow = sheet.CreateRow(rowIndex); //create new Row // rowIndex - it's integer, like : 1,2,3
ICellStyle cellDateStyle = workBook.CreateCellStyle(); //create custom style
cellDateStyle.DataFormat = workBook.CreateDataFormat().GetFormat("dd/mm/yyyy"); //set day time Format
eRow.CreateCell(3).SetCellValue(Convert.ToDateTime(row["Date"])); //set DateTime value to cell
eRow.GetCell(6).CellStyle = cellDateStyle; // Restyle cell using "cellDateStyle"
I hope it helps
Create a style then but this style for the column
ICellStyle _TextCellStyle = wb1.CreateCellStyle();
_TextCellStyle.DataFormat = wb1.CreateDataFormat().GetFormat("#");
sheet.SetDefaultColumnStyle(2, _TextCellStyle);