package xls import ( "regexp" "strconv" "strings" "time" ) // Excel styles can reference number formats that are built-in, all of which // have an id less than 164. This is a possibly incomplete list comprised of as // many of them as I could find. var builtInNumFmt = map[uint16]string{ 0: "general", 1: "0", 2: "0.00", 3: "#,##0", 4: "#,##0.00", 9: "0%", 10: "0.00%", 11: "0.00e+00", 12: "# ?/?", 13: "# ??/??", 14: "mm-dd-yyyy", 15: "d-mmm-yyyy", 16: "d-mmm", 17: "mmm-yyyy", 18: "h:mm am/pm", 19: "h:mm:ss am/pm", 20: "h:mm", 21: "h:mm:ss", 22: "m/d/yyyy h:mm", 37: "#,##0 ;(#,##0)", 38: "#,##0 ;[red](#,##0)", 39: "#,##0.00;(#,##0.00)", 40: "#,##0.00;[red](#,##0.00)", 41: `_(* #,##0_);_(* \(#,##0\);_(* "-"_);_(@_)`, 42: `_("$"* #,##0_);_("$* \(#,##0\);_("$"* "-"_);_(@_)`, 43: `_(* #,##0.00_);_(* \(#,##0.00\);_(* "-"??_);_(@_)`, 44: `_("$"* #,##0.00_);_("$"* \(#,##0.00\);_("$"* "-"??_);_(@_)`, 45: "mm:ss", 46: "[h]:mm:ss", 47: "mmss.0", 48: "##0.0e+0", 49: "@", 58: time.RFC3339, } // Excel date time mapper to go system var dateTimeMapper = []struct{ xls, golang string }{ {"yyyy", "2006"}, {"yy", "06"}, {"mmmm", "%%%%"}, {"dddd", "&&&&"}, {"dd", "02"}, {"d", "2"}, {"mmm", "Jan"}, {"mmss", "0405"}, {"ss", "05"}, {"mm:", "04:"}, {":mm", ":04"}, {"mm", "01"}, {"am/pm", "pm"}, {"m/", "1/"}, {"%%%%", "January"}, {"&&&&", "Monday"}, } // Format value interface type Format struct { Head struct { Index uint16 Size uint16 } Raw []string bts int vType int } // Prepare format meta data func (f *Format) Prepare() { var regexColor = regexp.MustCompile("^\\[[a-zA-Z]+\\]") var regexFraction = regexp.MustCompile("#\\,?#*") for k, v := range f.Raw { // In Excel formats, "_" is used to add spacing, which we can't do in HTML v = strings.Replace(v, "_", "", -1) // Some non-number characters are escaped with \, which we don't need v = strings.Replace(v, "\\", "", -1) // Some non-number strings are quoted, so we'll get rid of the quotes, likewise any positional * symbols v = strings.Replace(v, "*", "", -1) v = strings.Replace(v, "\"", "", -1) // strip () v = strings.Replace(v, "(", "", -1) v = strings.Replace(v, ")", "", -1) // strip color information v = regexColor.ReplaceAllString(v, "") // Strip # v = regexFraction.ReplaceAllString(v, "") if 0 == f.vType { if regexp.MustCompile("^(\\[\\$[A-Z]*-[0-9A-F]*\\])*[hmsdy]").MatchString(v) { f.vType = TYPE_DATETIME } else if strings.HasSuffix(v, "%") { f.vType = TYPE_PERCENTAGE } else if strings.HasPrefix(v, "$") || strings.HasPrefix(v, "¥") { f.vType = TYPE_CURRENCY } } f.Raw[k] = strings.Trim(v, "\r\n\t ") } if 0 == f.vType { f.vType = TYPE_NUMERIC } if TYPE_NUMERIC == f.vType || TYPE_CURRENCY == f.vType || TYPE_PERCENTAGE == f.vType { var t []string if t = strings.SplitN(f.Raw[0], ".", 2); 2 == len(t) { f.bts = strings.Count(t[1], "") if f.bts > 0 { f.bts = f.bts - 1 } } } } // String format content to spec string // see http://www.openoffice.org/sc/excelfileformat.pdf Page #174 func (f *Format) String(v float64) string { var ret string switch f.vType { case TYPE_NUMERIC: if 0 == f.bts && nil != f.Raw && "general" == f.Raw[0] { f.bts = -1 } ret = strconv.FormatFloat(v, 'f', f.bts, 64) case TYPE_CURRENCY: ret = strconv.FormatFloat(v, 'f', f.bts, 64) case TYPE_PERCENTAGE: if 0 == f.bts { ret = strconv.FormatInt(int64(v)*100, 10) + "%" } else { ret = strconv.FormatFloat(v*100, 'f', f.bts, 64) + "%" } case TYPE_DATETIME: ret = parseTime(v, f.Raw[0]) default: ret = strconv.FormatFloat(v, 'f', -1, 64) } return ret } // ByteToUint32 Read 32-bit unsigned integer func ByteToUint32(b []byte) uint32 { return uint32(b[0]) | uint32(b[1])<<8 | uint32(b[2])<<16 | uint32(b[3])<<24 } // ByteToUint16 Read 16-bit unsigned integer func ByteToUint16(b []byte) uint16 { return (uint16(b[0]) | (uint16(b[1]) << 8)) } // parseTime provides function to returns a string parsed using time.Time. // Replace Excel placeholders with Go time placeholders. For example, replace // yyyy with 2006. These are in a specific order, due to the fact that m is used // in month, minute, and am/pm. It would be easier to fix that with regular // expressions, but if it's possible to keep this simple it would be easier to // maintain. Full-length month and days (e.g. March, Tuesday) have letters in // them that would be replaced by other characters below (such as the 'h' in // March, or the 'd' in Tuesday) below. First we convert them to arbitrary // characters unused in Excel Date formats, and then at the end, turn them to // what they should actually be. // Based off: http://www.ozgrid.com/Excel/CustomFormats.htm func parseTime(v float64, f string) string { var val time.Time if 0 == v { val = time.Now() } else { val = timeFromExcelTime(v, false) } // It is the presence of the "am/pm" indicator that determines if this is // a 12 hour or 24 hours time format, not the number of 'h' characters. if is12HourTime(f) { f = strings.Replace(f, "hh", "03", 1) f = strings.Replace(f, "h", "3", 1) } else { f = strings.Replace(f, "hh", "15", 1) f = strings.Replace(f, "h", "15", 1) } for _, repl := range dateTimeMapper { f = strings.Replace(f, repl.xls, repl.golang, 1) } // If the hour is optional, strip it out, along with the possible dangling // colon that would remain. if val.Hour() < 1 { f = strings.Replace(f, "]:", "]", 1) f = strings.Replace(f, "[03]", "", 1) f = strings.Replace(f, "[3]", "", 1) f = strings.Replace(f, "[15]", "", 1) } else { f = strings.Replace(f, "[3]", "3", 1) f = strings.Replace(f, "[15]", "15", 1) } return val.Format(f) } // is12HourTime checks whether an Excel time format string is a 12 hours form. func is12HourTime(format string) bool { return strings.Contains(format, "am/pm") || strings.Contains(format, "AM/PM") || strings.Contains(format, "a/p") || strings.Contains(format, "A/P") }