Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Workbook(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Workbook(3pm) |
Return the number of the active (open) worksheet (at the time the workbook was saved. May return undef.
Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Workbook - A class for Workbooks.
See the documentation for Spreadsheet::ParseExcel.
This module is used in conjunction with Spreadsheet::ParseExcel. See the documentation for Spreadsheet::ParseExcel.
The following Workbook methods are available:
$workbook->worksheets() $workbook->worksheet() $workbook->worksheet_count() $workbook->get_filename() $workbook->get_print_areas() $workbook->get_print_titles() $workbook->using_1904_date()
The "worksheets()" method returns an array of Worksheet objects. This was most commonly used to iterate over the worksheets in a workbook:
for my $worksheet ( $workbook->worksheets() ) { ... }
The "worksheet()" method returns a single "Worksheet" object using either its name or index:
$worksheet = $workbook->worksheet('Sheet1'); $worksheet = $workbook->worksheet(0);
Returns "undef" if the sheet name or index doesn't exist.
The "worksheet_count()" method returns the number of Woksheet objects in the Workbook.
my $worksheet_count = $workbook->worksheet_count();
The "get_filename()" method returns the name of the Excel file of "undef" if the data was read from a filehandle rather than a file.
my $filename = $workbook->get_filename();
The "get_print_areas()" method returns an array ref of print areas.
my $print_areas = $workbook->get_print_areas();
Each print area is as follows:
[ $start_row, $start_col, $end_row, $end_col ]
Returns undef if there are no print areas.
The "get_print_titles()" method returns an array ref of print title hash refs.
my $print_titles = $workbook->get_print_titles();
Each print title array ref is as follows:
{ Row => [ $start_row, $end_row ], Column => [ $start_col, $end_col ], }
Returns undef if there are no print titles.
The "using_1904_date()" method returns true if the Excel file is using the 1904 date epoch instead of the 1900 epoch.
my $using_1904_date = $workbook->using_1904_date(); The Windows version of Excel generally uses the 1900 epoch while the Mac version of Excel generally uses the 1904 epoch.
Returns 0 if the 1900 epoch is in use.
Current maintainer 0.60+: Douglas Wilson dougw@cpan.org
Maintainer 0.40-0.59: John McNamara jmcnamara@cpan.org
Maintainer 0.27-0.33: Gabor Szabo szabgab@cpan.org
Original author: Kawai Takanori kwitknr@cpan.org
Copyright (c) 2014 Douglas Wilson
Copyright (c) 2009-2013 John McNamara
Copyright (c) 2006-2008 Gabor Szabo
Copyright (c) 2000-2006 Kawai Takanori
All rights reserved.
You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file.
2023-12-30 | perl v5.36.0 |