Xsv is a fast, lightweight, pure Ruby parser for Office Open XML spreadsheet files (commonly known as Excel or .xlsx files). It strives to be minimal in the sense that it provides nothing a CSV reader wouldn't, meaning it only deals with minimal formatting and cannot create or modify documents.
Xsv is designed for worksheets with a single table of data, optionally with a header row. It only casts values to basic Ruby types (integer, float, date and time) and does not deal with most formatting or more advanced functionality. It strives for fast processing of large worksheets with minimal RAM and CPU consumption and has been in production use since the earliest versions.
Xsv stands for 'Excel Separated Values', because Excel just gets in the way.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'xsv'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install xsv
Xsv targets ruby >= 2.5 and has a just single dependency, rubyzip
. It has been
tested successfully with MRI, JRuby, and TruffleRuby. Due to the lack of
native extensions should work well in multi-threaded environments or in Ractor
when that becomes stable.
Xsv has two modes of operation. By default, it returns an array for each row in the sheet:
x = Xsv::Workbook.open("sheet.xlsx")
sheet = x.sheets[0]
# Iterate over rows
sheet.each_row do |row|
row # => ["header1", "header2"], etc.
end
# Access row by index (zero-based)
sheet[1] # => ["value1", "value2"]
Alternatively, it can load the headers from the first row and return a hash for every row:
x = Xsv::Workbook.open("sheet.xlsx")
sheet = x.sheets[0]
sheet.mode # => :array
# Parse headers and switch to hash mode
sheet.parse_headers!
sheet.mode # => :hash
sheet.each_row do |row|
row # => {"header1" => "value1", "header2" => "value2"}, etc.
end
sheet[1] # => {"header1" => "value1", "header2" => "value2"}
Be aware that hash mode will lead to unpredictable results if the worksheet has multiple columns with the same header.
Xsv::Workbook.open
accepts a filename, or an IO or String containing a workbook. Optionally, you can pass a block
which will be called with the workbook as parameter, like File#open
.
Xsv::Sheet
implements Enumerable
so you can call methods like #first
,
#filter
/#select
, and #map
on it.
The sheets can be accessed by index or by name:
x = Xsv::Workbook.open("sheet.xlsx")
sheet = x.sheets[0] # gets sheet by index
sheet = x.sheets_by_name('Name').first # gets sheet by name
To get all the sheets names:
sheet_names = x.sheets.map(&:name)
Since Xsv treats worksheets like csv files it makes certain assumptions about your sheet:
-
In array mode, your data starts on the first row
-
In hash mode the first row of the sheet contains headers, followed by rows of data
If your data or headers do not start on the first row of the sheet you can tell Xsv to skip a number of rows:
workbook.sheets[0].row_skip = 1
All operations will honour this offset, making the skipped rows unreachable.
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake test
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Xsv is faster and more memory efficient than other gems because of two things: it only reads values from Excel files and it's based on a SAX-based parser instead of a DOM-based parser. If you want to read some background on this, check out my blog post on Efficient XML parsing in Ruby.
Jamie Schembri did a shootout of Xsv against various other Excel reading gems comparing parsing speed, memory usage, and allocations. Check our his blog post: Faster Excel parsing in Ruby.
Pre-1.0, Xsv used a native extension for XML parsing, which was faster than the native Ruby one (on MRI). But even with the native Ruby version generally Xsv still outperforms other Ruby parsing gems.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/martijn/xsv. Please provide an .xlsx file with a minimum breaking example that is acceptable for inclusion in the source code repository.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.