Recently, Andrea Gavana, developer of the agw library in the wxPython code base, released his newest widget: XLSGrid. It’s purpose is to faithfully reproduce the appearance of a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet (one worksheet per every instance of XLSGrid). This widget is based on wx.grid.PyGridTableBase and wx.grid.PyGridCellRenderer and requires xlrd. Andrea also recommends using Mark Hammond’s PyWin32 module or the widget’s formatting abilities will be very limited. If you’d like to read the full announcement, just go here.

If you grab the download from the wxPython group, you’ll get three files:

Example_1.xls

xlsgrid.py

XLSGridDemo.py

The first is an example Microsoft Excel file, the second is the widget file itself and the third is a handy demo. If you run the demo and notice the following error in your command window, then you need to download the latest agw stuff from the wxPython SVN repository:

Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Users\Mike\Desktop\xls\xlsgrid.py", line 1657, in OnMouseMotion self.tip_window = TransientPopup(window, comment, wx.GetMousePosition()) File "C:\Users\Mike\Desktop\xls\xlsgrid.py", line 1853, in __init__ self.DoShowNow() AttributeError: 'TransientPopup' object has no attribute 'DoShowNow'

Now we’ll take a moment and create a simple Excel file and our own little demo. Let’s get coding!

Note: You can download the Excel file at the end of this post.

import wx import xlrd import xlsgrid as XG ######################################################################## class MyForm(wx.Frame): #---------------------------------------------------------------------- def __init__(self): wx.Frame.__init__(self, None, wx.ID_ANY, "Tutorial") panel = wx.Panel(self, wx.ID_ANY) filename = "demo.xls" book = xlrd.open_workbook(filename, formatting_info=1) sheetname = "Sheet1" sheet = book.sheet_by_name(sheetname) rows, cols = sheet.nrows, sheet.ncols comments, texts = XG.ReadExcelCOM(filename, sheetname, rows, cols) xlsGrid = XG.XLSGrid(panel) xlsGrid.PopulateGrid(book, sheet, texts, comments) sizer = wx.BoxSizer(wx.VERTICAL) sizer.Add(xlsGrid, 1, wx.EXPAND, 5) panel.SetSizer(sizer) #---------------------------------------------------------------------- # Run the program if __name__ == "__main__": app = wx.App(False) frame = MyForm().Show() app.MainLoop()

If you run the code above, you should see something like this:

The only problem I had when I ran this was that if the Excel file had no comments whatsoever, I’d get the following traceback:

pywintypes.com_error: (-2147352567, 'Exception occurred.', (0, 'Microsoft Excel', 'No cells were found.', 'C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft Office\\Office10\\1033\\xlmain10.chm', 0, -2146827284), None) File "E:\My Documents\My Dropbox\Scripts\wx tutorials\XLSGrid-tut\mvp_xlsDemo.py", line 32, in frame = MyForm().Show() File "E:\My Documents\My Dropbox\Scripts\wx tutorials\XLSGrid-tut\mvp_xlsDemo.py", line 19, in __init__ comments, texts = XG.ReadExcelCOM(filename, sheetname, rows, cols) File "E:\My Documents\My Dropbox\Scripts\wx tutorials\XLSGrid-tut\xlsgrid.py", line 475, in ReadExcelCOM comm_range = workbook.GetCommentsRange() File "E:\My Documents\My Dropbox\Scripts\wx tutorials\XLSGrid-tut\xlsgrid.py", line 535, in GetCommentsRange return self.sheet.Cells.SpecialCells(-4144) File "L:\Python25\Lib\site-packages\win32com\client\dynamic.py", line 3, in SpecialCells

Thus, this widget currently seems to require at least one comment to work as of version 0.2. Other than that, it works great. If you have a need to read and display Microsoft Excel files in your code (or you just want to learn some neat wx.grid tricks), you should go download this cool new widget!

Downloads