writing to existing workbook using xlwt [closed]
Here's some sample code I used recently to do just that.
It opens a workbook, goes down the rows, if a condition is met it writes some data in the row. Finally it saves the modified file.
from xlutils.copy import copy # http://pypi.python.org/pypi/xlutils
from xlrd import open_workbook # http://pypi.python.org/pypi/xlrd
START_ROW = 297 # 0 based (subtract 1 from excel row number)
col_age_november = 1
col_summer1 = 2
col_fall1 = 3
rb = open_workbook(file_path,formatting_info=True)
r_sheet = rb.sheet_by_index(0) # read only copy to introspect the file
wb = copy(rb) # a writable copy (I can't read values out of this, only write to it)
w_sheet = wb.get_sheet(0) # the sheet to write to within the writable copy
for row_index in range(START_ROW, r_sheet.nrows):
age_nov = r_sheet.cell(row_index, col_age_november).value
if age_nov == 3:
#If 3, then Combo I 3-4 year old for both summer1 and fall1
w_sheet.write(row_index, col_summer1, 'Combo I 3-4 year old')
w_sheet.write(row_index, col_fall1, 'Combo I 3-4 year old')
wb.save(file_path + '.out' + os.path.splitext(file_path)[-1])
You need xlutils.copy
. Try something like this:
from xlutils.copy import copy
w = copy('book1.xls')
w.get_sheet(0).write(0,0,"foo")
w.save('book2.xls')
Keep in mind you can't overwrite cells by default as noted in this question.
The code example is exactly this:
from xlutils.copy import copy
from xlrd import *
w = copy(open_workbook('book1.xls'))
w.get_sheet(0).write(0,0,"foo")
w.save('book2.xls')
You'll need to create book1.xls to test, but you get the idea.
openpyxl
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import openpyxl
file = 'sample.xlsx'
wb = openpyxl.load_workbook(filename=file)
# Seleciono la Hoja
ws = wb.get_sheet_by_name('Hoja1')
# Valores a Insertar
ws['A3'] = 42
ws['A4'] = 142
# Escribirmos en el Fichero
wb.save(file)