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Cell reference arguments are column, row whereas vector arguments are row, column Just a little more explanation to avoid confusion (as the arguments are reversed for each of the functions which we access on the same line. |
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benchmarks | ||
cmake | ||
docs | ||
include/xlnt | ||
logo | ||
samples | ||
source | ||
tests | ||
third-party/libstudxml | ||
.appveyor.yml | ||
.clang-format | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
.travis.yml | ||
AUTHORS.md | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
LICENSE.md | ||
README.md | ||
SUMMARY.md |
Introduction
xlnt is a modern C++ library for manipulating spreadsheets in memory and reading/writing them from/to XLSX files as described in ECMA 376 4th edition. xlnt is currently under active feature development and is on track for the version 1.0 release in the next few weeks. Until then, the API could have significant changes. For a high-level summary of what you can do with this library, see the feature list.
Example
Including xlnt in your project, creating a new spreadsheet, and saving it as "example.xlsx"
#include <xlnt/xlnt.hpp>
int main()
{
xlnt::workbook wb;
xlnt::worksheet ws = wb.active_sheet();
ws.cell("A1").value(5);
ws.cell("B2").value("string data");
ws.cell("C3").formula("=RAND()");
ws.merge_cells("C3:C4");
ws.freeze_panes("B2");
wb.save("example.xlsx");
return 0;
}
// compile with -std=c++14 -Ixlnt/include -Lxlnt/lib -lxlnt
Documentation
Documentation for the current release of xlnt is available here.
License
xlnt is released to the public for free under the terms of the MIT License. See LICENSE.md for the full text of the license and the licenses of xlnt's third-party dependencies. LICENSE.md should be distributed alongside any assemblies that use xlnt in source or compiled form.