Write to StringIO object using Pandas Excelwriter?
For those not using xlsxwriter
as their engine=
for to_excel
here is a solution to use openpyxl
in memory:
in_memory_file = StringIO.StringIO()
xlw = pd.ExcelWriter('temp.xlsx', engine='openpyxl')
# ... do many .to_excel() thingies
xlw.book.save(in_memory_file)
# if you want to read it or stream to a client, don't forget this
in_memory_file.seek(0)
explanation: the ExcelWriter
wrapper class exposes the engines individual workbook through the .book
property. For openpyxl
you can then use the Workbook.save
method as usual!
Pandas expects a filename path to the ExcelWriter constructors although each of the writer engines support StringIO
. Perhaps that should be raised as a bug/feature request in Pandas.
In the meantime here is a workaround example using the Pandas xlsxwriter
engine:
import pandas as pd
import StringIO
io = StringIO.StringIO()
# Use a temp filename to keep pandas happy.
writer = pd.ExcelWriter('temp.xlsx', engine='xlsxwriter')
# Set the filename/file handle in the xlsxwriter.workbook object.
writer.book.filename = io
# Write the data frame to the StringIO object.
pd.DataFrame().to_excel(writer, sheet_name='Sheet1')
writer.save()
xlsx_data = io.getvalue()
Update: As of Pandas 0.17 it is now possible to do this more directly:
# Note, Python 2 example. For Python 3 use: output = io.BytesIO().
output = StringIO.StringIO()
# Use the StringIO object as the filehandle.
writer = pd.ExcelWriter(output, engine='xlsxwriter')
See also Saving the Dataframe output to a string in the XlsxWriter docs.
None of these were working from me. I had a view I wanted to return an excel workbook from in Django. I found my solution from the pandas documentation.
import io
bio = io.BytesIO()
writer = pd.ExcelWriter(bio, engine='xlsxwriter')
df.to_excel(writer, sheet_name='Sheet1')
writer.save()
bio.seek(0)
# BONUS CONTENT
# .. because I wanted to return from an api
response = HttpResponse(bio, content_type='application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet')
response['Content-Disposition'] = 'attachment; filename=myfile.xlsx'
return response # returned from a view here
Note, I used that value for content type because it was the mime type according to the mozzilla docs. From ".xlsx" in the following link. Replace as needed. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Basics_of_HTTP/MIME_types/Common_types
Glancing at the pandas.io.excel source looks like it shouldn't be too much of a problem if you don't mind using xlwt as your writer. The other engines may not be all that difficult either but xlwt jumps out as easy since its save method takes a stream or a filepath.
You need to initially pass in a filename just to make pandas happy as it checks the filename extension against the engine to make sure it's a supported format. But in the case of the xlwt engine, it just stuffs the filename into the object's path attribute and then uses it in the save method. If you change the path attribute to your stream, it'll happily save to that stream when you call the save method.
Here's an example:
import pandas as pd
import StringIO
import base64
df = pd.DataFrame.from_csv('http://moz.com/top500/domains/csv')
xlwt_writer = pd.io.excel.get_writer('xlwt')
my_writer = xlwt_writer('whatever.xls') #make pandas happy
xl_out = StringIO.StringIO()
my_writer.path = xl_out
df.to_excel(my_writer)
my_writer.save()
print base64.b64encode(xl_out.getvalue())
That's the quick, easy and slightly dirty way to do it. BTW... a cleaner way to do it is to subclass ExcelWriter (or one of it's existing subclasses, e.g. _XlwtWriter) -- but honestly there's so little involved in updating the path attribute, I voted to show you the easy way rather than go the slightly longer route.