Create report from excel template
Generate Excel Report with Excel files from templates.
Designer to create pdf and excel report layouts.
Generate Excel Report with Excel files from templates.
Excel report engine for Playwright with safe screenshot handling and parallel execution support
Designer to create pdf and excel report layouts. The reports can be generated with reportbro-lib (a Python package) on the server.
Parses the time data Excel report from Avanti into a JavaScript object.
Designer to create pdf and excel report layouts. The reports can be generated with reportbro-lib (a Python package) on the server.
Newman report Excel Report
Read `.xlsx` files in a web browser or in Node.js
Essential Javascript 2 Excel Export Library
ems advanced excel report v2.0.0.1 full source [extra quality]
Kendo UI for Angular Excel Export component
Base reporting library for istanbul
Write simple `*.xlsx` files in a browser or Node.js
TypeScript definitions for istanbul-lib-report
Node-Excel-Export
React Excel export helps you export and save data to Excel files and customize or filter the output. KendoReact Excel Export package
Local AI assistant: 80 tools (Gmail, Calendar, Drive, GitHub, Slack, browser, code, files), 38 agents, visual workflows (Studio, AWF, WebCraft). Install with `npm i -g nothumanallowed`, run with `nha ui`. Free tier built-in (Liara), no API key required. Y
Excel (XLSB/XLSX/XLSM/XLS/XML) and ODS spreadsheet parser and writer (extended to enable read/write of cell formats with xlsx files)
Generate .xlsx (Excel) files from templates built in Excel
A custom WebDriverIO reporter that generates JSON and HTML reports with timestamps, screenshots, and execution metadata.
excel-builder-vanilla types
Themes for stylized Vega and Vega-Lite visualizations.
Declarative excel reports based on axlsx.
Energon is a report engine written in ruby, creating advanced and reliable reports from templates.
A wrapper to send model reports using using spreadsheet and mail gem
Generates an excel report to verify before and after state of db data
A Ruby gem that integrates seamlessly with Ruby on Rails to generate Excel reports using a simple DSL. Features include streaming, styling, callbacks, and Rails helpers.
A Discord bot for reporting on QuakeWorld Team Fortress game servers
This tool allows you to generate quick and simple Excel reports based on the array of records returned by your ActiveRecord queries
This library generates diff reports of CSV files, using the diff capabilities of the CSV Diff gem. Unlike a standard diff that compares line by line, and is sensitive to the ordering of records, CSV-Diff identifies common lines by key field(s), and then compares the contents of the fields in each line. CSV-Diff Report takes the diff information calculated by CSV-Diff, and uses it to produce Excel, HTML, or text diff reports. It also provides a command-line tool (csvdiff) for generating these diff reports from CSV files. The csvdiff command-line tool supports both file and directory diffs. As directories may contain files of different formats, .csvdiff files can be used to match file names to file types, and specify the appropriate diff settings for each file type.
This library performs diffs of CSV data, or any table-like source. Unlike a standard diff that compares line by line, and is sensitive to the ordering of records, CSV-Diff identifies common lines by key field(s), and then compares the contents of the fields in each line. Data may be supplied in the form of CSV files, or as an array of arrays. The diff process provides a fine level of control over what to diff, and can optionally ignore certain types of changes (e.g. changes in position). CSV-Diff is particularly well suited to data in parent-child format. Parent- child data does not lend itself well to standard text diffs, as small changes in the organisation of the tree at an upper level can lead to big movements in the position of descendant records. By instead matching records by key, CSV-Diff avoids this issue, while still being able to detect changes in sibling order. This gem implements the core diff algorithm, and handles the loading and diffing of CSV files (or Arrays of Arrays). It also supports converting data in XML format into tabular form, so that it can then be processed like any other CSV or table-like source. It returns a CSVDiff object containing the details of differences in object form. This is useful for projects that need diff capability, but want to handle the reporting or actioning of differences themselves. For a pre-built diff reporting capability, see the csv-diff-report gem, which provides a command-line tool for generating diff reports in HTML, Excel, or text formats.
# Excel to Code [](https://travis-ci.org/tamc/excel_to_code) excel_to_c - roughly translate some Excel files into C. excel_to_ruby - roughly translate some Excel files into Ruby. This allows spreadsheets to be: 1. Embedded in other programs, such as web servers, or optimisers 2. Without depending on any Microsoft code For example, running [these commands](examples/simple/compile.sh) turns [this spreadsheet](examples/simple/simple.xlsx) into [this Ruby code](examples/simple/ruby/simple.rb) or [this C code](examples/simple/c/simple.c). # Install Requires Ruby. Install by: gem install excel_to_code # Run To just have a go: excel_to_c <excel_file_name> This will produce a file called excelspreadsheet.c For a more complex spreadsheet: excel_to_c --compile --run-tests --settable <name of input worksheet> --prune-except <name of output worksheet> <excel file name> See the full list of options: excel_to_c --help # Gotchas, limitations and bugs 0. No custom functions, no macros for generating results 1. Results are cached. So you must call reset(), then set values, then read values. 2. It must be possible to replace INDIRECT and OFFSET formula with standard references at compile time (e.g., INDIRECT("A"&"1") is fine, INDIRECT(userInput&"3") is not. 3. Doesn't implement all functions. [See which functions are implemented](docs/Which_functions_are_implemented.md). 4. Doesn't implement references that involve range unions and lists (but does implement standard ranges) 5. Sometimes gives cells as being empty, when excel would give the cell as having a numeric value of zero 6. The generated C version does not multithread and will give bad results if you try. 7. The generated code uses floating point, rather than fully precise arithmetic, so results can differ slightly. 8. The generated code uses the sprintf approach to rounding (even-odd) rather than excel's 0.5 rounds away from zero. 9. Ranges like this: Sheet1!A10:Sheet1!B20 and 3D ranges don't work. Report bugs: <https://github.com/tamc/excel_to_code/issues> # Changelog See [Changes](CHANGES.md). # License See [License](LICENSE.md) # Hacking Source code: <https://github.com/tamc/excel_to_code> Documentation: * [Installing from source](docs/installing_from_source.md) * [Structure of this project](docs/structure_of_this_project.md) * [How does the calculation work](docs/how_does_the_calculation_work.md) * [How to fix parsing errors](docs/How_to_fix_parsing_errors.md) * [How to implement a new Excel function](docs/How_to_add_a_missing_function.md) Some notes on how Excel works under the hood: * [The Excel file structure](docs/implementation/excel_file_structure.md) * [Relationships](docs/implementation/relationships.md) * [Workbooks](docs/implementation/workbook.md) * [Worksheets](docs/implementation/worksheets.md) * [Cells](docs/implementation/cell.md) * [Tables](docs/implementation/tables.md) * [Shared Strings](docs/implementation/shared_strings.md) * [Array formulae](docs/implementation/array_formulae.md)
ANTLR, ANother Tool for Language Recognition, is a language tool that provides a framework for constructing recognizers, interpreters, compilers, and translators from grammatical descriptions containing actions in a variety of target languages. ANTLR provides excellent support for tree construction, tree walking, translation, error recovery, and error reporting. There are currently about 5,000 ANTLR source downloads a month.
The Customization module is a versatile Ruby library designed to enhance your text formatting capabilities in the terminal. This module empowers you to add style, color, and effects to text, making it an excellent tool for creating visually appealing command-line applications, generating stylish reports, or simply adding a touch of flair to your terminal outputs.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.