Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Cell - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


Sections
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION AUTHOR COPYRIGHT
NAME
    Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Cell - A class for Cell data and formatting.

SYNOPSIS
    See the documentation for Spreadsheet::ParseExcel.

DESCRIPTION
    This module is used in conjunction with Spreadsheet::ParseExcel. See the
    documentation for Spreadsheet::ParseExcel.

Methods
    The following Cell methods are available:

        $cell->value()
        $cell->unformatted()
        $cell->get_format()
        $cell->type()
        $cell->encoding()
        $cell->is_merged()
        $cell->get_rich_text()
        $cell->get_hyperlink()

  value()
    The "value()" method returns the formatted value of the cell.

        my $value = $cell->value();

    Formatted in this sense refers to the numeric format of the cell value.
    For example a number such as 40177 might be formatted as 40,117,
    40117.000 or even as the date 2009/12/30.

    If the cell doesn't contain a numeric format then the formatted and
    unformatted cell values are the same, see the "unformatted()" method
    below.

    For a defined $cell the "value()" method will always return a value.

    In the case of a cell with formatting but no numeric or string contents
    the method will return the empty string ''.

  unformatted()
    The "unformatted()" method returns the unformatted value of the cell.

        my $unformatted = $cell->unformatted();

    Returns the cell value without a numeric format. See the "value()"
    method above.

  get_format()
    The "get_format()" method returns the Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Format
    object for the cell.

        my $format = $cell->get_format();

    If a user defined format hasn't been applied to the cell then the
    default cell format is returned.

  type()
    The "type()" method returns the type of cell such as Text, Numeric or
    Date. If the type was detected as Numeric, and the Cell Format matches
    "m{^[dmy][-\\/dmy]*$}i", it will be treated as a Date type.

        my $type = $cell->type();

    See also "Dates and Time in Excel".

  encoding()
    The "encoding()" method returns the character encoding of the cell.

        my $encoding = $cell->encoding();

    This method is only of interest to developers. In general
    Spreadsheet::ParseExcel will return all character strings in UTF-8
    regardless of the encoding used by Excel.

    The "encoding()" method returns one of the following values:

    *   0: Unknown format. This shouldn't happen. In the default case the
        format should be 1.

    *   1: 8bit ASCII or single byte UTF-16. This indicates that the
        characters are encoded in a single byte. In Excel 95 and earlier
        This usually meant ASCII or an international variant. In Excel 97 it
        refers to a compressed UTF-16 character string where all of the high
        order bytes are 0 and are omitted to save space.

    *   2: UTF-16BE.

    *   3: Native encoding. In Excel 95 and earlier this encoding was used
        to represent multi-byte character encodings such as SJIS.

  is_merged()
    The "is_merged()" method returns true if the cell is merged.

        my $is_merged = $cell->is_merged();

    Returns "undef" if the property isn't set.

  get_rich_text()
    The "get_rich_text()" method returns an array ref of font information
    about each string block in a "rich", i.e. multi-format, string.

        my $rich_text = $cell->get_rich_text();

    The return value is an arrayref of arrayrefs in the form:

        [
            [ $start_position, $font_object ],
             ...,
        ]

    Returns undef if the property isn't set.

  get_hyperlink()
    If a cell contains a hyperlink, the "get_hyperlink()" method returns an
    array ref of information about it.

    A cell can contain at most one hyperlink. If it does, it contains no
    other value.

    Otherwise, it returns undef;

    The array contains:

    *   0: Description (what's displayed); undef if not present

    *   1: Link, converted to an appropriate URL - Note: Relative links are
        based on the input file. %REL% is used if the input file is unknown
        (e.g. a file handle or scalar)

    *   2: Target - target frame (or undef if none)

Dates and Time in Excel
    Dates and times in Excel are represented by real numbers, for example
    "Jan 1 2001 12:30 PM" is represented by the number 36892.521.

    The integer part of the number stores the number of days since the epoch
    and the fractional part stores the percentage of the day.

    A date or time in Excel is just like any other number. The way in which
    it is displayed is controlled by the number format:

        Number format               $cell->value()            $cell->unformatted()
        =============               ==============            ==============
        'dd/mm/yy'                  '28/02/08'                39506.5
        'mm/dd/yy'                  '02/28/08'                39506.5
        'd-m-yyyy'                  '28-2-2008'               39506.5
        'dd/mm/yy hh:mm'            '28/02/08 12:00'          39506.5
        'd mmm yyyy'                '28 Feb 2008'             39506.5
        'mmm d yyyy hh:mm AM/PM'    'Feb 28 2008 12:00 PM'    39506.5

    The Spreadsheet::ParseExcel::Utility module contains a function called
    "ExcelLocaltime" which will convert between an unformatted Excel
    date/time number and a "localtime()" like array.

    For date conversions using the CPAN "DateTime" framework see
    DateTime::Format::Excel
    http://search.cpan.org/search?dist=DateTime-Format-Excel

AUTHOR
    Current maintainer 0.60+: Douglas Wilson dougw AT cpan.org

    Maintainer 0.40-0.59: John McNamara jmcnamara AT cpan.org

    Maintainer 0.27-0.33: Gabor Szabo szabgab AT cpan.org

    Original author: Kawai Takanori kwitknr AT cpan.org

COPYRIGHT
    Copyright (c) 2014 Douglas Wilson

    Copyright (c) 2009-2013 John McNamara

    Copyright (c) 2006-2008 Gabor Szabo

    Copyright (c) 2000-2006 Kawai Takanori

    All rights reserved.

    You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public
    License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file.


Generated by phpMan Author: Che Dong On Apache Under GNU General Public License - MarkDown Format
2026-05-23 05:18 @216.73.217.24 CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0 TransitionalValid CSS!

^_back to top