Cyber-Duck / laravel-excel by cyber-duck
forked from clemblanco/laravel-excel

This package provides a way to export an Eloquent collection as an excel file and to import a Excel file as an Eloquent collection.
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Package Data
Maintainer Username: cyber-duck
Maintainer Contact: support@cyber-duck.co.uk (Cyber-Duck)
Package Create Date: 2016-05-06
Package Last Update: 2023-09-08
Home Page: https://www.cyber-duck.co.uk
Language: PHP
License: MIT
Last Refreshed: 2024-04-15 15:06:39
Package Statistics
Total Downloads: 197,995
Monthly Downloads: 1,566
Daily Downloads: 63
Total Stars: 73
Total Watchers: 6
Total Forks: 25
Total Open Issues: 8

Laravel Excel

Latest Stable Version Total Downloads License

Exporting and importing Excel, CSV and OpenOffice stylesheets using Eloquent Collections and Query Builders in Laravel (5.* and 4.*).
It's based on box/spout.

Author: Simone Todaro
Contributors: Clément Blanco
Made with :heart: by Cyber-Duck Ltd

Installation
Export Excel
Import Excel
Different formats

Installation

Use composer to download the package:

composer require cyber-duck/laravel-excel

Laravel 4.x

Register the service provider in config/app.php by adding this line to providers array.

'providers' => [
	Cyberduck\LaravelExcel\ExcelLegacyServiceProvider::class,
],

Laravel < 5.5

Register the service provider in config/app.php by adding this line to providers array.

'providers' => [
	Cyberduck\LaravelExcel\ExcelServiceProvider::class,
],

Laravel 5.5

No need to register anything, since it used package auto discovery feature in Laravel 5.5.

Export Excel

Generate and download an excel file

Add

use Exporter;

to your controller.

In your controler function, create a new excel file from an Eloquent collection.

$excel = Exporter::make('Excel');
$excel->load($yourCollection);
return $excel->stream($yourFileName);

The exporter class is fluent, so you can also write

return Exporter::make('Excel')->load($yourCollection)->stream($yourFileName);

The exporter class supports Query builder objects as well

$query = DB:table('table')->select('col1','col2');
$excel = Exporter::make('Excel');
$excel->loadQuery($query);
return $excel->stream($yourFileName);

If you deal with big tables, you can set the chunk size to minimise the memory usage

$query = DB:table('table')->select('col1','col2');
$excel = Exporter::make('Excel');
$excel->loadQuery($query);
$excel->setChunk(1000);
return $excel->stream($yourFileName);

Generate and save an excel file

To save the excel file on the server, use the save method.

return $excel->save($yourFileNameWithPath);

Advanced usage

By default, every element of the Collection becomes a row and every unprotected field of the Model becomes a cell.
No headers row is printed.

To change this behaviour, create a class extending Cyberduck\LaravelExcel\Contract\SerialiserInterface, implement the methods getHeaderRow() and getData(Model $data) and set this class on the excel object usint setSerialiser().

$serialiser = new CustomSerialiser();
$excel = Exporter::make('Excel');
$excel->load($collection);
$excel->setSerialiser($serialiser);
return $excel->stream($yourFileName);

getHeaderRow() must return an array of string where every element is a cell of the first row. To not print the header row, simply return a void array [].
getData(Model $data) must return an array of string, and every elements is a cell.

Example

namespace App\Serialisers;

use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
use Cyberduck\LaravelExcel\Contract\SerialiserInterface;

class ExampleSerialiser implements SerialiserInterface
{
    public function getData($data)
    {
        $row = [];

        $row[] = $data->field1;
        $row[] = $data->relationship->field2;

        return $row;
    }

    public function getHeaderRow()
    {
        return [
            'Field 1',
            'Field 2 (from a relationship)'
        ];
    }
}

then set the serialiser before saving the file the collection.

$collection = Exporter::make('Excel')->load($yourCollection)->setSerialiser(new ExampleSerialiser)->stream($yourFileName);

Import Excel

Add

use Importer;

to your controller.

In your controler function, import an excel file.

$excel = Importer::make('Excel');
$excel->load($filepath);
$collection = $excel->getCollection();
//dd($collection)

The importer class is fluent, then you can also write

return Importer::make('Excel')->load($filepath)->getCollection();

Advanced usage

By default, every row of the first sheet of the excel file becomes an array and the final result is wraped in a Collection (Illuminate\Support\Collection).

To import a different sheet, use setSheet($sheet)

$excel = Importer::make('Excel');
$excel->load($filepath);
$excel->setSheet($sheetNumber);
$collection = $excel->getCollection();
//dd($collection)

To import each row in an Eloquent model, create a class extending Cyberduck\LaravelExcel\Contract\ParserInterface and implement the methods transform($row).

Example

namespace App\Parsers;

use App\Models\YourModel;
use Cyberduck\LaravelExcel\Contract\ParserInterface;

class ExampleParser implements ParserInterface
{
    public function transform($row, $header)
    {
        $model = new YourModel();
        $model->field1 = $row[0];
        $model->field2 = $row[1];
        // We can manunipulate the data before returning the object
        $model->field3 = new \Carbon($row[2]);
        return $model;
    }
}

then set the parser before creating the collection.

$collection = Importer::make('Excel')->load($filepath)->setParser(new ExampleParser)->getCollection();

Different formats

The package supports ODS and CSV files.

ODS

$exporter = Exporter::make('OpenOffice');
$importer = Importer::make('OpenOffice');

CSV

$exporter = Exporter::make('Csv');
$importer = Importer::make('Csv');