# This is where we handle translating css styles into openpyxl styles # and cascading those from parent to child in the dom. from openpyxl.cell import cell from openpyxl.styles import Font, Alignment, PatternFill, NamedStyle, Border, Side, Color from openpyxl.styles.fills import FILL_SOLID from openpyxl.styles.numbers import FORMAT_CURRENCY_USD_SIMPLE, FORMAT_PERCENTAGE from openpyxl.styles.colors import BLACK FORMAT_DATE_MMDDYYYY = 'mm/dd/yyyy' def colormap(color): """ Convenience for looking up known colors """ cmap = {'black': BLACK} return cmap.get(color, color) def style_string_to_dict(style): """ Convert css style string to a python dictionary """ def clean_split(string, delim): return (s.strip() for s in string.split(delim)) styles = [clean_split(s, ":") for s in style.split(";") if ":" in s] return dict(styles) def get_side(style, name): return {'border_style': style.get('border-{}-style'.format(name)), 'color': colormap(style.get('border-{}-color'.format(name)))} known_styles = {} def style_dict_to_named_style(style_dict, number_format=None): """ Change css style (stored in a python dictionary) to openpyxl NamedStyle """ style_and_format_string = str({ 'style_dict': style_dict, 'parent': style_dict.parent, 'number_format': number_format, }) if style_and_format_string not in known_styles: # Font font = Font(bold=style_dict.get('font-weight') == 'bold', color=style_dict.get_color('color', None), size=style_dict.get('font-size')) # Alignment alignment = Alignment(horizontal=style_dict.get('text-align', 'general'), vertical=style_dict.get('vertical-align'), wrap_text=style_dict.get('white-space', 'nowrap') == 'normal') # Fill bg_color = style_dict.get_color('background-color') fg_color = style_dict.get_color('foreground-color', Color()) fill_type = style_dict.get('fill-type') if bg_color and bg_color != 'transparent': fill = PatternFill(fill_type=fill_type or FILL_SOLID, start_color=bg_color, end_color=fg_color) else: fill = PatternFill() # Border border = Border(left=Side(**get_side(style_dict, 'left')), right=Side(**get_side(style_dict, 'right')), top=Side(**get_side(style_dict, 'top')), bottom=Side(**get_side(style_dict, 'bottom')), diagonal=Side(**get_side(style_dict, 'diagonal')), diagonal_direction=None, outline=Side(**get_side(style_dict, 'outline')), vertical=None, horizontal=None) name = 'Style {}'.format(len(known_styles) + 1) pyxl_style = NamedStyle(name=name, font=font, fill=fill, alignment=alignment, border=border, number_format=number_format) known_styles[style_and_format_string] = pyxl_style return known_styles[style_and_format_string] class StyleDict(dict): """ It's like a dictionary, but it looks for items in the parent dictionary """ def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): self.parent = kwargs.pop('parent', None) super(StyleDict, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) def __getitem__(self, item): if item in self: return super(StyleDict, self).__getitem__(item) elif self.parent: return self.parent[item] else: raise KeyError('{} not found'.format(item)) def __hash__(self): return hash(tuple([(k, self.get(k)) for k in self._keys()])) # Yielding the keys avoids creating unnecessary data structures # and happily works with both python2 and python3 where the # .keys() method is a dictionary_view in python3 and a list in python2. def _keys(self): yielded = set() for k in self.keys(): yielded.add(k) yield k if self.parent: for k in self.parent._keys(): if k not in yielded: yielded.add(k) yield k def get(self, k, d=None): try: return self[k] except KeyError: return d def get_color(self, k, d=None): """ Strip leading # off colors if necessary """ color = self.get(k, d) if hasattr(color, 'startswith') and color.startswith('#'): color = color[1:] if len(color) == 3: # Premailers reduces colors like #00ff00 to #0f0, openpyxl doesn't like that color = ''.join(2 * c for c in color) return color class Element(object): """ Our base class for representing an html element along with a cascading style. The element is created along with a parent so that the StyleDict that we store can point to the parent's StyleDict. """ def __init__(self, element, parent=None): self.element = element self.number_format = None parent_style = parent.style_dict if parent else None self.style_dict = StyleDict(style_string_to_dict(element.get('style', '')), parent=parent_style) self._style_cache = None def style(self): """ Turn the css styles for this element into an openpyxl NamedStyle. """ if not self._style_cache: self._style_cache = style_dict_to_named_style(self.style_dict, number_format=self.number_format) return self._style_cache def get_dimension(self, dimension_key): """ Extracts the dimension from the style dict of the Element and returns it as a float. """ dimension = self.style_dict.get(dimension_key) if dimension: if dimension[-2:] in ['px', 'em', 'pt', 'in', 'cm']: dimension = dimension[:-2] dimension = float(dimension) return dimension class Table(Element): """ The concrete implementations of Elements are semantically named for the types of elements we are interested in. This defines a very concrete tree structure for html tables that we expect to deal with. I prefer this compared to allowing Element to have an arbitrary number of children and dealing with an abstract element tree. """ def __init__(self, table): """ takes an html table object (from lxml) """ super(Table, self).__init__(table) table_head = table.find('thead') self.head = TableHead(table_head, parent=self) if table_head is not None else None table_body = table.find('tbody') self.body = TableBody(table_body if table_body is not None else table, parent=self) class TableHead(Element): """ This class maps to the `