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- package xlsx
- import (
- "errors"
- "fmt"
- "math"
- "strconv"
- "strings"
- )
- // Do not edit these attributes once this struct is created. This struct should only be created by
- // parseFullNumberFormatString() from a number format string. If the format for a cell needs to change, change
- // the number format string and getNumberFormat() will invalidate the old struct and re-parse the string.
- type parsedNumberFormat struct {
- numFmt string
- isTimeFormat bool
- negativeFormatExpectsPositive bool
- positiveFormat *formatOptions
- negativeFormat *formatOptions
- zeroFormat *formatOptions
- textFormat *formatOptions
- parseEncounteredError *error
- }
- type formatOptions struct {
- isTimeFormat bool
- showPercent bool
- fullFormatString string
- reducedFormatString string
- prefix string
- suffix string
- }
- // FormatValue returns a value, and possibly an error condition
- // from a Cell. If it is possible to apply a format to the cell
- // value, it will do so, if not then an error will be returned, along
- // with the raw value of the Cell.
- //
- // This is the documentation of the "General" Format in the Office Open XML spec:
- //
- // Numbers
- // The application shall attempt to display the full number up to 11 digits (inc. decimal point). If the number is too
- // large*, the application shall attempt to show exponential format. If the number has too many significant digits, the
- // display shall be truncated. The optimal method of display is based on the available cell width. If the number cannot
- // be displayed using any of these formats in the available width, the application shall show "#" across the width of
- // the cell.
- //
- // Conditions for switching to exponential format:
- // 1. The cell value shall have at least five digits for xE-xx
- // 2. If the exponent is bigger than the size allowed, a floating point number cannot fit, so try exponential notation.
- // 3. Similarly, for negative exponents, check if there is space for even one (non-zero) digit in floating point format**.
- // 4. Finally, if there isn't room for all of the significant digits in floating point format (for a negative exponent),
- // exponential format shall display more digits if the exponent is less than -3. (The 3 is because E-xx takes 4
- // characters, and the leading 0 in floating point takes only 1 character. Thus, for an exponent less than -3, there is
- // more than 3 additional leading 0's, more than enough to compensate for the size of the E-xx.)
- //
- // Floating point rule:
- // For general formatting in cells, max overall length for cell display is 11, not including negative sign, but includes
- // leading zeros and decimal separator.***
- //
- // Added Notes:
- // * "If the number is too large" can also mean "if the number has more than 11 digits", so greater than or equal to
- // 1e11 and less than 1e-9.
- // ** Means that you should switch to scientific if there would be 9 zeros after the decimal (the decimal and first zero
- // count against the 11 character limit), so less than 1e9.
- // *** The way this is written, you can get numbers that are more than 11 characters because the golang Float fmt
- // does not support adjusting the precision while not padding with zeros, while also not switching to scientific
- // notation too early.
- func (fullFormat *parsedNumberFormat) FormatValue(cell *Cell) (string, error) {
- switch cell.cellType {
- case CellTypeError:
- // The error type is what XLSX uses in error cases such as when formulas are invalid.
- // There will be text in the cell's value that can be shown, something ugly like #NAME? or #######
- return cell.Value, nil
- case CellTypeBool:
- if cell.Value == "0" {
- return "FALSE", nil
- } else if cell.Value == "1" {
- return "TRUE", nil
- } else {
- return cell.Value, errors.New("invalid value in bool cell")
- }
- case CellTypeString:
- fallthrough
- case CellTypeInline:
- fallthrough
- case CellTypeStringFormula:
- textFormat := cell.parsedNumFmt.textFormat
- // This switch statement is only for String formats
- switch textFormat.reducedFormatString {
- case builtInNumFmt[builtInNumFmtIndex_GENERAL]: // General is literally "general"
- return cell.Value, nil
- case builtInNumFmt[builtInNumFmtIndex_STRING]: // String is "@"
- return textFormat.prefix + cell.Value + textFormat.suffix, nil
- case "":
- // If cell is not "General" and there is not an "@" symbol in the format, then the cell's value is not
- // used when determining what to display. It would be completely legal to have a format of "Error"
- // for strings, and all values that are not numbers would show up as "Error". In that case, this code would
- // have a prefix of "Error" and a reduced format string of "" (empty string).
- return textFormat.prefix + textFormat.suffix, nil
- default:
- return cell.Value, errors.New("invalid or unsupported format, unsupported string format")
- }
- case CellTypeDate:
- // These are dates that are stored in date format instead of being stored as numbers with a format to turn them
- // into a date string.
- return cell.Value, nil
- case CellTypeNumeric:
- return fullFormat.formatNumericCell(cell)
- default:
- return cell.Value, errors.New("unknown cell type")
- }
- }
- func (fullFormat *parsedNumberFormat) formatNumericCell(cell *Cell) (string, error) {
- rawValue := strings.TrimSpace(cell.Value)
- // If there wasn't a value in the cell, it shouldn't have been marked as Numeric.
- // It's better to support this case though.
- if rawValue == "" {
- return "", nil
- }
- if fullFormat.isTimeFormat {
- return fullFormat.parseTime(rawValue, cell.date1904)
- }
- var numberFormat *formatOptions
- floatVal, floatErr := strconv.ParseFloat(rawValue, 64)
- if floatErr != nil {
- return rawValue, floatErr
- }
- // Choose the correct format. There can be different formats for positive, negative, and zero numbers.
- // Excel only uses the zero format if the value is literally zero, even if the number is so small that it shows
- // up as "0" when the positive format is used.
- if floatVal > 0 {
- numberFormat = fullFormat.positiveFormat
- } else if floatVal < 0 {
- // If format string specified a different format for negative numbers, then the number should be made positive
- // before getting formatted. The format string itself will contain formatting that denotes a negative number and
- // this formatting will end up in the prefix or suffix. Commonly if there is a negative format specified, the
- // number will get surrounded by parenthesis instead of showing it with a minus sign.
- if fullFormat.negativeFormatExpectsPositive {
- floatVal = math.Abs(floatVal)
- }
- numberFormat = fullFormat.negativeFormat
- } else {
- numberFormat = fullFormat.zeroFormat
- }
- // When showPercent is true, multiply the number by 100.
- // The percent sign will be in the prefix or suffix already, so it does not need to be added in this function.
- // The number format itself will be the same as any other number format once the value is multiplied by 100.
- if numberFormat.showPercent {
- floatVal = 100 * floatVal
- }
- // Only the most common format strings are supported here.
- // Eventually this switch needs to be replaced with a more general solution.
- // Some of these "supported" formats should have thousand separators, but don't get them since Go fmt
- // doesn't have a way to request thousands separators.
- // The only things that should be supported here are in the array formattingCharacters,
- // everything else has been stripped out before and will be placed in the prefix or suffix.
- // The formatting characters can have non-formatting characters mixed in with them and those should be maintained.
- // However, at this time we fail to parse those formatting codes and they get replaced with "General"
- var formattedNum string
- switch numberFormat.reducedFormatString {
- case builtInNumFmt[builtInNumFmtIndex_GENERAL]: // General is literally "general"
- // prefix, showPercent, and suffix cannot apply to the general format
- // The logic for showing numbers when the format is "general" is much more complicated than the rest of these.
- generalFormatted, err := generalNumericScientific(cell.Value, true)
- if err != nil {
- return rawValue, nil
- }
- return generalFormatted, nil
- case builtInNumFmt[builtInNumFmtIndex_STRING]: // String is "@"
- formattedNum = cell.Value
- case builtInNumFmt[builtInNumFmtIndex_INT], "#,##0": // Int is "0"
- // Previously this case would cast to int and print with %d, but that will not round the value correctly.
- formattedNum = fmt.Sprintf("%.0f", floatVal)
- case "0.0", "#,##0.0":
- formattedNum = fmt.Sprintf("%.1f", floatVal)
- case builtInNumFmt[builtInNumFmtIndex_FLOAT], "#,##0.00": // Float is "0.00"
- formattedNum = fmt.Sprintf("%.2f", floatVal)
- case "0.000", "#,##0.000":
- formattedNum = fmt.Sprintf("%.3f", floatVal)
- case "0.0000", "#,##0.0000":
- formattedNum = fmt.Sprintf("%.4f", floatVal)
- case "0.00e+00", "##0.0e+0":
- formattedNum = fmt.Sprintf("%e", floatVal)
- case "":
- // Do nothing.
- default:
- return rawValue, nil
- }
- return numberFormat.prefix + formattedNum + numberFormat.suffix, nil
- }
- func generalNumericScientific(value string, allowScientific bool) (string, error) {
- if strings.TrimSpace(value) == "" {
- return "", nil
- }
- f, err := strconv.ParseFloat(value, 64)
- if err != nil {
- return value, err
- }
- if allowScientific {
- absF := math.Abs(f)
- // When using General format, numbers that are less than 1e-9 (0.000000001) and greater than or equal to
- // 1e11 (100,000,000,000) should be shown in scientific notation.
- // Numbers less than the number after zero, are assumed to be zero.
- if (absF >= math.SmallestNonzeroFloat64 && absF < minNonScientificNumber) || absF >= maxNonScientificNumber {
- return strconv.FormatFloat(f, 'E', -1, 64), nil
- }
- }
- // This format (fmt="f", prec=-1) will prevent padding with zeros and will never switch to scientific notation.
- // However, it will show more than 11 characters for very precise numbers, and this cannot be changed.
- // You could also use fmt="g", prec=11, which doesn't pad with zeros and allows the correct precision,
- // but it will use scientific notation on numbers less than 1e-4. That value is hardcoded in Go and cannot be
- // configured or disabled.
- return strconv.FormatFloat(f, 'f', -1, 64), nil
- }
- // Format strings are a little strange to compare because empty string needs to be taken as general, and general needs
- // to be compared case insensitively.
- func compareFormatString(fmt1, fmt2 string) bool {
- if fmt1 == fmt2 {
- return true
- }
- if fmt1 == "" || strings.EqualFold(fmt1, "general") {
- fmt1 = "general"
- }
- if fmt2 == "" || strings.EqualFold(fmt2, "general") {
- fmt2 = "general"
- }
- return fmt1 == fmt2
- }
- func parseFullNumberFormatString(numFmt string) *parsedNumberFormat {
- parsedNumFmt := &parsedNumberFormat{
- numFmt: numFmt,
- }
- if isTimeFormat(numFmt) {
- // Time formats cannot have multiple groups separated by semicolons, there is only one format.
- // Strings are unaffected by the time format.
- parsedNumFmt.isTimeFormat = true
- parsedNumFmt.textFormat, _ = parseNumberFormatSection("general")
- return parsedNumFmt
- }
- var fmtOptions []*formatOptions
- formats, err := splitFormatOnSemicolon(numFmt)
- if err == nil {
- for _, formatSection := range formats {
- parsedFormat, err := parseNumberFormatSection(formatSection)
- if err != nil {
- // If an invalid number section is found, fall back to general
- parsedFormat = fallbackErrorFormat
- parsedNumFmt.parseEncounteredError = &err
- }
- fmtOptions = append(fmtOptions, parsedFormat)
- }
- } else {
- fmtOptions = append(fmtOptions, fallbackErrorFormat)
- parsedNumFmt.parseEncounteredError = &err
- }
- if len(fmtOptions) > 4 {
- fmtOptions = []*formatOptions{fallbackErrorFormat}
- err = errors.New("invalid number format, too many format sections")
- parsedNumFmt.parseEncounteredError = &err
- }
- if len(fmtOptions) == 1 {
- // If there is only one option, it is used for all
- parsedNumFmt.positiveFormat = fmtOptions[0]
- parsedNumFmt.negativeFormat = fmtOptions[0]
- parsedNumFmt.zeroFormat = fmtOptions[0]
- if strings.Contains(fmtOptions[0].fullFormatString, "@") {
- parsedNumFmt.textFormat = fmtOptions[0]
- } else {
- parsedNumFmt.textFormat, _ = parseNumberFormatSection("general")
- }
- } else if len(fmtOptions) == 2 {
- // If there are two formats, the first is used for positive and zeros, the second gets used as a negative format,
- // and strings are not formatted.
- // When negative numbers now have their own format, they should become positive before having the format applied.
- // The format will contain a negative sign if it is desired, but they may be colored red or wrapped in
- // parenthesis instead.
- parsedNumFmt.negativeFormatExpectsPositive = true
- parsedNumFmt.positiveFormat = fmtOptions[0]
- parsedNumFmt.negativeFormat = fmtOptions[1]
- parsedNumFmt.zeroFormat = fmtOptions[0]
- parsedNumFmt.textFormat, _ = parseNumberFormatSection("general")
- } else if len(fmtOptions) == 3 {
- // If there are three formats, the first is used for positive, the second gets used as a negative format,
- // the third is for negative, and strings are not formatted.
- parsedNumFmt.negativeFormatExpectsPositive = true
- parsedNumFmt.positiveFormat = fmtOptions[0]
- parsedNumFmt.negativeFormat = fmtOptions[1]
- parsedNumFmt.zeroFormat = fmtOptions[2]
- parsedNumFmt.textFormat, _ = parseNumberFormatSection("general")
- } else {
- // With four options, the first is positive, the second is negative, the third is zero, and the fourth is strings
- // Negative numbers should be still become positive before having the negative formatting applied.
- parsedNumFmt.negativeFormatExpectsPositive = true
- parsedNumFmt.positiveFormat = fmtOptions[0]
- parsedNumFmt.negativeFormat = fmtOptions[1]
- parsedNumFmt.zeroFormat = fmtOptions[2]
- parsedNumFmt.textFormat = fmtOptions[3]
- }
- return parsedNumFmt
- }
- // splitFormatOnSemicolon will split the format string into the format sections
- // This logic to split the different formats on semicolon is fully correct, and will skip all literal semicolons,
- // and will catch all breaking semicolons.
- func splitFormatOnSemicolon(format string) ([]string, error) {
- var formats []string
- prevIndex := 0
- for i := 0; i < len(format); i++ {
- if format[i] == ';' {
- formats = append(formats, format[prevIndex:i])
- prevIndex = i + 1
- } else if format[i] == '\\' {
- i++
- } else if format[i] == '"' {
- endQuoteIndex := strings.Index(format[i+1:], "\"")
- if endQuoteIndex == -1 {
- // This is an invalid format string, fall back to general
- return nil, errors.New("invalid format string, unmatched double quote")
- }
- i += endQuoteIndex + 1
- }
- }
- return append(formats, format[prevIndex:]), nil
- }
- var fallbackErrorFormat = &formatOptions{
- fullFormatString: "general",
- reducedFormatString: "general",
- }
- // parseNumberFormatSection takes in individual format and parses out most of the options.
- // Some options are parsed, removed from the string, and set as settings on formatOptions.
- // There remainder of the format string is put in the reducedFormatString attribute, and supported values for these
- // are handled in a switch in the Cell.FormattedValue() function.
- // Ideally more and more of the format string would be parsed out here into settings until there is no remainder string
- // at all.
- // Features that this supports:
- // - Time formats are detected, and marked in the options. Time format strings are handled when doing the formatting.
- // The logic to detect time formats is currently not correct, and can catch formats that are not time formats as well
- // as miss formats that are time formats.
- // - Color formats are detected and removed.
- // - Currency annotations are handled properly.
- // - Literal strings wrapped in quotes are handled and put into prefix or suffix.
- // - Numbers that should be percent are detected and marked in the options.
- // - Conditionals are detected and removed, but they are not obeyed. The conditional groups will be used just like the
- // positive;negative;zero;string format groups. Here is an example of a conditional format: "[Red][<=100];[Blue][>100]"
- // Decoding the actual number formatting portion is out of scope, that is placed into reducedFormatString and is used
- // when formatting the string. The string there will be reduced to only the things in the formattingCharacters array.
- // Everything not in that array has been parsed out and put into formatOptions.
- func parseNumberFormatSection(fullFormat string) (*formatOptions, error) {
- reducedFormat := strings.TrimSpace(fullFormat)
- // general is the only format that does not use the normal format symbols notations
- if compareFormatString(reducedFormat, "general") {
- return &formatOptions{
- fullFormatString: "general",
- reducedFormatString: "general",
- }, nil
- }
- prefix, reducedFormat, showPercent1, err := parseLiterals(reducedFormat)
- if err != nil {
- return nil, err
- }
- reducedFormat, suffixFormat := splitFormatAndSuffixFormat(reducedFormat)
- suffix, remaining, showPercent2, err := parseLiterals(suffixFormat)
- if err != nil {
- return nil, err
- }
- if len(remaining) > 0 {
- // This paradigm of codes consisting of literals, number formats, then more literals is not always correct, they can
- // actually be intertwined. Though 99% of the time number formats will not do this.
- // Excel uses this format string for Social Security Numbers: 000\-00\-0000
- // and this for US phone numbers: [<=9999999]###\-####;\(###\)\ ###\-####
- return nil, errors.New("invalid or unsupported format string")
- }
- return &formatOptions{
- fullFormatString: fullFormat,
- isTimeFormat: false,
- reducedFormatString: reducedFormat,
- prefix: prefix,
- suffix: suffix,
- showPercent: showPercent1 || showPercent2,
- }, nil
- }
- // formattingCharacters will be left in the reducedNumberFormat
- // It is important that these be looked for in order so that the slash cases are handled correctly.
- // / (slash) is a fraction format if preceded by 0, #, or ?, otherwise it is not a formatting character
- // E- E+ e- e+ are scientific notation, but E, e, -, + are not formatting characters independently
- // \ (back slash) makes the next character a literal (not formatting)
- // " Anything in double quotes is not a formatting character
- // _ (underscore) skips the width of the next character, so the next character cannot be formatting
- var formattingCharacters = []string{"0/", "#/", "?/", "E-", "E+", "e-", "e+", "0", "#", "?", ".", ",", "@", "*"}
- // The following are also time format characters, but since this is only used for detecting, not decoding, they are
- // redundant here: ee, gg, ggg, rr, ss, mm, hh, yyyy, dd, ddd, dddd, mm, mmm, mmmm, mmmmm, ss.0000, ss.000, ss.00, ss.0
- // The .00 type format is very tricky, because it only counts if it comes after ss or s or [ss] or [s]
- // .00 is actually a valid number format by itself.
- var timeFormatCharacters = []string{"m", "d", "yy", "h", "m", "AM/PM", "A/P", "am/pm", "a/p", "r", "g", "e", "b1", "b2", "[hh]", "[h]", "[mm]", "[m]",
- "s.0000", "s.000", "s.00", "s.0", "s", "[ss].0000", "[ss].000", "[ss].00", "[ss].0", "[ss]", "[s].0000", "[s].000", "[s].00", "[s].0", "[s]"}
- func splitFormatAndSuffixFormat(format string) (string, string) {
- var i int
- for ; i < len(format); i++ {
- curReducedFormat := format[i:]
- var found bool
- for _, special := range formattingCharacters {
- if strings.HasPrefix(curReducedFormat, special) {
- // Skip ahead if the special character was longer than length 1
- i += len(special) - 1
- found = true
- break
- }
- }
- if !found {
- break
- }
- }
- suffixFormat := format[i:]
- format = format[:i]
- return format, suffixFormat
- }
- func parseLiterals(format string) (string, string, bool, error) {
- var prefix string
- showPercent := false
- for i := 0; i < len(format); i++ {
- curReducedFormat := format[i:]
- switch curReducedFormat[0] {
- case '\\':
- // If there is a slash, skip the next character, and add it to the prefix
- if len(curReducedFormat) > 1 {
- i++
- prefix += curReducedFormat[1:2]
- }
- case '_':
- // If there is an underscore, skip the next character, but don't add it to the prefix
- if len(curReducedFormat) > 1 {
- i++
- }
- case '*':
- // Asterisks are used to repeat the next character to fill the full cell width.
- // There isn't really a cell size in this context, so this will be ignored.
- case '"':
- // If there is a quote skip to the next quote, and add the quoted characters to the prefix
- endQuoteIndex := strings.Index(curReducedFormat[1:], "\"")
- if endQuoteIndex == -1 {
- return "", "", false, errors.New("invalid formatting code, unmatched double quote")
- }
- prefix = prefix + curReducedFormat[1:endQuoteIndex+1]
- i += endQuoteIndex + 1
- case '%':
- showPercent = true
- prefix += "%"
- case '[':
- // Brackets can be currency annotations (e.g. [$$-409])
- // color formats (e.g. [color1] through [color56], as well as [red] etc.)
- // conditionals (e.g. [>100], the valid conditionals are =, >, <, >=, <=, <>)
- bracketIndex := strings.Index(curReducedFormat, "]")
- if bracketIndex == -1 {
- return "", "", false, errors.New("invalid formatting code, invalid brackets")
- }
- // Currencies in Excel are annotated with this format: [$<Currency String>-<Language Info>]
- // Currency String is something like $, ¥, €, or £
- // Language Info is three hexadecimal characters
- if len(curReducedFormat) > 2 && curReducedFormat[1] == '$' {
- dashIndex := strings.Index(curReducedFormat, "-")
- if dashIndex != -1 && dashIndex < bracketIndex {
- // Get the currency symbol, and skip to the end of the currency format
- prefix += curReducedFormat[2:dashIndex]
- } else {
- return "", "", false, errors.New("invalid formatting code, invalid currency annotation")
- }
- }
- i += bracketIndex
- case '$', '-', '+', '/', '(', ')', ':', '!', '^', '&', '\'', '~', '{', '}', '<', '>', '=', ' ':
- // These symbols are allowed to be used as literal without escaping
- prefix += curReducedFormat[0:1]
- default:
- for _, special := range formattingCharacters {
- if strings.HasPrefix(curReducedFormat, special) {
- // This means we found the start of the actual number formatting portion, and should return.
- return prefix, format[i:], showPercent, nil
- }
- }
- // Symbols that don't have meaning and aren't in the exempt literal characters and are not escaped.
- return "", "", false, errors.New("invalid formatting code: unsupported or unescaped characters")
- }
- }
- return prefix, "", showPercent, nil
- }
- // parseTime returns a string parsed using time.Time
- func (fullFormat *parsedNumberFormat) parseTime(value string, date1904 bool) (string, error) {
- f, err := strconv.ParseFloat(value, 64)
- if err != nil {
- return value, err
- }
- val := TimeFromExcelTime(f, date1904)
- format := fullFormat.numFmt
- // Replace Excel placeholders with Go time placeholders.
- // For example, replace yyyy with 2006. These are in a specific order,
- // due to the fact that m is used in month, minute, and am/pm. It would
- // be easier to fix that with regular expressions, but if it's possible
- // to keep this simple it would be easier to maintain.
- // Full-length month and days (e.g. March, Tuesday) have letters in them that would be replaced
- // by other characters below (such as the 'h' in March, or the 'd' in Tuesday) below.
- // First we convert them to arbitrary characters unused in Excel Date formats, and then at the end,
- // turn them to what they should actually be.
- // Based off: http://www.ozgrid.com/Excel/CustomFormats.htm
- replacements := []struct{ xltime, gotime string }{
- {"yyyy", "2006"},
- {"yy", "06"},
- {"mmmm", "%%%%"},
- {"dddd", "&&&&"},
- {"dd", "02"},
- {"d", "2"},
- {"mmm", "Jan"},
- {"mmss", "0405"},
- {"ss", "05"},
- {"mm:", "04:"},
- {":mm", ":04"},
- {"mm", "01"},
- {"am/pm", "pm"},
- {"m/", "1/"},
- {"%%%%", "January"},
- {"&&&&", "Monday"},
- }
- // It is the presence of the "am/pm" indicator that determins
- // if this is a 12 hour or 24 hours time format, not the
- // number of 'h' characters.
- if is12HourTime(format) {
- format = strings.Replace(format, "hh", "03", 1)
- format = strings.Replace(format, "h", "3", 1)
- } else {
- format = strings.Replace(format, "hh", "15", 1)
- format = strings.Replace(format, "h", "15", 1)
- }
- for _, repl := range replacements {
- format = strings.Replace(format, repl.xltime, repl.gotime, 1)
- }
- // If the hour is optional, strip it out, along with the
- // possible dangling colon that would remain.
- if val.Hour() < 1 {
- format = strings.Replace(format, "]:", "]", 1)
- format = strings.Replace(format, "[03]", "", 1)
- format = strings.Replace(format, "[3]", "", 1)
- format = strings.Replace(format, "[15]", "", 1)
- } else {
- format = strings.Replace(format, "[3]", "3", 1)
- format = strings.Replace(format, "[15]", "15", 1)
- }
- return val.Format(format), nil
- }
- // isTimeFormat checks whether an Excel format string represents a time.Time.
- // This function is now correct, but it can detect time format strings that cannot be correctly handled by parseTime()
- func isTimeFormat(format string) bool {
- var foundTimeFormatCharacters bool
- for i := 0; i < len(format); i++ {
- curReducedFormat := format[i:]
- switch curReducedFormat[0] {
- case '\\', '_':
- // If there is a slash, skip the next character, and add it to the prefix
- // If there is an underscore, skip the next character, but don't add it to the prefix
- if len(curReducedFormat) > 1 {
- i++
- }
- case '*':
- // Asterisks are used to repeat the next character to fill the full cell width.
- // There isn't really a cell size in this context, so this will be ignored.
- case '"':
- // If there is a quote skip to the next quote, and add the quoted characters to the prefix
- endQuoteIndex := strings.Index(curReducedFormat[1:], "\"")
- if endQuoteIndex == -1 {
- // This is not any type of valid format.
- return false
- }
- i += endQuoteIndex + 1
- case '$', '-', '+', '/', '(', ')', ':', '!', '^', '&', '\'', '~', '{', '}', '<', '>', '=', ' ':
- // These symbols are allowed to be used as literal without escaping
- case ',':
- // This is not documented in the XLSX spec as far as I can tell, but Excel and Numbers will include
- // commas in number formats without escaping them, so this should be supported.
- default:
- foundInThisLoop := false
- for _, special := range timeFormatCharacters {
- if strings.HasPrefix(curReducedFormat, special) {
- foundTimeFormatCharacters = true
- foundInThisLoop = true
- i += len(special) - 1
- break
- }
- }
- if foundInThisLoop {
- continue
- }
- if curReducedFormat[0] == '[' {
- // For number formats, this code would happen above in a case '[': section.
- // However, for time formats it must happen after looking for occurrences in timeFormatCharacters
- // because there are a few time formats that can be wrapped in brackets.
- // Brackets can be currency annotations (e.g. [$$-409])
- // color formats (e.g. [color1] through [color56], as well as [red] etc.)
- // conditionals (e.g. [>100], the valid conditionals are =, >, <, >=, <=, <>)
- bracketIndex := strings.Index(curReducedFormat, "]")
- if bracketIndex == -1 {
- // This is not any type of valid format.
- return false
- }
- i += bracketIndex
- continue
- }
- // Symbols that don't have meaning, aren't in the exempt literal characters, and aren't escaped are invalid.
- // The string could still be a valid number format string.
- return false
- }
- }
- // If the string doesn't have any time formatting characters, it could technically be a time format, but it
- // would be a pretty weak time format. A valid time format with no time formatting symbols will also be a number
- // format with no number formatting symbols, which is essentially a constant string that does not depend on the
- // cell's value in anyway. The downstream logic will do the right thing in that case if this returns false.
- return foundTimeFormatCharacters
- }
- // is12HourTime checks whether an Excel time format string is a 12
- // hours form.
- func is12HourTime(format string) bool {
- return strings.Contains(format, "am/pm") || strings.Contains(format, "AM/PM") || strings.Contains(format, "a/p") || strings.Contains(format, "A/P")
- }
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