Using Javascript, how do I create an HTML table that can "accept" numeric matrix data from excel (or google spreadsheet), via "copy" in the spreadsheet and then "paste" into the table in the browser.

Thanks.

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Here is a very similar question: stackoverflow.com/questions/686995/jquery-catch-paste-input – jjclarkson Jul 7 '09 at 22:25
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3 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

This would only work reliably on IE since Firefox (and likely others) don't allow access to the clipboard without specifically allowing it; the earlier suggestion of pasting into a textarea first might work better than this.

When you copy from a spreadsheet, generally the cells are separated with a tab (chr9) and the rows with a CR (chr13). This script converts the clipboard into a 2D array and then builds a table from it. Not too elegant but it seems to work copying data out of Excel.

<html>
<head>
<script language="javascript">
function clip() {

    // get the clipboard text

    var clipText = window.clipboardData.getData('Text');

    // split into rows

    clipRows = clipText.split(String.fromCharCode(13));

    // split rows into columns

    for (i=0; i<clipRows.length; i++) {
    	clipRows[i] = clipRows[i].split(String.fromCharCode(9));
    }


    // write out in a table

    newTable = document.createElement("table")
    newTable.border = 1;
    for (i=0; i<clipRows.length - 1; i++) {

    	newRow = newTable.insertRow();

    	for (j=0; j<clipRows[i].length; j++) {
    		newCell = newRow.insertCell();
    		if (clipRows[i][j].length == 0) {
    			newCell.innerText = ' ';
    		}
    		else {
    			newCell.innerText = clipRows[i][j];
    		}
    	}
    }

    document.body.appendChild(newTable);
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<input type="button" onclick="clip()">
</body>
</html>
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Thanks!!! I'll try this out tonight. – perrinmeyer Jul 9 '09 at 17:31
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Here is the javascript code I created (based on the helpful answers). I'm new to javascript, so I'm sure there is much better way to do this, but it seems to work... The goal is to "paste" two columns of numerical data into the text area from a spreadsheet (I've tried both excel and google spreadsheet) and create floating point vectors "xf" and "yf". Hopefully useful to someone. Criticism welcome...

It assumes these exist on an html page...

<textarea id="psmtext" rows=24 cols=72> </textarea>

<input type="button" value="run code" onClick="psmtest();">



function psmtest(){

var psmtext = document.getElementById("psmtext"); var st = psmtext.value; Ast = st.split("\n"); var numrows = Ast.length;

var ii; var xs = []; var ys = []; for (ii = 0 ; ii < numrows ; ii++) { // tab or comma deliminated data if ( Ast[ii].split(",",2)[1] != null ){ ys[ii] = Ast[ii].split(",")[1]; xs[ii] = Ast[ii].split(",")[0];} if ( Ast[ii].split("\t",2)[1] != null ){ ys[ii] = Ast[ii].split("\t")[1]; xs[ii] = Ast[ii].split("\t")[0];} }

var xss = []; var yss = []; var numgoodrows = 0; var iii =0; for (ii = 0 ; ii < numrows ; ii++) { if ( xs[ii] != null && ys[ii] != null) { xss[iii] = xs[ii]; yss[iii] = ys[ii]; iii++; } } numgoodrows = iii; // next I need to convert to floating point array var xf = [], var yf = [];

var xf = []; var yf = []; for (ii = 0 ; ii < numgoodrows ; ii++) { xf[ii] = parseFloat(xss[ii]); yf[ii] = parseFloat(yss[ii]); }

}

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This is going to be very difficult to do really well.

Off the top of my head, I'd say the best approach would be to give the users a <textarea> that they can paste into. Then, in the onchange event handler, use some JS parsing to figure out where the rows and columns line up, create the HTML table and inject it into the DOM.

This should work alright for a relatively "square" dataset - you might run into more issues with merged columns/rows and "jagged" data

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