I'm having trouble figuring out how to import Excel files into my Python script. I'm only a few days into Python so I'm guessing it's something very obvious I'm missing. I'm using Python 3 and the tablib module. From the examples on the tablib site, I've worked out how to save files in xls format
def saveXLS(self, name, data):
# Form the dataset with the accompanying headers
dataTab = tablib.Dataset()
dataTab.headers = data[0][:]
for i in range(1,len(data)):
dataTab.append(data[i][:])
with open(self.saveDir + name + ".xls", 'wb') as f:
f.write(dataTab.xls)
(I know that loop is horrible and un-Pythonic, but it's important I get results at the moment as it's for work). At the moment, I open the Excel workbook and save it as a text file (I should point out that all my data is tab-delimited and consists of strings, even for numbers).
I open it like this
def loadTxt(self,name, fileType, data):
if( fileType == "txt"):
with open(self.currentWorkingDir + "\\" + name + ".txt",'r') as f:
reader=csv.reader(f,delimiter='\t')
for X in reader:
data.append(X)
I tried copying the "dbf" example on the tablib website (http://tablib.readthedocs.org/en/latest/api/) to get
def loadXLS(self):
self.data = tablib.Dataset()
self.data = open('Data.xlsx').read()
return self.datav
And I get an error (as I expected, as I pulled it from my ass)
UnicodeDecodeError: 'charmap' codec can't decode byte 0x8f in position 637: character maps to .
I really have no clue how to figure this out unfortunately, so any advice would be really appreciated.