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I'm not able to load an Excel file in the older Office XML format (think Office 2002 or 2003 version) into Java. I tried JXL and Apache's POI (version 3.7). POI doesn't work since it appears to want the newer Office .xlsx format.

Here's an example of the older Office XML format.

One can generate a similar XML file from MS Excel 2010 by saving the workbook as the format "XML Spreadsheet 2003"?

Are there any open-source Java libraries that will load the XMLSS format? Otherwise I have no choice but to write a custom parser: read the XML file then interpret the cell tags to build out the cell matrix. In this XML format, any rows with empty cell values are skipped, the next cell with data positioned with an index attribute that acts like an offset in the columns, I assume to save space in the XML file.

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  • "Otherwise I have no choice but to write.." <DWS>Yes, sadly, sometimes programmers actually have to write programs.</DWS> BTW - if you do have to program it, be sure to offer the code as open source to save others the hassle. Aug 17, 2011 at 7:24
  • Yeah, I was trying to avoid writing a routine since I was under a deadline and this issue would have set me back. I was already thinking ahead of how to write it, but did not want to reinvent the wheel.
    – drewxmlss
    Aug 18, 2011 at 1:07

6 Answers 6

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The format is called SpreadsheetML (do not confuse with .xlsx which is also xml-based), a library called Xelem can handle it:

import nl.fountain.xelem.excel.Workbook;
import nl.fountain.xelem.lex.ExcelReader;
//...
ExcelReader reader = new ExcelReader();
Workbook xlWorkbook = reader.getWorkbook("c:\\my\\spreadsheet.xml");
System.out.println(xlWorkbook.getSheetNames());
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  • Note: "Xelem is free software and licensed under the GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE." (copy left license) Nov 4, 2022 at 8:38
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Copying Mark Beardsley's answer from POI team http://apache-poi.1045710.n5.nabble.com/How-to-convert-xml-to-xls-td2306602.html :

You have got an Office 2003 xml file there, not an OpenXML file; it is an early attempt by Microsoft to create an xml based file format for Excel and it is in that sense a 'valid' Office file format.

Sadly, POI cannot interpret this file at all and that is why you saw the exception when you tried to wrap it up in the InputStream and pass it to WorkbookFactory(s) constructor. You do however have a number of options;

  • You could use Excel itself and manually open and save each file you wish to convert, as you already have done.
  • If you have access to Visual Studio and can write Visual Basic or C# code then you could use a control that will allow you to control Excel programmatically. This way you could automate a file conversion process using Excel itself. Then once the file has been converted wither to the binary or OpenXML formats, POI can be used to process it.
  • If you are running on a stand alone PC on which a copy of Excel is installed and using the Windows operating system, then you could use OLE to do something very similar from Java code. As above, POI can be used to process the file following the conversion.
  • If you have access to OpenOffice, it has a rather good API that is accessible from Java code. You could use it to convert between the file types for you - it is simply a matter of discovering the correct filter to use in this case. OpenOffice is good for all except the most complex files and you should be able to use POI to process the file following conversion. However, if you choose this route, it may be best to do all of the work using OpenOffice's UNO api.
  • Depending upon what you want to do with the file's contents, you could create your own parser using core java code and either the SAX or Xerces parsers (consider using xmlBeans (http://xmlbeans.apache.org/) ). If you simply open the original xml file using a simple text editor, you can see that the structure is not complex and, if all you wish to get at is the raw data it contains, this could be your best option.
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    Thanks, your last option was the one I was going to pursue next, as I wanted to just have one process manage the file conversion. Instead I made a case to the BAs and the vendor today to change their format, and it was simple for them to write the file as an Excel binary format rather than XML. Bullet dodged, since I was under a deadline.
    – drewxmlss
    Aug 18, 2011 at 1:08
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After a lot of pain I've found a solution to this. JODConverter uses the OpenOffice.org/LibreOffice API and can convert SpreadsheetML to whatever formats OpenOffice.org suppports.

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You might get some result using the OpenOffice API. If not directly you could probably convert to a 'supported' format. Otherwise the schema for the Office 2003 'SpreadsheetML' isn't very complicated. I have succesfully created an xslt scenario to convert a resultset (database query) to a (simple yet effective) Excel 2003 document (XML format). The other way around should not be very hard to achieve.

Cheers, Wim

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  • Thanks, I'll look into OpenOffice next time, as that's an option that Andrey also mentioned. I would vote you guys up but don't have the rep, yet. Will remember to vote once I get my rep up.
    – drewxmlss
    Aug 18, 2011 at 1:10
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The answer today was to ask the vendor to change their Excel file format to an Excel binary rather than the old Office XML. Doing so allowed me to use Apache POI 3.7 to read the file with no issues. I appreciate the answers, as I had no idea there was no direct support in the Java-based open source libraries for this old Office XML format. Now I know next time to check earlier to see what format the Excel files are in before committing to a timeline.

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I had the same problem some time ago, ended up writing a SAX parser to read the XML file. I wrote a blog post about it here.

You can find the sample project to parse the file in Github.

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