Django REST Framework Renderer: XLSX

drf-renderer-xlsx provides an XLSX renderer for Django REST Framework. It uses OpenPyXL to create the spreadsheet and returns the data.

Requirements

It may work with earlier versions, but has been tested with the following:

  • Python >= 3.6
  • Django >= 2.2
  • Django REST Framework >= 3.6
  • OpenPyXL >= 2.4

Installation

pip install drf-renderer-xlsx

Then add the following to your REST_FRAMEWORK settings:

    REST_FRAMEWORK = {
        ...

        'DEFAULT_RENDERER_CLASSES': (
            'rest_framework.renderers.JSONRenderer',
            'rest_framework.renderers.BrowsableAPIRenderer',
            'drf_renderer_xlsx.renderers.XLSXRenderer',
        ),
    }

To avoid having a file streamed without a filename (which the browser will often default to the filename “download”, with no extension), we need to use a mixin to override the Content-Disposition header. If no filename is provided, it will default to export.xlsx. For example:

from rest_framework.viewsets import ReadOnlyModelViewSet
from drf_renderer_xlsx.mixins import XLSXFileMixin
from drf_renderer_xlsx.renderers import XLSXRenderer

from .models import MyExampleModel
from .serializers import MyExampleSerializer

class MyExampleViewSet(XLSXFileMixin, ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
    queryset = MyExampleModel.objects.all()
    serializer_class = MyExampleSerializer
    renderer_classes = (XLSXRenderer,)
    filename = 'my_export.xlsx'

The XLSXFileMixin also provides a get_filename() method which can be overridden, if you prefer to provide a filename programmatically instead of the filename attribute.

Configuring Styles

Styles can be added to your worksheet header, column header row, and body rows, from view attributes header, column_header, body. Any arguments from the OpenPyXL package can be used for font, alignment, fill and border_side (border will always be all side of cell).

class MyExampleViewSet(XLSXFileMixin, ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
    queryset = MyExampleModel.objects.all()
    serializer_class = MyExampleSerializer
    renderer_classes = (XLSXRenderer,)

    column_header = {
        'titles': [
            "Column_1_name",
            "Column_2_name",
            "Column_3_name",
        ],
        'column_width': [17, 30, 17],
        'height': 25,
        'style': {
            'fill': {
                'fill_type': 'solid',
                'start_color': 'FFCCFFCC',
            },
            'alignment': {
                'horizontal': 'center',
                'vertical': 'center',
                'wrapText': True,
                'shrink_to_fit': True,
            },
            'border_side': {
                'border_style': 'thin',
                'color': 'FF000000',
            },
            'font': {
                'name': 'Arial',
                'size': 14,
                'bold': True,
                'color': 'FF000000',
            },
        },
    }
    body = {
        'style': {
            'fill': {
                'fill_type': 'solid',
                'start_color': 'FFCCFFCC',
            },
            'alignment': {
                'horizontal': 'center',
                'vertical': 'center',
                'wrapText': True,
                'shrink_to_fit': True,
            },
            'border_side': {
                'border_style': 'thin',
                'color': 'FF000000',
            },
            'font': {
                'name': 'Arial',
                'size': 14,
                'bold': False,
                'color': 'FF000000',
            }
        },
        'height': 40,
    }

Also you can dynamically generate style attributes in methods get_body, get_header, get_column_header.

def get_header(self):
    starttime, endtime = parse_times(request=self.request)
    datetime_format = "%H:%M:%S %d.%m.%Y"
    return {
        'tab_title': 'MyReport',
        'header_title': 'Report from {} to {}'.format(
            starttime.strftime(datetime_format),
            endtime.strftime(datetime_format),
        ),
        'height': 45,
        'img': 'app/images/MyLogo.png',
        'style': {
            'fill': {
                'fill_type': 'solid',
                'start_color': 'FFFFFFFF',
            },
            'alignment': {
                'horizontal': 'center',
                'vertical': 'center',
                'wrapText': True,
                'shrink_to_fit': True,
            },
            'border_side': {
                'border_style': 'thin',
                'color': 'FF000000',
            },
            'font': {
                'name': 'Arial',
                'size': 16,
                'bold': True,
                'color': 'FF000000',
            }
        }
    }

Also you can add color field to your serializer and fill body rows.

class ExampleSerializer(serializers.Serializer):
    color = serializers.SerializerMethodField()

    def get_color(self, instance):
        color_map = {'w': 'FFFFFFCC', 'a': 'FFFFCCCC'}
        return color_map.get(instance.alarm_level, 'FFFFFFFF')

Controlling XLSX headers and values

Use Serializer Field labels as header names

By default, headers will use the same ‘names’ as they are returned by the API. This can be changed by setting xlsx_use_labels = True inside your API View.

Instead of using the field names, the export will use the labels as they are defined inside your Serializer. A serializer field defined as title = serializers.CharField(label=_("Some title")) would return Some title instead of title, also supporting translations. If no label is set, it will fall back to using title.

Ignore fields

By default, all fields are exported, but you might want to exclude some fields from your export. To do so, you can set an array with fields you want to exclude: xlsx_ignore_headers = [

]
.

This also works with nested fields, separated with a dot (i.e. icon.url).

Name boolean values

True and False as values for boolean fields are not always the best representation and don’t support translation. This can be controlled with xlsx_boolean_labels.

xlsx_boolean_labels = {True: _('Yes'), False: _('No')} will replace True with Yes and False with No.

Format dates

To format dates differently than what DRF returns (eg. 2013-01-29T12:34:56.000000Z) xlsx_date_format_mappings takes a ´dict` with the field name as its key and the date(time) format as its value:

xlsx_date_format_mappings = {
    'created_at': '%d.%m.%Y %H:%M',
    'updated_at': '%d.%m.%Y %H:%M'
}

Custom mappings

Assuming you have a field that returns a dict instead of a simple str, you might not want to return the whole object but only a value of it. Let’s say status returns { value: 1, display: 'Active' }. To return the display value in the status column, we can do this:

xlsx_custom_mappings = {
    'status': 'display'
}

A probably more common case is that you want to change how a value is formatted. xlsx_custom_mappings also takes functions as values. Assuming we have a field description, and for some strange reason want to reverse the text, we can do this:

def reverse_text(val):
    return val[::-1]

xlsx_custom_mappings = {
    'description': reverse_text
}

Release Notes

Release notes are available on GitHub.

Maintainer

We are looking for someone to help be a maintainer! This involves reviewing Pull Requests and releasing new versions. If you use this package frequently and are interested in helping, please open an issue to let me know.

This package is maintained by the staff of Wharton Research Data Services. We are thrilled that The Wharton School allows us a certain amount of time to contribute to open-source projects. We add features as they are necessary for our projects, and try to keep up with Issues and Pull Requests as best we can. Due to constraints of time (our full time jobs!), Feature Requests without a Pull Request may not be implemented, but we are always open to new ideas and grateful for contributions and our package users.

Contributors (Thank You!)

GitHub

https://github.com/wharton/drf-renderer-xlsx