My bulletproofing of these tests was not yet sufficient. Although I have never had a failure in probably thousands of tests, one user submitted a PR which did fail testing NOW, fortunately not in a test that is required to pass. The problem is that it is not sufficient merely to set the cell value inside a do-while loop; it is necessary to calculate it in order to cache its result so that results based on that cell will be internally consistent.
No source code is changed for this PR, just some tests.
* isFormula Referencing Sheet With Space in Title
See issue #2304. User sets a cell to `ISFORMULA(cell)`, where `cell` exists on a sheet whose title contains a space, and receives an error. Coordinates are not being passed correctly to Functions::isFormula; in particular, the sheet name is not enclosed in apostrophes, e.g. `Sheet Name!A1` rather than `'Sheet Name'!A1`. (Note that sheet name was not specified in Cell; PhpSpreadsheet adds it before calling isFormula.) Sheets without embedded spaces (or other non-word characters) are handled correctly with or without apostrophes, but spaces require surrounding apostrophes.
As part of this investigation, I determined that Excel handles defined names and cell ranges in ISFORMULA (subject to spills), and that PhpSpreadsheet does not. It is changed to handle them. In the absence of spill support, it will use only the first cell in the range.
Existing tests for ISFORMULA used mocking unneccesarily. They are moved to a separate test member, and mocking is no longer used.
* PhpUnit and Jpgraph
35_Char_render.php had previously been a problem only for PHP8+. It is now a problem for PHP7.4, and will therefore be skipped all the time.
* Xlsx Reader Better Namespace Handling Phase 1 Second Bugfix
See issue #2301. The main problem in that issue had been introduced with 18.0 and had already ben fixed in master. However there was a subsequent problem that had been introduced in master, an undotted i uncrossed t with namespace handling. When using namespaces, need to call attributes() to access the attributes before trying to access them directly. Failure to do so in parseRichText caused fonts declared in Rich Text elements to be ignored.
* Add An Assertion
Addresses problem in 2301 that had already been fixed.
* Permit CSV Delimiter to be Set to Null
See issue #2287. A 1-character change. The delimiter variable is defined as nullable, and getDelimiter can return null; setDelimiter should follow suit.
* Scrutinizer Inanity
Are you sure the test always returns null?????
Yes, I'm sure, that's why it's part of the test.
Let's see if we can recode it and miss this "problem".
Fixes issue #2266. Writer/Xlsx fails when there is no longer a sheet which corresponds to the definition of a local defined name. The code is changed to drop such an orphaned name. Writer/Xls does not fail under the same cicrcumstances, so no correction is needed there. Writer/Ods fails in a different manner, and is corrected to no longer do so.
* Validate Input to SetSelectedCells
See issue #2279. User requests an enhancement so that you can set a Style on a Named Range. The attempt is failing because setting the style causes a call to setSelectedCells, which does not account for Named Ranges. Although not related to the issue, it is worth noting that setSelectedCells does nothing to attempt to validate its input.
The request seems reasonable, even if it is probably more than Excel itself offers. I have added code to setSelectedCells to recognize Named Ranges (if and only if they are defined on the sheet in question). It will throw an exception if the string passed as coordinates cannot be parsed as a range of cells or an appropriate Named Range, e.e.g. a Named Range on a different sheet, a non-existent named range, named formulas, formulas, use of sheet name qualifiers (even for the same sheet). Tests are, of course, added for all of those and for the original issue. The code in setSelectedCells is tested in a very large number of cases in the test suite, none of which showed any problems after this change.
* Scrutinizer
2 minor (non-fatal) corrections, including 1 where Phpstan and Scrutinizer have a different idea about return values from preg_replace.
See issues #1432 and #2149. Data validations on an Xlsx worksheet can be specified in two manners - one (henceforth "internal") if a list is specified from the same sheet, and a different one (henceforth "external") if a list is specified from a different sheet. Xlsx worksheet reader formerly processed only the internal format; PR #2150 fixed this so that both would be processed correctly on read. However, Xlsx worksheet writer outputs data validators only in the internal format, and that does not work for external data validations; it appears, however, that internal data validations can be specified in external format.
This PR changes Xlsx worksheet writer to use only the external format. Somewhat surprisingly, this must come after most of the other XML tags that constitute a worksheet. It shares this characteristic (and XML tag) with conditional formatting. The new test case DataValidator2Test includes a worksheet which has both internal and external data validation, as well as conditional formatting.
There is some additional namespacing work supporting Data Validations that needs to happen on Xlsx reader. Since that is substantially unchanged with this PR, that work will happen in a future namespacing phase, probably phase 2. However, there are some non-namespace-related changes to Xlsx reader in this PR:
- Cell DataValidation adds support for a new property sqref, which is initialized through Xlsx reader using a setSqref method. If not initialized at write time, the code will work as it did before the introduction of this property. In particular, before this change, data validation applied to an entire column (as in the sample spreadsheet) would be applied only through the last populated row. In addition, this also allows a user to extend a Data Validation over a range of cells rather than just a single cell; the new method is added to the documentation.
- The topLeft property had formerly been used only for worksheets which use "freeze panes". However, as luck would have it, the sample dataset provided to demonstrate the Data Validations problem uses topLeft without freeze panes, slightly affecting the view when the spreadsheet is initially opened; PhpSpreadsheet will now do so as well.
It is worth noting issue #2262, which documents a problem with the hasValidValue method involving the calculation engine. That problem existed before this PR, and I do not yet have a handle on how it might be fixed.
* Fraction Formatting
See issue #2253. User's analysis was correct - leading zeros in the decimal portion were being stripped out, so 0.0625 and 0.625 were being treated the same. As it turns out, integers also aren't handled well (`0 0/1` anyone?). The latter problem had been hidden because caller tested for integer first and skipped call if true; but FractionFormatter::format is public and should work correctly regardless. All Phpstan baseline entries for FractionFormatter and NumberFormatter are eliminated. New test data is added; no need for changes to test code.
* Scrutinizer
Ensure result is string.
See issue #2239. Problem is dealt with at the source, by making sure that Reader Xls checks for use of 'GENERAL' rather than 'General'. There doesn't seem to be a reason to test in other places, or to test for other casing variants.
* Html Reader Comments
See issue #2234. Html Reader processes Comment as comment, then processes it as part of cell contents. Change to only do the first. Comment Test checks that comment read by Html Reader is okay, but neglects to check the value of the cell to which the comment is attached. Added that check.
* Disconnect Worksheets
... at end of test.
* Csv Handling of Booleans (and an 8.1 Deprecation)
PhpSpreadsheet writes boolean values to a Csv as null-string/1, and treats input values of 'true' and 'false' as if they were strings. On the other hand, Excel writes boolean values to a Csv as TRUE/FALSE, and case-insensitively treats a matching string as boolean on read. This PR changes PhpSpreadsheet to match Excel.
A side-effect of this change is that it fixes behavior incorrectly reported as a bug in PR #2048. That issue was closed, correctly, as user error. The user had altered Csv Writer, including adding ```declare(strict_types=1);```; that declaration was the cause of the error. The "offending" statements, calls to strpbrk and str_replace, will now work correctly whether or not strict_types is in use.
And, just as I was getting ready to push this, the dailies for PHP 8.1 introduced a change deprecating auto_detect_line_endings. Csv Reader uses that setting; it allows it to process a Csv with Mac line endings, which happens to be something that Excel can do. As they say in https://wiki.php.net/rfc/deprecations_php_8_1, where the proposal passed without a single dissenting vote, "These newlines were used by “Classic” Mac OS, a system which has been discontinued in 2001, nearly two decades ago. Interoperability with such systems is no longer relevant." I tend to agree, but I don't know that we're ready to pull the plug yet. I don't see an easy way to emulate that functionality. For now, I have silenced the deprecation notices with at signs. I have also added a test case which will fail when support for that setting is pulled; this will give time to consider alternatives.
* Scrutinizer: Handling ini_set
This could be interesting. It doesn't like not handling an error condition for ini_set. Let's see if this satisfies it.
* New Looming Problems with PHP8.1
More deprecations. The following corrections are made in this PR:
- Calculation.php has a call to ctype_upper and apparently one of the samples manages to pass it an int. That function treats int differently from numeric strings, and that treatment is on the deprecation list. Enclosing the argument in quotes cannot cause a problem unless the int represents the ASCII value of an uppercase letter, which I cannot believe is the case; anyhow, if it is, the code will wind up with a nonsense result, e.g. if column is C and row is 1, the cell will be resolved as C1, but if column is int 67 (ASCII for C) and row is 1, the cell will be resolved as 671, not C1.
- Several Worksheet iterators need one or more functions to explicitly declare their return types. Thankfully, this does not seem to break earlier PHP versions.
- LocaleFloatsTest - see issue #1863. This was supposed to fail in PHP 8.0, but var_dump continued to support the old way (for 64-bit PHP only, not for 32-bit). PHP 8.1 appears to correct that omission, and the test will now fail. It doesn't show up as a failure in Github because of an accident - the attempt to set the locale to France in Github fails, so it skips the test before attempting the var_dump. But it does fail locally on my system. I have changed the test to use sprintf rather than var_dump; I think users are far more likely to use sprintf rather than var_dump in their applications. (They are, of course, even more likely to just cast to string, but the result of doing that is already different in 8.0 than in 7.4.) I would be equally happy to delete the test altogether.
There remain PHP 8.1 problems with Mpdf which are, of course, out of scope here.
There is one additional problem that I do not address in this ticket. The auto_detect_line_endings setting is being deprecated. This has some implications for Csv. I have another PR ready for Csv, and will discuss that problem there.
* Minor Scrutinizer Error
Hopefully fixed now.
* Tweaks to Input File Validation
This started as a response to issue #1718, for which it is a partial (not complete) solution. The following changes are made:
- canRead can currently throw an exception. This seems wrong. It should just return true/false.
- Breaking change of sorts. When AssertFile encounters a non-existent or unreadable file, it throws InvalidArgumentException. This does not make sense. I have changed it to throw PhpSpreadsheet/Reader/Exception.
- Since the previous bullet item required changing of most of the Reader files anyhow, this is a good time to add explicit typing for canRead in the function signature rather than the DocBlock. Since all the canRead functions inherit from an abstract version in IReader, they all have to be changed simulatneously. Except for Xlsx and Ods, most of the Reader files are otherwise unchanged.
- AssertFile is changed to add an optional "zip member" parameter. It will check for the existence of an appropriate member in what is supposed to be a zip file. It is used by Xlsx and Ods.
- Verifying that a given file is a valid zip ought to be a feature of ZipArchive. Thanks to a particularly nasty bug in php/libzip (see https://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=81222), it is unsafe to attempt to open a zero-length file as a zip archive. There is a solution, but it does not apply to all the PHP releases which we support, and isn't even necessarily supported on all the point versions of the PHP versions which we do support. I have coded up a manual test for "valid zip", with a comment pointing to the spec.
- In theory, tests now cover 100% of the code in Shared/File. In practice ... One of the tests require that chmod works properly, which is not quite true on Windows systems, so that test is skipped on Windows. Another test requires that php.ini uses a non-default value for upload_temp_dir (can't be overridden in application code), which is probably not the case when Github runs the unit tests, so that test is skipped when appropriate. I have run tests for both on systems where they are not skipped.
* Update File.php
* Scrutinizer Timeout
It's not actually timing out, it's just waiting for something to finish that finished ages ago. Making a meaningless comment change in hopes that will clear the jam. Not particularly hopeful.
* Initial adjustments to Xlsx Reader for two possible locations for AutoFiter information, either on the sheet itself for older files, or in the tables/tableX file for more recent files
* Refactor AutoFilter Reader logic into separate methods; preparatory work toward the eventual goal of moving it into its own dedicated AutoFilterTables class
* Basic unit tests to verify that the Xlsx Reader can read both the older and Office365 variants of the files used to store AutoFilter structure
* Xls Reader Handle MACCENTRALEUROPE With or Without Hyphen
Fixes issue #549 and https://github.com/Maatwebsite/Laravel-Excel/issues/989 (which is the source of the new test file). Some systems accept MACCENTRALEUROPE as the name for the appropriate encoding, and some accept MAC-CENTRALEUROPE. I fortunately have access to at least one of each type, and have run the tests on each.
CodePage.php has an array of translations from codepage number to string. I now allow the value to itself be an array; if so, the code will test each in turn to see if it can be used in iconv. I did not go fishing for other similar problems. If such show up, they can be dealt with in the same manner as this one. I don't really expect others, since this is a problem not merely for Xls, but, even then, it applies only to BIFF5 and earlier.
I also moved XlsTest from Reader to Reader/Xls.
* Cache Successful Result For Future Use
Per suggestion from @MarkBaker
This is a leftover Scrutinizer change, but it needed more attention than most others. Chart/Title DocBlocks define caption as `null|string`. However, in the wild, Excel usually presents the caption as an array, and not an array of strings but rather of RichText items. I am not sure why an array is needed since a RichText item can contain many text runs, but things are what they are.
Reader/Xlsx/ChartTitleTest reads a spreadsheet with the captions stored as a RichText array. Since it performs array operations on something the DocBlock says cannot be an array, Scrutinizer objects, although not seriously enough to fail the module. Phpstan also objects; its objection is silenced with an annotation. Aside from this test, there are other tests which do set the caption to a string, and Excel seems to handle that without a problem. So, I have changed the DocBlock to specify `array|RichText|String`. I have dropped null as a possibility; nullstring will do equally well.
Because getCaption can now return multiple datatypes, I think a new function which can return the text portion of the entire caption as a single string is needed. I have added it. This simplifies the test named above, and some code in Writer/Html. The latter is not part of unit testing because the version of JpGraph found in Composer is too antiquated. I verified the Html change manually by running samples/Chart/32_Chart_read_write_HTML.php using a recent version of JpGraph. It was as a result of this test that I uncovered issue #2203. I did not see anything about Charts in docs, so did not add a description of the new function there.
Phpstan is happy with the changes. We'll see how Scrutinizer feels when I push it.
See issue #2203. An undotted i uncrossed t. When using namespaces, need to call attributes() to access the attributes before trying to access them directly. Failure to do so in castToFormula caused problem for shared formulas.
Surprisingly, this didn't show up in unit tests. Perhaps sharing the same formula between two cells isn't common. It did show up in Chart Samples. I've added a test.
I was really inclined to merge this right away. Not to worry - I can control myself. It should be moved fairly quickly nevertheless.
Just reviewing Scrutinizer's list of "bugs". There are 19 ascribed to me. For some, I will definitely take no action (e.g. use of bitwise operators in AND, OR, and XOR functions). However, where I can clean things up so that Scrutinizer is satisfied and the resulting code is not too contorted, I will make an attempt.
This PR corrects 2 problems according to Scrutinizer, and 1 per Phpstan. Only test members are involved.
Just reviewing Scrutinizer's list of "bugs". There are 19 ascribed to me. For some, I will definitely take no action (e.g. use of bitwise operators in AND, OR, and XOR functions). However, where I can clean things up so that Scrutinizer is satisfied and the resulting code is not too contorted, I will make an attempt.
This PR corrects 3 problems (2 mine) according to Scrutinizer, and 7 per Phpstan. It also moves the Reader Slk tests under their own directory, as is the case for all the other Reader types.
* Reader/Gnumeric vs. Scrutinizer
Just reviewing Scrutinizer's list of "bugs". There are 19 ascribed to me. For some, I will definitely take no action (e.g. use of bitwise operators in AND, OR, and XOR functions). However, where I can clean things up so that Scrutinizer is satisfied and the resulting code is not too contorted, I will make an attempt.
I believe this is the only one with which will involve more than 2 or 3 changes. It fixes 5 items ascribed to me, and 4 to others.
* Use Strict Checking for in_array
* Correct Some Problems Which Will Show Up for PHP8.1
PHP8.1 wants to issue a message when you use a float where it thinks you ought to be using an int (it wants its implicit casts made explicit). This is causing unit tests to fail. The following corrections are made in this PR:
- Calculation.php tests `isset(self::binaryOperators[$token])`, where token can be a float. No numeric values are members of that array, so we can test for numeric before isset.
- SharedOle.php packs a float, intending it as an int, in 2 places. I simplified the logic here, and added explicit casts to avoid the problem. This is used by Xls Reader and Writer; as added confirmation, I added some timestamps from before 1970 (i.e. negative values) to Document/EpochTest. Because of this, the test suite has been verified for 32-bit PHP as well as PHP 8.1.
- Writer/Xlsx/StringTable tests `isset($aFlippedStringTable[$cellValue])`. This is the same problem as in Calculation, but requires a different solution. The same if statement here also tests that the datatype is string, but it does so after the isset test. Changing the order of these tests avoids the problem.
* Update OLE.php
Fix for issue #1897.
The existing hashing code seems to work correctly almost all the time, but there are exceptions. It is replaced by an exact implementation of the spec, including a link to the spec in the comments. Cases known to fail are added to the unit test suite.
The spec expects the string to be at most 255 bytes (yes, bytes not characters). The program had permitted any length; it will now throw an exception when the maximum length is exceeded.
Xls does not support any hashing algorithm except basic. The Xls writer had, nevertheless, accepted the results of any of the other possible algorithms. This leads to (a) a worksheet that can't be unprotected, and (b) deprecation notices during the write (because it is using hexdec, which expects only hex characters, and the other algorithms generate non-hex characters). I have changed Xls writer to ignore passwords generated by other algorithms. An alternative would be to have the password hasher generate both an algorithmic password (for use by Xlsx) and a basic password (for use by Xls); I think that is too complex a solution, but can look into it if you think it worthwhile.
I do not see any current support for Worksheet passwords in ODS Reader or Writer. I did not add support in this PR.
I added a new test to confirm the password for reading a spreadsheet is consistent with the one used for writing it. As you can see from the comments for the new test, it had an unusual problem with a somewhat unusual solution.
* Xlsx Reader Better Namespace Handling Phase 1 Try2
This is a replacement for #2088, which has run into merge conflicts. I will close that PR in the near future, however the comments in that PR may prove useful for this one. While that PR has been in draft status all along, I am marking this one as ready. I will gladly add additional tests (and, of course, make code changes) that anyone has to suggest, but, with my most recent test files which I will describe in a separate comment, I have no further ideas on useful additions.
As mentioned in the earlier ticket, this is a risky change. But, as has been demonstrated, delaying it comes with its own set of risks. It would be helpful to have a temporary moratorium on changes to Reader/Xlsx until this change is merged.
The original commit message follows.
There have been a number of issues concerning the handling of legitimate but unexpected namespace prefixes in Xlsx spreadsheets created by software other than Excel and PhpSpreadsheet/PhpExcel.I have studied them, but, till now, have not had a good idea on how to act on them. A recent comment https://github.com/PHPOffice/PhpSpreadsheet/issues/860#issuecomment-824926224 in issue #860 by @IMSoP has triggered an idea about how to proceed.
Gnumeric Reader was recently changed to handle namespaces better. Using that as a model, this PR begins the process of doing the same for Xlsx. Xlsx is much larger and more complicated than Gnumeric, hence the need to tackle it in multiple phases. I believe that this PR handles all of:
- listWorkSheetNames
- listWorkSheetInfo. Note that there was a bug in this function which would cause it to count only used columns rather than all columns. That bug is corrected.
- active sheet
- selected cell and top left cell
- cell content (formulas, numbers, text)
- hyperlinks
- comments (partial - see below)
This PR does not address:
- styles
- images and charts
- VBA and ribbons
- many other items, I'm sure
The issue for non-standard namespacing till now has been the use of unexpected prefixes. While I was working on this change, @Lambik introduced issue #2067 PR #2068 which introduced a completely different problem - the use of unexpected URLs. That PR and the issue associated with it were quite well documented, including the supplying of a test file and tests for it. I asked if I could take a look to see if it could be integrated with my change, and the result seems to be yes, so those changes are also part of this PR.
While adding a comment to my test file, I discovered that Microsoft had added "threaded comments" as a new feature. I believe these are not yet supported by PhpSpreadsheet, and I am not going to add it, at least not now. I believe that, among other things, this will make identifying the author of a comment more difficult.
Although there are a number of Phpstan baseline changes as part of this PR, I did not attempt to resolve all Phpstan reports for Reader/Xlsx. Nor did I do anything to increase coverage. This change is already large and complex enough without those efforts.
Per suggestion from @MarkBaker.
WildcardMatch did not handle double tilde correctly. It has been changed to do so and its logic simplified (and commented).
Existing AutoFilter test covered this situation, but I added a test for MATCH as well.
Most of the remaining 32-bit-unsafe date handling that remains in PhpSpreadsheet is in AutoFilter. Cleaning this up demonstrated that there are a lot of problems with AutoFilter, and I will do it in two pieces. Part 1 was PR #2141 which I have just merged.
In this PR:
- Fix remaining 32-bit dates in filterTestInDateGroupSet.
- Also in some of the existing AutoFilter samples. Note that the comments in two of those said the filter was being set for the first day of each month, but the code specifies the last day - I have corrected the comments.
- Remove mocking in unit tests for AutoFilter in favor of 'real' tests.
- Code coverage is now 100% in all of AutoFilter, AutoFilter/Column, and AutoFilter/Common/Rule.
- No remaining AutoFilter(/Column(/Rule)) exceptions in Phpstan baseline.
- Documentation for escaping of asterisk, question mark, and tilde in text filters included spurious backslashes which are now removed.
- Text filter escaping of question mark did not work. There had been no unit tests for any text filtering.
- Likewise there had been no testing for TopTen.
- Above- and below- average filters were not working because they acquired their Calculation instance incorrectly. There had been no tests.
- Several unchanging private static arrays in Rule were changed to private const arrays.
- Clones are now tested.
- RuleTest is moved to same directory as other tests.
Specifically, the default for these two functions has been changed from `ENT_COMPAT` to `ENT_QUOTES | ENT_SUBSTITUTE`
This PR configures the argument used for those functions in Settings, and then explicitly applies it everywhere they are used in the codebase.
PR #2088 is having major merge problems. This is partly because it moves some tests from Reader to Reader/Xlsx. Making this move beforehand may help. Or it may make things worse, but they are already bad enough that I am contemplating redoing the PR. If I do that, having this done beforehand will make things easier.
This PR does nothing but move some tests. This will make it easier to test changes to Xlsx Reader without having to run each test individually, or without having to run tests for all the other readers at the same time.
* Read data validations for drop down list in another sheet.
* Add function testLoadXlsxDataValidationOfAnotherSheet() in class tests/PhpSpreadsheetTests/Reader/XlsxTest.php for unit test.
* Add sample xlsx for unit tests.
* Modifiy call function isset() for warnings.
* Additional assertions to ensure that the worksheet has been read correctly for DataValidation that references a list on a different worksheet
* This should resolve the phpstan issues
Co-authored-by: Mark Baker <mark@lange.demon.co.uk>
* Improve Identification of Samples in Coverage Report
The Phpunit coverage report currently contains bullet items like `PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheetTests\Helper\SampleTest\testSample with data set "49"`. This extremely simple change takes advantage of Phpunit's ability to accept an array with keys which are either strings or integers, by using the sample filenames as the array keys rather than sequential but otherwise meaningless integers (e.g. `49` in the earlier cited item). The bullet item will now read `PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheetTests\Helper\SampleTest\testSample with data set "Basic/38_Clone_worksheet.php"`.
* Fix for Issue 2158 (AverageIf Calculation Problem)
Issue #2158 reports an error calculating AverageIf because a function returns null rather than a string. There turn out to be several components to this problem:
- The nominal fix to the problem is to add some null-to-nullstring coercion in DatabaseAbstract.
- This fixes the error, but does not necessarily lead to the correct result because buildQuery treats values of null and null-string identically, whereas Excel does not. So change that to treat null-string as any other string.
- But that doesn't lead to the correct result either. That's because Functions/ifCondition recognizes a null string, but then continues to (over-)process it until it returns the wrong result. Fix this problem in conjunction with the other two, and we finally get the correct result.
A new unit test is added for AVERAGEIF, and new test cases are added for SUMIF. In each case, there are complementary tests for conditions of null and null-string, and the results agree with Excel. There may or may not be value in adding new tests to other functions, and I will be glad to do so for any functions which you care to identify, but no existing tests broke as a result of these changes.
* PHP8.1 Deprecation Passing Null to String Function
For each of the files in this PR, one or more statements can pass a null to string functions like strlower. This is deprecated in PHP8.1, and, when deprecated messages are enabled, causes many tests to error out. In every case, use coercion to pass null string rather than null.
* TextData - Minor Changes, Test Coverage
Per agreement on a previous push, I looked into standardizing the initialization of the TextData functions (like Engineering and MathTrig), with particular regard for avoiding multiple later null coercions. This simplifies the code quite a bit. This PR also increases coverage to 100% for all TextData modules. All entries in Phpstan baseline for non-deprecated TEXTDATA functions are removed. There were some minor bugfixes.
Whereas Excel (and Gnumeric) treat booleans when supplied as strings as 'TRUE' or 'FALSE', ODS treats them as '1' or '0'. Unlike Excel, ODS generally does not allow bool for int arguments; it does, however, allow them for FIND and SEARCH. ODS allows boolean for into for SUBSTITUTE even though Excel doesn't. ODS allows bool for string for NUMBERVALUE and VALUE even though Excel doesn't. ODS accepts 0 as an argument for CHAR; Excel doesn't. Most of this seems like random decisions on the part of the developers; I've done my best to follow the products in each case. There is a new test member devoted to ODS tests.
Gnumeric has an anomaly vis-a-vis the others - if length is supplied to LEFT/MID/RIGHT as null, Gnumeric treats it as 0 rather than 1.
All tests now take place in the context of a spreadsheet ...
Except for RETURNSTRING, which is not the implementation of an Excel function, and is referred to in the rest of PhpSpreadsheet only in the unit tests for itself. It should probably be deprecated, but that is not part of this PR, just in case there is some reason for it that I couldn't discern.
I have tried to make the first line of each doc block identify the Excel function name rather than its name in PhpSpreadsheet. I think it makes things more comprehensible.
Some tests call Settings::setLocale, but there was no Settings::getLocale. At the end of the tests which do it, they invoke setLocale('EN-US'), which, in a practical sense, is sufficient. However, in theory it would be better for them to get the current locale before changing it, then changing it back to the original when the time came. I have added getLocale and made the appropriate testing change.
The CHAR function took an interesting turn. One can set the value of a cell to, say, CHAR(2), the ASCII/UTF-8 representation of a control character, which is not legal in certain contexts. The only Reader/Writer that could handle this without problems is Xls, which deals with binary data all the time. However, if you tried to write it to Xlsx, Excel would not be able to open the resulting file because of what it considers an illegal character. I changed the Xlsx writer to escape such characters when writing the value of a string function. I did not make any other changes to the Xlsx writer - it seems to me that setting a cell to CHAR(2) is legitimate, but setting it to say `"\x02"` seems less likely to be legitimate, so the latter will still fail (although `="\x02"` should work). The Xlsx reader already supports the escape mechanism that I added to the writer.
CHAR control character and Ods - not supported by either Reader or Writer. I did not attempt to add this now. There is lots still missing from ODS, and this item just can't be a high priority amongst all of those.
CHAR control character and Csv - it is supported by reader and writer if the file has a csv extension. However, trying to guess the mime type without an extension - the control character makes mime_get_type guess application/octet-stream, and PhpSpreadsheet therefore thinks that Csv can't read it.
CHAR control character and Html. Actual use of the control character in the file is subject to the same problems as Xml (i.e. Xlsx and Ods). It wasn't terribly difficult to get the Html Writer to change `"\x02"` to "``". I believe that this is technically legal; however, DOMDocument.loadHTML rejects it as an illegal entity, and I am not convinced that it is wrong to do so, so I haven't changed the Html writer.
* Scrutinizer
Correct 3 minor errors.
* Fix for the BIFF-8 Xls colour mappings in the Reader
* Unit test for reading colours, writing hen rereading and ensuring that the RGB values have not changed
The Phpunit coverage report currently contains bullet items like `PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheetTests\Helper\SampleTest\testSample with data set "49"`. This extremely simple change takes advantage of Phpunit's ability to accept an array with keys which are either strings or integers, by using the sample filenames as the array keys rather than sequential but otherwise meaningless integers (e.g. `49` in the earlier cited item). The bullet item will now read `PhpOffice\PhpSpreadsheetTests\Helper\SampleTest\testSample with data set "Basic/38_Clone_worksheet.php"`.
Allows basic column width conversion when importing from Html that includes UoM... while not overly-sophisticated in converting units to MS Excel's column width units, it should allow import without errors
Also provides a general conversion helper class, and allows column width getters/setters to specify a UoM for easier usage
* Initia work on differentiating between empty arguments and null arguments passed to Excel functions
Previously we always passed a null value for an empty argument (i.e. where there was an argument separator in the function call without an argument.... PHP doesn't support empty arguments, so we needed to provide some value but then it wasn't possible to differentiate between a genuine null argument (either a literal null, or a null cell value) and the null that we were passing to represent an empty argument value.
This change evaluates empty arguments within the calculation engine, and instead of passing a null, it reads the signature of the required Excel function, and passes the default value for that argument; so now a null argument really does mean a null value argument.
* If the Excel function implementation doesn't accept any arguments; or once we reach a variadic argument, or try to pass more arguments than the method supports in its signature, then there's no point in checking for defaults, and to do so will lead to PHP errors, so break out of the default replacement loop