excel-automation
- Repo stars 1,187
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- Author updated Jun 14, 2026, 10:01 AM
- Author repo claude-code-skills
- Domain
- Data
- Compatible agents
-
- Claude Code
- Cursor
- Cline
- Codex
- Windsurf
- Gemini CLI
- +20
- Trust score
- 88 / 100 · community maintained
- Author / version / license
- @daymade · no license declared
- Token usage
- Lean
- Setup complexity
- Guided setup
- External API key
- Not required
- Operating systems
- macOS
- Runtime requirements
- Python
- Permissions
-
- Read-only
- Write / modify
- Shell exec
- Network behavior
- Local-only
- Install commands
- 26 variants
Profile is derived at build time from SKILL.md and install vectors. Subject to drift from author intent.
Heads up: 未限定 allowed-tools,默认拥有全部工具权限。
---
name: excel-automation
description: Create, parse, and control Excel files on macOS. Professional formatting with openpyxl, complex…
category: data
runtime: Python
---
# excel-automation output preview
## PART A: Task fit
- Use case: Create, parse, and control Excel files on macOS. Professional formatting with openpyxl, complex xlsm parsing with stdlib zipfile+xml for investment bank financial models, and Excel window control via AppleScript. Use when creating formatted Excel reports, parsing financial models that openpyxl cannot handle, or automating Excel on macOS..
- Inputs: target material, constraints, expected output, and acceptance criteria.
- Evidence boundary: follow “Quick Start / Overview / Tool Selection Decision Tree” and do not present inference as author intent.
## PART B: Execution result
- **01** The card summarizes the use case; runtime output centers on “Create, parse, and control Excel files on macOS. Professional formatting with openpyxl, complex xlsm parsing with stdlib zipfile+xml for investment bank financial models, and Excel window control via AppleScript. Use when creating formatted Excel reports, parsing financial models that openpyxl cannot handle, or automating Excel on macOS.”.
- **02** When the source has headings, the agent prioritizes “Quick Start / Overview / Tool Selection Decision Tree” so the result follows the author’s structure.
- **03** Typical output includes task judgment, concrete steps, required commands or file edits, validation, and follow-up options.
- **04** Risk context follows the fingerprint: read files, write/modify files, run shell commands; mostly runs locally; usually needs no extra API key.
## Running Rules
- read files, write/modify files, run shell commands; mostly runs locally; usually needs no extra API key.
- Validate with a small sample before expanding scope.
- Return the result, validation criteria, and next iteration options. The source does not require a stable slash command. After installation, invoke the skill by name and describe the task.
Name target files or source material, expected output, forbidden changes, and whether network or shell access is allowed. Permission fingerprint: read files, write/modify files, run shell commands.
Start with a small task and check whether the result follows “Quick Start / Overview / Tool Selection Decision Tree”. Inspect diffs, logs, previews, or tests before expanding scope.
Confirm the final output includes a concrete result, evidence, and next action. If it stays generic, tighten inputs, boundaries, and acceptance criteria.
---
name: excel-automation
description: Create, parse, and control Excel files on macOS. Professional formatting with openpyxl, complex…
category: data
source: daymade/claude-code-skills
---
# excel-automation
## When to use
- Create, parse, and control Excel files on macOS. Professional formatting with openpyxl, complex xlsm parsing with stdl…
- Use it when the task has clear inputs, repeatable steps, and validation criteria.
## What to provide
- Target material, scope, expected result, and forbidden changes.
- Whether network, commands, file writes, or external services are allowed.
## Execution rules
- Organize steps around “Quick Start / Overview / Tool Selection Decision Tree” and keep inference separate from source facts.
- read files, write/modify files, run shell commands; mostly runs locally; usually needs no extra API key.
- Validate with a small sample before expanding the task.
## Output requirements
- Return the deliverable, key evidence, validation method, and next action.
- Mark missing information as unknown; do not invent commands, platforms, or dependencies. The author source anchors workflow facts; repository files anchor sources and commands; Fluxly only adds fit, limitations, and quality judgment.
skill "excel-automation" {
input -> user goal + target files + boundaries + acceptance criteria
context -> Quick Start / Overview / Tool Selection Decision Tree
rules -> SKILL.md triggers / order / output contract
runtime -> Python | read files, write/modify files, run shell commands | mostly runs locally
guardrails -> usually needs no extra API key + small-sample validation + diff/log review
output -> copyable result + checklist + next iteration
} Excel Automation
Create professional Excel files, parse complex financial models, and control Excel on macOS.
Quick Start
# Create a formatted Excel report
uv run --with openpyxl scripts/create_formatted_excel.py output.xlsx
# Parse a complex xlsm that openpyxl can't handle
uv run scripts/parse_complex_excel.py model.xlsm # List sheets
uv run scripts/parse_complex_excel.py model.xlsm "DCF" # Extract a sheet
uv run scripts/parse_complex_excel.py model.xlsm --fix # Fix corrupted names
# Control Excel via AppleScript (with timeout to prevent hangs)
timeout 5 osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel" to activate'
Overview
Three capabilities:
| Capability | Tool | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| Create formatted Excel | openpyxl |
Reports, mockups, dashboards |
| Parse complex xlsm/xlsx | zipfile + xml.etree |
Financial models, VBA workbooks, >1MB files |
| Control Excel window | AppleScript (osascript) |
Zoom, scroll, select cells programmatically |
Tool Selection Decision Tree
Is the file simple (data export, no VBA, <1MB)?
├─ YES → openpyxl or pandas
└─ NO
├─ Is it .xlsm or from investment bank / >1MB?
│ └─ YES → zipfile + xml.etree.ElementTree (stdlib)
└─ Is it truly .xls (BIFF format)?
└─ YES → xlrd
Signals of "complex" Excel: file >1MB, .xlsm extension, from investment bank/broker, contains VBA macros.
IMPORTANT: Always run file <path> first — extensions lie. A .xls file may actually be a ZIP-based xlsx.
Creating Excel Files (openpyxl)
Professional Color Convention (Investment Banking Standard)
| Color | RGB Code | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Blue | 0000FF |
User input / assumption |
| Black | 000000 |
Calculated value |
| Green | 008000 |
Cross-sheet reference |
| White on dark blue | FFFFFF on 4472C4 |
Section headers |
| Dark blue text | 1F4E79 |
Title |
Core Formatting Patterns
from openpyxl.styles import Font, PatternFill, Border, Side, Alignment
# Fonts
BLUE_FONT = Font(color="0000FF", size=10, name="Calibri")
BLACK_FONT_BOLD = Font(color="000000", size=10, name="Calibri", bold=True)
GREEN_FONT = Font(color="008000", size=10, name="Calibri")
HEADER_FONT = Font(color="FFFFFF", size=12, name="Calibri", bold=True)
# Fills
DARK_BLUE_FILL = PatternFill("solid", fgColor="4472C4")
LIGHT_BLUE_FILL = PatternFill("solid", fgColor="D9E1F2")
INPUT_GREEN_FILL = PatternFill("solid", fgColor="E2EFDA")
LIGHT_GRAY_FILL = PatternFill("solid", fgColor="F2F2F2")
# Borders
THIN_BORDER = Border(bottom=Side(style="thin", color="B2B2B2"))
BOTTOM_DOUBLE = Border(bottom=Side(style="double", color="000000"))
Number Format Codes
| Format | Code | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Currency | '$#,##0' |
$1,234 |
| Currency with decimals | '$#,##0.00' |
$1,234.56 |
| Percentage | '0.0%' |
12.3% |
| Percentage (2 decimal) | '0.00%' |
12.34% |
| Number with commas | '#,##0' |
1,234 |
| Multiplier | '0.0x' |
1.5x |
Conditional Formatting (Sensitivity Tables)
Red-to-green gradient for sensitivity analysis:
from openpyxl.formatting.rule import ColorScaleRule
rule = ColorScaleRule(
start_type="min", start_color="F8696B", # Red (low)
mid_type="percentile", mid_value=50, mid_color="FFEB84", # Yellow (mid)
end_type="max", end_color="63BE7B" # Green (high)
)
ws.conditional_formatting.add(f"B2:F6", rule)
Execution
uv run --with openpyxl scripts/create_formatted_excel.py
Full template script: See scripts/create_formatted_excel.py
Parsing Complex Excel (zipfile + xml)
When openpyxl fails on complex xlsm files (corrupted DefinedNames, complex VBA), use stdlib directly.
XLSX Internal ZIP Structure
file.xlsx (ZIP archive)
├── [Content_Types].xml
├── xl/
│ ├── workbook.xml ← Sheet names + order
│ ├── sharedStrings.xml ← All text values (lookup table)
│ ├── worksheets/
│ │ ├── sheet1.xml ← Cell data for sheet 1
│ │ ├── sheet2.xml ← Cell data for sheet 2
│ │ └── ...
│ └── _rels/
│ └── workbook.xml.rels ← Maps rId → sheetN.xml
└── _rels/.rels
Sheet Name Resolution (Two-Step)
Sheet names in workbook.xml link to physical files via _rels/workbook.xml.rels:
import zipfile
import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET
MAIN_NS = 'http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/spreadsheetml/2006/main'
REL_NS = 'http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/officeDocument/2006/relationships'
RELS_NS = 'http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/package/2006/relationships'
def get_sheet_path(zf, sheet_name):
"""Resolve sheet name to physical XML file path inside ZIP."""
# Step 1: workbook.xml → find rId for the sheet name
wb_xml = ET.fromstring(zf.read('xl/workbook.xml'))
sheets = wb_xml.findall(f'.//{{{MAIN_NS}}}sheet')
rid = None
for s in sheets:
if s.get('name') == sheet_name:
rid = s.get(f'{{{REL_NS}}}id')
break
if not rid:
raise ValueError(f"Sheet '{sheet_name}' not found")
# Step 2: workbook.xml.rels → map rId to file path
rels_xml = ET.fromstring(zf.read('xl/_rels/workbook.xml.rels'))
for rel in rels_xml.findall(f'{{{RELS_NS}}}Relationship'):
if rel.get('Id') == rid:
return 'xl/' + rel.get('Target')
raise ValueError(f"No file mapping for {rid}")
Cell Data Extraction
def extract_cells(zf, sheet_path):
"""Extract all cell values from a sheet XML."""
# Build shared strings lookup
shared = []
try:
ss_xml = ET.fromstring(zf.read('xl/sharedStrings.xml'))
for si in ss_xml.findall(f'{{{MAIN_NS}}}si'):
texts = si.itertext()
shared.append(''.join(texts))
except KeyError:
pass # No shared strings
# Parse sheet cells
sheet_xml = ET.fromstring(zf.read(sheet_path))
rows = sheet_xml.findall(f'.//{{{MAIN_NS}}}row')
data = {}
for row in rows:
for cell in row.findall(f'{{{MAIN_NS}}}c'):
ref = cell.get('r') # e.g., "A1"
cell_type = cell.get('t') # "s" = shared string, None = number
val_el = cell.find(f'{{{MAIN_NS}}}v')
if val_el is not None and val_el.text:
if cell_type == 's':
data[ref] = shared[int(val_el.text)]
else:
try:
data[ref] = float(val_el.text)
except ValueError:
data[ref] = val_el.text
return data
Fixing Corrupted DefinedNames
Investment bank xlsm files often have corrupted <definedName> entries containing "Formula removed":
def fix_defined_names(zf_in_path, zf_out_path):
"""Remove corrupted DefinedNames and repackage."""
import shutil, tempfile
with tempfile.TemporaryDirectory() as tmp:
tmp = Path(tmp)
with zipfile.ZipFile(zf_in_path, 'r') as zf:
zf.extractall(tmp)
wb_xml_path = tmp / 'xl' / 'workbook.xml'
tree = ET.parse(wb_xml_path)
root = tree.getroot()
ns = {'main': MAIN_NS}
defined_names = root.find('.//main:definedNames', ns)
if defined_names is not None:
for name in list(defined_names):
if name.text and "Formula removed" in name.text:
defined_names.remove(name)
tree.write(wb_xml_path, encoding='utf-8', xml_declaration=True)
with zipfile.ZipFile(zf_out_path, 'w', zipfile.ZIP_DEFLATED) as zf:
for fp in tmp.rglob('*'):
if fp.is_file():
zf.write(fp, fp.relative_to(tmp))
Full template script: See scripts/parse_complex_excel.py
Controlling Excel on macOS (AppleScript)
All commands verified on macOS with Microsoft Excel.
Verified Commands
# Activate Excel (bring to front)
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel" to activate'
# Open a file
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel" to open POSIX file "/path/to/file.xlsx"'
# Set zoom level (percentage)
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
set zoom of active window to 120
end tell'
# Scroll to specific row
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
set scroll row of active window to 45
end tell'
# Scroll to specific column
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
set scroll column of active window to 3
end tell'
# Select a cell range
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
select range "A1" of active sheet
end tell'
# Select a specific sheet by name
osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel"
activate object sheet "DCF" of active workbook
end tell'
Timing and Timeout
Always add sleep 1 between AppleScript commands and subsequent operations (e.g., screenshot) to allow UI rendering.
IMPORTANT: osascript will hang indefinitely if Excel is not running or not responding. Always wrap with timeout:
# Safe pattern: 5-second timeout
timeout 5 osascript -e 'tell application "Microsoft Excel" to activate'
# Check exit code: 124 = timed out
if [ $? -eq 124 ]; then
echo "Excel not responding — is it running?"
fi
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Correction |
|---|---|
| openpyxl fails on complex xlsm → try monkey-patching | Switch to zipfile + xml.etree immediately |
Count Chinese characters with wc -c |
Use wc -m (chars, not bytes; Chinese = 3 bytes/char) |
| Trust file extension | Run file <path> first to confirm actual format |
openpyxl load_workbook hangs on large xlsm |
Use zipfile for targeted extraction instead of loading entire workbook |
Important Notes
- Execute Python scripts with
uv run --with openpyxl(never use system Python) - LibreOffice (
soffice --headless) can convert formats and recalculate formulas - Detailed formatting reference: See
references/formatting-reference.md
Decide Fit First
Design Intent
How To Use It
Boundaries And Review