Working with styles

Introduction

Styles are used to change the look of your data while displayed on screen. They are also used to determine the formatting for numbers.

Styles can be applied to the following aspects:

  • font to set font size, color, underlining, etc.
  • fill to set a pattern or color gradient
  • border to set borders on a cell
  • cell alignment
  • protection

The following are the default values

>>> from openpyxl.styles import PatternFill, Border, Side, Alignment, Protection, Font
>>> font = Font(name='Calibri',
...                 size=11,
...                 bold=False,
...                 italic=False,
...                 vertAlign=None,
...                 underline='none',
...                 strike=False,
...                 color='FF000000')
>>> fill = PatternFill(fill_type=None,
...                 start_color='FFFFFFFF',
...                 end_color='FF000000')
>>> border = Border(left=Side(border_style=None,
...                           color='FF000000'),
...                 right=Side(border_style=None,
...                            color='FF000000'),
...                 top=Side(border_style=None,
...                          color='FF000000'),
...                 bottom=Side(border_style=None,
...                             color='FF000000'),
...                 diagonal=Side(border_style=None,
...                               color='FF000000'),
...                 diagonal_direction=0,
...                 outline=Side(border_style=None,
...                              color='FF000000'),
...                 vertical=Side(border_style=None,
...                               color='FF000000'),
...                 horizontal=Side(border_style=None,
...                                color='FF000000')
...                )
>>> alignment=Alignment(horizontal='general',
...                     vertical='bottom',
...                     text_rotation=0,
...                     wrap_text=False,
...                     shrink_to_fit=False,
...                     indent=0)
>>> number_format = 'General'
>>> protection = Protection(locked=True,
...                         hidden=False)
>>>

Cell Styles and Named Styles

There are two types of styles: cell styles and named styles, also known as style templates.

Cell Styles

Cell styles are shared between objects and once they have been assigned they cannot be changed. This stops unwanted side-effects such as changing the style for lots of cells when instead of only one.

>>> from openpyxl.styles import colors
>>> from openpyxl.styles import Font, Color
>>> from openpyxl import Workbook
>>> wb = Workbook()
>>> ws = wb.active
>>>
>>> a1 = ws['A1']
>>> d4 = ws['D4']
>>> ft = Font(color=colors.RED)
>>> a1.font = ft
>>> d4.font = ft
>>>
>>> a1.font.italic = True # is not allowed 
>>>
>>> # If you want to change the color of a Font, you need to reassign it::
>>>
>>> a1.font = Font(color=colors.RED, italic=True) # the change only affects A1

Copying styles

Styles can also be copied

>>> from openpyxl.styles import Font
>>> from copy import copy
>>>
>>> ft1 = Font(name='Arial', size=14)
>>> ft2 = copy(ft1)
>>> ft2.name = "Tahoma"
>>> ft1.name
'Arial'
>>> ft2.name
'Tahoma'
>>> ft2.size # copied from the
14.0

Basic Font Colors

Colors are usually RGB or aRGB hexvalues. The colors module contains some handy constants

>>> from openpyxl.styles import Font
>>> from openpyxl.styles.colors import RED
>>> font = Font(color=RED)
>>> font = Font(color="FFBB00")

There is also support for legacy indexed colors as well as themes and tints

>>> from openpyxl.styles.colors import Color
>>> c = Color(indexed=32)
>>> c = Color(theme=6, tint=0.5)

Applying Styles

Styles are applied directly to cells

>>> from openpyxl.workbook import Workbook
>>> from openpyxl.styles import Font, Fill
>>> wb = Workbook()
>>> ws = wb.active
>>> c = ws['A1']
>>> c.font = Font(size=12)

Styles can also applied to columns and rows but note that this applies only to cells created (in Excel) after the file is closed. If you want to apply styles to entire rows and columns then you must apply the style to each cell yourself. This is a restriction of the file format:

>>> col = ws.column_dimensions['A']
>>> col.font = Font(bold=True)
>>> row = ws.row_dimensions[1]
>>> row.font = Font(underline="single")

Styling Merged Cells

Sometimes you want to format a range of cells as if they were a single object. Excel pretends that this is possible by merging cells (deleting all but the top-left cell) and then recreating them in order to apply pseudo-styles.

from openpyxl.styles import Border, Side, PatternFill, Font, GradientFill, Alignment
from openpyxl import Workbook


def style_range(ws, cell_range, border=Border(), fill=None, font=None, alignment=None):
    """
    Apply styles to a range of cells as if they were a single cell.

    :param ws:  Excel worksheet instance
    :param range: An excel range to style (e.g. A1:F20)
    :param border: An openpyxl Border
    :param fill: An openpyxl PatternFill or GradientFill
    :param font: An openpyxl Font object
    """

    top = Border(top=border.top)
    left = Border(left=border.left)
    right = Border(right=border.right)
    bottom = Border(bottom=border.bottom)

    first_cell = ws[cell_range.split(":")[0]]
    if alignment:
        ws.merge_cells(cell_range)
        first_cell.alignment = alignment

    rows = ws[cell_range]
    if font:
        first_cell.font = font

    for cell in rows[0]:
        cell.border = cell.border + top
    for cell in rows[-1]:
        cell.border = cell.border + bottom

    for row in rows:
        l = row[0]
        r = row[-1]
        l.border = l.border + left
        r.border = r.border + right
        if fill:
            for c in row:
                c.fill = fill

wb = Workbook()
ws = wb.active
my_cell = ws['B2']
my_cell.value = "My Cell"
thin = Side(border_style="thin", color="000000")
double = Side(border_style="double", color="ff0000")

border = Border(top=double, left=thin, right=thin, bottom=double)
fill = PatternFill("solid", fgColor="DDDDDD")
fill = GradientFill(stop=("000000", "FFFFFF"))
font = Font(b=True, color="FF0000")
al = Alignment(horizontal="center", vertical="center")


style_range(ws, 'B2:F4', border=border, fill=fill, font=font, alignment=al)
wb.save("styled.xlsx")

Edit Page Setup

>>> from openpyxl.workbook import Workbook
>>>
>>> wb = Workbook()
>>> ws = wb.active
>>>
>>> ws.page_setup.orientation = ws.ORIENTATION_LANDSCAPE
>>> ws.page_setup.paperSize = ws.PAPERSIZE_TABLOID
>>> ws.page_setup.fitToHeight = 0
>>> ws.page_setup.fitToWidth = 1

Named Styles

In contrast to Cell Styles, Named Styles are mutable. They make sense when you want to apply formatting to lots of different cells at once. NB. once you have assigned a named style to a cell, additional changes to the style will not affect the cell.

Once a named style has been registered with a workbook, it can be referred to simply by name.

Creating a Named Style

>>> from openpyxl.styles import NamedStyle, Font, Border, Side
>>> highlight = NamedStyle(name="highlight")
>>> highlight.font = Font(bold=True, size=20)
>>> bd = Side(style='thick', color="000000")
>>> highlight.border = Border(left=bd, top=bd, right=bd, bottom=bd)

Once a named style has been created, it can be registered with the workbook:

>>> wb.add_named_style(highlight)

But named styles will also be registered automatically the first time they are assigned to a cell:

>>> ws['A1'].style = highlight

Once registered assign the style using just the name:

>>> ws['D5'].style = 'highlight'

Using builtin styles

The specification includes some builtin styles which can also be used. Unfortunately, the names for these styles are stored in their localised forms. openpyxl will only recognise the English names and only exactly as written here. These are as follows:

  • ‘Normal’ # same as no style

Number formats

  • ‘Comma’
  • ‘Comma [0]’
  • ‘Currency’
  • ‘Currency [0]’
  • ‘Percent’

Informative

  • ‘Calculation’
  • ‘Total’
  • ‘Note’
  • ‘Warning Text’
  • ‘Explanatory Text’

Text styles

  • ‘Title’
  • ‘Headline 1’
  • ‘Headline 2’
  • ‘Headline 3’
  • ‘Headline 4’
  • ‘Hyperlink’
  • ‘Followed Hyperlink’
  • ‘Linked Cell’

Comparisons

  • ‘Input’
  • ‘Output’
  • ‘Check Cell’
  • ‘Good’
  • ‘Bad’
  • ‘Neutral’

Highlights

  • ‘Accent1’
  • ‘20 % - Accent1’
  • ‘40 % - Accent1’
  • ‘60 % - Accent1’
  • ‘Accent2’
  • ‘20 % - Accent2’
  • ‘40 % - Accent2’
  • ‘60 % - Accent2’
  • ‘Accent3’
  • ‘20 % - Accent3’
  • ‘40 % - Accent3’
  • ‘60 % - Accent3’
  • ‘Accent4’
  • ‘20 % - Accent4’
  • ‘40 % - Accent4’
  • ‘60 % - Accent4’
  • ‘Accent5’
  • ‘20 % - Accent5’
  • ‘40 % - Accent5’
  • ‘60 % - Accent5’
  • ‘Accent6’
  • ‘20 % - Accent6’
  • ‘40 % - Accent6’
  • ‘60 % - Accent6’
  • ‘Pandas’

For more information about the builtin styles please refer to the openpyxl.styles.builtins