| name | xlsx |
| description | Use this skill any time a spreadsheet file is the primary input or output. This means any task where the user wants to: open, read, edit, or fix an existing .xlsx, .xlsm, .csv, or .tsv file; create a new spreadsheet from scratch or from other data sources; or convert between tabular file formats. Also trigger for cleaning or restructuring messy tabular data. The deliverable must be a spreadsheet file. |
| dependencies | {"commands":["python3"],"tools":["skillScriptTool","skillFileTool"]} |
| platforms | ["macos","linux","windows"] |
Important: All scripts/ paths are relative to this skill directory.
Use run_skill_script tool to execute scripts, or run with: cd {this_skill_dir} && python scripts/...
Requirements for Outputs
All Excel files
Professional Font
- Use a consistent, professional font (e.g., Arial, Times New Roman) unless otherwise instructed
Zero Formula Errors
- Every Excel model MUST be delivered with ZERO formula errors (#REF!, #DIV/0!, #VALUE!, #N/A, #NAME?)
Preserve Existing Templates
- Study and EXACTLY match existing format, style, and conventions when modifying files
- Existing template conventions ALWAYS override these guidelines
Financial Models
Color Coding Standards
- Blue text (0,0,255): Hardcoded inputs
- Black text (0,0,0): ALL formulas and calculations
- Green text (0,128,0): Links from other worksheets
- Red text (255,0,0): External links to other files
- Yellow background (255,255,0): Key assumptions needing attention
Number Formatting Standards
- Years: Format as text strings ("2024" not "2,024")
- Currency: Use $#,##0 format; specify units in headers ("Revenue ($mm)")
- Zeros: Format as "-" including percentages
- Percentages: Default to 0.0% format
- Multiples: Format as 0.0x
- Negative numbers: Use parentheses (123) not minus -123
Formula Construction Rules
- Place ALL assumptions in separate assumption cells
- Use cell references instead of hardcoded values
- Example: Use
=B5*(1+$B$6) instead of =B5*1.05
XLSX creation, editing, and analysis
Prerequisites
- openpyxl: Excel file creation and editing
- pandas: data analysis and bulk operations
- LibreOffice (
soffice): formula recalculation via scripts/recalc.py
CRITICAL: Use Formulas, Not Hardcoded Values
Always use Excel formulas instead of calculating values in Python and hardcoding them.
WRONG - Hardcoding
total = df['Sales'].sum()
sheet['B10'] = total
CORRECT - Using Formulas
sheet['B10'] = '=SUM(B2:B9)'
Common Workflow
- Choose tool: pandas for data, openpyxl for formulas/formatting
- Create/Load: Create new workbook or load existing file
- Modify: Add/edit data, formulas, and formatting
- Save: Write to file
- Recalculate formulas (MANDATORY IF USING FORMULAS):
python scripts/recalc.py output.xlsx
- Verify and fix any errors:
- If
status is errors_found, check error_summary for specific errors
- Fix the identified errors and recalculate again
Reading and Analyzing Data
Data analysis with pandas
import pandas as pd
df = pd.read_excel('file.xlsx')
all_sheets = pd.read_excel('file.xlsx', sheet_name=None)
df.head()
df.info()
df.describe()
df.to_excel('output.xlsx', index=False)
Excel File Workflows
Creating new Excel files
from openpyxl import Workbook
from openpyxl.styles import Font, PatternFill, Alignment
wb = Workbook()
sheet = wb.active
sheet['A1'] = 'Hello'
sheet['B1'] = 'World'
sheet.append(['Row', 'of', 'data'])
sheet['B2'] = '=SUM(A1:A10)'
sheet['A1'].font = Font(bold=True, color='FF0000')
sheet['A1'].fill = PatternFill('solid', start_color='FFFF00')
sheet['A1'].alignment = Alignment(horizontal='center')
sheet.column_dimensions['A'].width = 20
wb.save('output.xlsx')
Editing existing Excel files
from openpyxl import load_workbook
wb = load_workbook('existing.xlsx')
sheet = wb.active
sheet['A1'] = 'New Value'
sheet.insert_rows(2)
sheet.delete_cols(3)
new_sheet = wb.create_sheet('NewSheet')
new_sheet['A1'] = 'Data'
wb.save('modified.xlsx')
Unpack/Pack Workflow (Advanced XML editing)
For advanced Excel manipulation via raw XML:
python scripts/office/unpack.py spreadsheet.xlsx unpacked/
python scripts/office/pack.py unpacked/ output.xlsx
Recalculating Formulas
python scripts/recalc.py <excel_file> [timeout_seconds]
The script:
- Automatically sets up LibreOffice macro on first run
- Recalculates all formulas in all sheets
- Scans ALL cells for Excel errors
- Returns JSON with detailed error locations and counts
- Works on Linux, macOS, and Windows
Interpreting recalc.py Output
{
"status": "success",
"total_errors": 0,
"total_formulas": 42,
"error_summary": {}
}
Formula Verification Checklist
Essential Verification
- Test 2-3 sample references before building full model
- Confirm Excel column mapping (column 64 = BL, not BK)
- Remember Excel rows are 1-indexed (DataFrame row 5 = Excel row 6)
Common Pitfalls
- NaN handling: Check for null values with
pd.notna()
- Division by zero: Check denominators before
/ in formulas
- Wrong references: Verify all cell references point to intended cells
- Cross-sheet references: Use correct format (
Sheet1!A1)
Best Practices
Library Selection
- pandas: Best for data analysis, bulk operations, and simple data export
- openpyxl: Best for complex formatting, formulas, and Excel-specific features
Working with openpyxl
- Cell indices are 1-based
- Use
data_only=True to read calculated values
- Warning:
data_only=True + save = formulas permanently lost
- Formulas are preserved but not evaluated - use
scripts/recalc.py to update values