Re: GRAND MASTER PLAN
- From: Christopher Browne <gnucash cbbrowne com>
- To: linas linas org (Linas Vepstas)
- Cc: msevior physics unimelb edu au, Dru <andru treshna com>, gnome-db-list gnome org, Charles Goodwin <charlie xwt org>, gnucash-devel gnucash org, gnome-office-list gnome org, Tim Lord <timl treshna com>
- Subject: Re: GRAND MASTER PLAN
- Date: Wed, 10 Mar 2004 16:16:59 -0500
>
> [re: reporting]
>
> On Tue, Mar 09, 2004 at 10:57:05AM -0500, Jody Goldberg was heard to remark:
> >
> > Sounds like what you really need is a way to generate an abi
> > document that contains a spreadsheet and a way to print the result.
>
> Yes, possibly. To answer Chris Browne's question more directly:
>
> Imagine a dunning letter:
>
> [company motto]
>
> Dear Mr. XXX,
>
> Your account with us is now XXX days overdue. Please
> remit XXX dollars immediately.
>
> Sincerly,
> William "Bill" Collector
>
> Its not really a spreasheet. The bill might be itemized, and a table
> would be needed for that, but it really is abi and not gnumeric that is
> best suited for this type of a report.
OK, good response.
I would argue that there is realistically a need for BOTH approaches:
- Many reports are best expressed as "columnar things" where
a spreadsheet is a vastly preferable way to look at it;
- Yes, indeed, a document that is a "letter" needs to be able to
generate data as 'running text.'
If you try to "kludge" everyting into AbiWord, you'll find it an
inconvenient tool to cope with the reports that look like spreadsheets.
And yes, you're right, it would be inconvenient to format data into a
spreadsheet that is really coming in the form of a 'letter.'
> (Put another way: looking at existing gnucash function, vs. future
> gnucash function, the existing report infrastructure is "adequate"
> and is able to do tables just fine. Replacing the existing infrasture
> with gnumeric doesn't expand gnucash abilities all that much.
> Other than to provide the 'export to gnumeric' feature that people
> ask for.)
>
> Speaking of which, is there an example of how a programmer (in C or
> scheme) can create a gnumeric spreadshhet & put data into it? I'm
> not sure I've ever seen such a thing.
I thought I submitted this into CVS a few years ago...
It's probably pretty crusty, but it did work, at least once...
;;;; gnumeric-utilities.scm - Gnumeric spreadsheet generation functions
(use-modules (srfi srfi-19))
;; (gnc:depend "xml-generator.scm") -- this needs to be changed to a
;; use-modules, but since this file doesn't appear to be used right
;; now, that can wait.
;;;; Gnumeric spreadsheet consists of:
;;;; gmr:Workbook
;;;; gmr:Summary Done
;;;; gmr:Geometry Done
;;;; gmr:Sheets
;;;; gmr:Sheet
;;;; gmr:Name - Need the Sheet name
;;;; gmr:MaxCol - omission OK
;;;; gmr:MaxRow - omission OK
;;;; gmr:Zoom - omission OK
;;;; gmr:PrintInformation - omission OK
;;;; gmr:Styles - Ok to omit
;;;; gmr:StyleRegion - optional
;;;; gmr:Style - optional
;;;; gmr:Font - optional
;;;; gmr:StyleBorder - optional
;;;; gmr:Top - optional
;;;; gmr:Bottom - optional
;;;; gmr:Left - optional
;;;; gmr:Right - optional
;;;; gmr:Diagonal - optional
;;;; gmr:Rev-Diagonal - optional
;;;; gmr:Cols - Optional, but should have this one...
;;;; gmr:ColInfo (No Unit MarginA MarginB HardSize Hidden)
;;;; gmr:Rows - Quite Optional
;;;; gmr:RowInfo (No Unit MarginA MarginB HardSize Hidden)
;;;; gmr:Cells - This is the meat of the matter...
;;;; gmr:Cell (Col Row Style)
;;;; gmr:Content
;;; Here's a kludgy function that is intended to compute the number of
;;; days since December 31, 1899. It is only approximate; feel free
;;; to suggest a better function.
;;; The point of this is that Gnumeric uses this as the "native" data
;;; representation.
(define (exceldate y m d)
(let
((epoch (encode-julian-day-number 31 12 1899)))
(- (encode-julian-day-number d m y) epoch)))
;(define (ymd->number y m d)
; (+
; 1 ;;; Start at 1
; (* (- y 1900) 365) ;;; 365 days per year
; d ;;; Add the number of days
; (vector-ref #(0 31 59 90 120 151 181 212 243 273 304 334)
; (- m 1));;; Add in days associated with month
; (truncate (/ (- y 1900) 4)) ;;; Add in leap days, valid 'til
; ;;; year 2100...
; (if
; (and (= 0 (modulo y 4)) ;;; If a leap year,
; (> m 2)) ;;; and month is post-Feb
; 1 ;;; add an extra day
; 0)))
;;; gmr:Summary appears to be some metadata about who/what generated
;;; the document.
(define (make-gmr-summary)
(define (make-gmr-item name value)
(xml-element
'gmr:Item no-attributes
(list (xml-element 'gmr:name no-attributes name)
(xml-element 'gmr:val-string no-attributes value))))
(xml-element
'gmr:Summary no-attributes
(list
(make-gmr-item "application"
"gnumeric")
(make-gmr-item "Author"
"GnuCash Generator"))))
;;; This function generates a goodly chunk of the document structure;
;;; gmr:Workbook is the base element for Gnumeric
(define (gnumeric-workbook sheets)
(xml-element
'gmr:Workbook '((xmlns:gmr . "http://www.gnome.org/gnumeric/v2"))
(list
(make-gmr-summary)
(xml-element 'gmr:Geometry '((Width . 912) (Height . 720)) no-children)
(xml-element 'gmr:Sheets no-attributes sheets))))
(define (gnumeric-xml-cell row col contents)
(xml-element
'gmr:Cell
(xml-attributes (xml-attribute 'Col col)
(xml-attribute 'Row row)
(xml-attribute 'Style 0))
(list (xml-element 'gmr:Content no-attributes contents))))
;;; Generate a set of style regions for a given Sheet
;;; This ought also to support the notion of named styles, but that
;;; can wait
(define (gnumeric-styles rows colassoc)
(xml-element
'gmr:Styles no-attributes
(map
(lambda (coll)
(let ((col (car coll))
(fmt (cdr coll)))
(gnumeric-style-column rows col fmt)))
colassoc)))
;;; Generate a StyleRegion for the given column
(define (gnumeric-style-column totalrows col format)
(xml-element
'gmr:StyleRegion
(xml-attributes (xml-attribute 'startCol col)
(xml-attribute 'endCol col)
(xml-attribute 'startRow 0)
(xml-attribute 'endRow totalrows))
(list (xml-element 'gmr:Style
(xml-attributes
(xml-attribute 'Format format))
no-children))))
(define (gmr:cell col row cell-value)
(xml-element
'gmr:Cell
(xml-attributes
(xml-attribute 'Col col)
(xml-attribute 'Row row))
cell-value))
;;; Each Sheet requires Cols to define the widths of columns.
;;; Don't omit this.
(define (gnumeric-columns collist)
(xml-element 'gmr:Cols no-attributes
(map (lambda (colassoc)
(xml-element 'gmr:ColInfo colassoc no-children))
collist)))
;;; And here's a function that generates a whole Sheet.
;;; It forces in style info; that's probably not the best thing to do.
(define (gnumeric-sheet name rows cols cells)
(let ((namelst (xml-element 'gmr:Name no-attributes name))
(stylelst (gnumeric-styles
rows our-style-list))
(celllst (xml-element 'gmr:Cells no-attributes cells)))
(xml-element 'gmr:Sheet no-attributes
(list
namelst
cols
stylelst
celllst))))
;;; Define some wild accounting-oriented display formats
(define our-style-list
(let ((acctgstyle "_($*#,##0.00_);_($(#,##0.00);_($*"-"??_);(@_)")
(coloredstyle "$0.00_);[Red]($0.00)"))
(list (cons 0 "yyyy-mm-dd")
(cons 2 acctgstyle)
(cons 3 coloredstyle))))
(define (gen-cells-for-txn txn row)
(display txn) (newline)
(apply
(lambda (y m d descr amt)
(list
(gmr:cell 0 row (exceldate y m d))
(gmr:cell 1 row descr)
(gmr:cell 2 row amt)
(gmr:cell 3 row (string-append "=D" (number->string row)
"+C"
(number->string (+ row 1))))))
txn))
(define (sample-cells)
(let loop
((txns
(sort
(append
'((1998 12 31 "Opening Balance" 0))
(map (lambda (x) (list 1999 x 1 "Rent" -500))
'(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12))
(map (lambda (x) (list 1999 x 1 "Salary" 1200))
'(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12))
(map (lambda (x) (list 1999 x 15 "Salary" 1200))
'(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12))
(map (lambda (x) (list 1999 x 12 "Phone" -35))
'(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12)))
(lambda (lst1 lst2)
(if (= (car lst1) (car lst2))
(if (= (cadr lst1) (cadr lst2))
(if (= (caddr lst1) (caddr lst2))
(if (string=? (cadddr lst1) (cadddr lst2))
#t
(string<? (cadddr lst1) (cadddr lst2)))
(< (caddr lst1) (caddr lst2)))
(< (cadr lst1) (cadr lst2)))
(< (car lst1) (car lst2))))))
(row 1)
(cells '()))
(if (null? txns)
cells
(loop (cdr txns)
(+ row 1)
(let* ((txn (car txns)))
(append cells (gen-cells-for-txn txn row)))))))
(define (build-full-sample)
(let*
((cells (sample-cells))
(cols 4)
(collist '(((No . 0) (Unit . 85))
((No . 1) (Unit . 150))
((No . 2) (Unit . 75))
((No . 3) (Unit . 75))))
(rows (/ (length cells) cols))
(cols (gnumeric-columns collist))
(sheet (gnumeric-sheet "Sample" rows cols cells))
(sheets (list sheet)))
(gnumeric-workbook sheets)))
;;; This function generates a whole whack of cells and formulae
(define (generate-sampl filename)
(let ((p (open-output-file filename))
(ss (build-full-sample)))
(display "<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>" p)
(output-xml-element ss p)
(close-output-port p)))
--
(format nil "~S ~S" "cbbrowne" "acm.org")
http://www.ntlug.org/~cbbrowne/finances.html
"Object-oriented programming is an exceptionally bad idea which could
only have originated in California." --Edsger Dijkstra
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