0, 'B' => 1, 'C' => 2, 'D' => 3, 'E' => 4, 'F' => 5, 'G' => 6, 'H' => 7, 'I' => 8, 'J' => 9, 'K' => 10, 'L' => 11, 'M' => 12, 'N' => 13, 'O' => 14, 'P' => 15, 'Q' => 16, 'R' => 17, 'S' => 18, 'T' => 19, 'U' => 20, 'V' => 21, 'W' => 22, 'X' => 23, 'Y' => 24, 'Z' => 25, ]; /** * Fills the missing indexes of an array with a given value. * For instance, $dataArray = []; $a[1] = 1; $a[3] = 3; * Calling fillMissingArrayIndexes($dataArray, 'FILL') will return this array: ['FILL', 1, 'FILL', 3] * * @param array $dataArray The array to fill * @param string|void $fillValue optional * @return array */ public static function fillMissingArrayIndexes($dataArray, $fillValue = '') { $existingIndexes = array_keys($dataArray); $newIndexes = array_fill_keys(range(0, max($existingIndexes)), $fillValue); $dataArray += $newIndexes; ksort($dataArray); return $dataArray; } /** * Returns the base 10 column index associated to the cell index (base 26). * Excel uses A to Z letters for column indexing, where A is the 1st column, * Z is the 26th and AA is the 27th. * The mapping is zero based, so that A1 maps to 0, B2 maps to 1, Z13 to 25 and AA4 to 26. * * @param string $cellIndex The Excel cell index ('A1', 'BC13', ...) * @return int * @throws \Box\Spout\Common\Exception\InvalidArgumentException When the given cell index is invalid */ public static function getColumnIndexFromCellIndex($cellIndex) { if (!self::isValidCellIndex($cellIndex)) { throw new InvalidArgumentException('Cannot get column index from an invalid cell index.'); } $columnIndex = 0; // Remove row information $columnLetters = preg_replace('/\d/', '', $cellIndex); // strlen() is super slow too... Using isset() is way faster and not too unreadable, // since we checked before that there are between 1 and 3 letters. $columnLength = isset($columnLetters[1]) ? (isset($columnLetters[2]) ? 3 : 2) : 1; // Looping over the different letters of the column is slower than this method. // Also, not using the pow() function because it's slooooow... switch ($columnLength) { case 1: $columnIndex = (self::$columnLetterToIndexMapping[$columnLetters]); break; case 2: $firstLetterIndex = (self::$columnLetterToIndexMapping[$columnLetters[0]] + 1) * 26; $secondLetterIndex = self::$columnLetterToIndexMapping[$columnLetters[1]]; $columnIndex = $firstLetterIndex + $secondLetterIndex; break; case 3: $firstLetterIndex = (self::$columnLetterToIndexMapping[$columnLetters[0]] + 1) * 676; $secondLetterIndex = (self::$columnLetterToIndexMapping[$columnLetters[1]] + 1) * 26; $thirdLetterIndex = self::$columnLetterToIndexMapping[$columnLetters[2]]; $columnIndex = $firstLetterIndex + $secondLetterIndex + $thirdLetterIndex; break; } return $columnIndex; } /** * Returns whether a cell index is valid, in an Excel world. * To be valid, the cell index should start with capital letters and be followed by numbers. * There can only be 3 letters, as there can only be 16,384 rows, which is equivalent to 'XFE'. * * @param string $cellIndex The Excel cell index ('A1', 'BC13', ...) * @return bool */ protected static function isValidCellIndex($cellIndex) { return (preg_match('/^[A-Z]{1,3}\d+$/', $cellIndex) === 1); } }