In-Table List with Highlighted Rows in Spreadsheet Document
In-Table List with Highlighted Rows in Spreadsheet Document
Leave feedback
Note
In this article, we will use GroupDocs.Assembly to generate an In-Table List with Highlighted Rows report in Spreadsheet Document format based on the use case: Working with a Business Case.
In-Table List with Highlighted Rows in Microsoft Excel Document
Creating a In-Table List with Highlighted Rows
Practising the following steps you can create In-Table List with Highlighted Rows Template in MS Excel 2013.
Add a new Workbook.
Select the range of cells that you want to include in the table.
On the Insert tab, in the Tables group, click Table.
Insert a 2x4 table.
Click the cell you want to highlight.
Click “Cell Styles” in Styles group.
Save the template.
Reporting Requirement
As a report developer, you are required to represent customers’ orders information with a specific filtering condition with the following key requirements:
The report must show each customer along with his orders.
Show single Customer and his single order price in a single row.
It must highlight the record with order price more than or equal to 400.
It must show sum of the order prices.
It must represent all the information in tabular form.
The report must be generated in the Spreadsheet Document.
Adding Syntax to be evaluated by GroupDocs.Assembly Engine
In-Table List with Highlighted Rows in OpenOffice Spreadsheet Document
Creating the Template
OpenDocument Spreadsheet (ODS) is a spreadsheet document format which can be used as an alternative to Microsoft Excel Document (XLS/XLSX) formats. Since ODS is not a Microsoft Proprietary format, there are multiple software (including Microsoft Office and Apache OpenOffice) available to create, open, edit and save this format. For more information on the available software to work with ODS, please visit wikipedia article.
In this topic, we ’ll not reinvent the wheel to recreate a template for generating an ‘In-Table List with Highlighted Rows’ report in ODS format. Instead, we’ll save the existing template to ODS format using Microsoft Office. In order to achieve this; assuming you are using Microsoft Office 2010, please follow below steps:
Open existing template we created in previous topic.
Click “File” and select “Save As”.
Select “OpenDocument Spreadsheet” from “Save As Type” drop down.
In order to check compatibility of ODS between Microsoft Office 2010 and Apache OpenOffice 4.1.2, we performed below tests:
We opened the ODS template created through Microsoft Office 2010 in Apache OpenOffice 4.1.2. The template opened successfully in Apache OpenOffice without any issues or formatting losses.
We opened the ODS report generated through GroupDocs.Assembly in Apache OpenOffice 4.1.2. The report opened successfully in Apache OpenOffice without any issues or formatting losses.
Was this page helpful?
Any additional feedback you'd like to share with us?
Please tell us how we can improve this page.
Thank you for your feedback!
We value your opinion. Your feedback will help us improve our documentation.