Last Updated on July 14, 2022 by Jay
The named range is a common Excel feature and we’ll learn how to work with it using Python in this tutorial. Named range is kind of like assigning a variable name to a cell and it makes your Excel formulas more descriptive.
Library
We’ll use the openpyxl library for this demonstration. If you haven’t already, go ahead and use pip to install it:
pip install openpyxl
Accessing Excel Named Range Using Python
Our sample Excel file currently has three named ranges. See the screenshot below:
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- ‘apple_range’
- ‘fruits’
- and ‘private_range’ – Note this is a “private” range which means this named range is only accessible within the scope of the sheet “calc”
Let’s load the Excel file into Python, then check the workbook’s defined_names attribute. Note the first two names “apple_range” and “fruits” both have localSheetId=None that implies they are a global range.
from openpyxl import load_workbook
wb = openpyxl.load_workbook('Book1.xlsx')
wb.defined_names
<openpyxl.workbook.defined_name.DefinedNameList object>
Parameters:
definedName=[<openpyxl.workbook.defined_name.DefinedName object>
Parameters:
name='apple_range', comment=None, customMenu=None, description=None, help=None, statusBar=None, localSheetId=None, hidden=None, function=None, vbProcedure=None, xlm=None, functionGroupId=None, shortcutKey=None, publishToServer=None, workbookParameter=None, attr_text='Sheet1!$C$3', <openpyxl.workbook.defined_name.DefinedName object>
Parameters:
name='fruits', comment=None, customMenu=None, description=None, help=None, statusBar=None, localSheetId=None, hidden=None, function=None, vbProcedure=None, xlm=None, functionGroupId=None, shortcutKey=None, publishToServer=None, workbookParameter=None, attr_text='Sheet1!$B$2:$D$8', <openpyxl.workbook.defined_name.DefinedName object>
Parameters:
name='private_range', comment=None, customMenu=None, description=None, help=None, statusBar=None, localSheetId=1, hidden=None, function=None, vbProcedure=None, xlm=None, functionGroupId=None, shortcutKey=None, publishToServer=None, workbookParameter=None, attr_text='calc!$C$6']
Excel Global vs Private Named Ranges
A global named range can be used anywhere (any sheet) inside the same workbook. Whereas a private named range can be used only on a specific sheet as defined by the scope. This concept of “scope” is similar to Python’s variable scope.
- A global named range:
- Inside the Excel Name Manager, Scope = Workbook
- As a defined_name object in Python, it has a parameter localSheetId=None
- A private named range:
- Inside the Excel Name Manager, Scope = <name of a sheet>
- As a defined_name object in Python, it has a parameter localSheetId=N, with N being the sheet id (1,2,3…)
Get Values from A Global Named Range
Let’s take a look at the “fruits” named range in Python. Both value and attr_text attributes return a reference to the range location, which is Sheet1!B2:D8.
wb.defined_names['fruits'].value
'Sheet1!$B$2:$D$8'
wb.defined_names['fruits'].attr_text
'Sheet1!$B$2:$D$8'
A defined_name also has a destinations attribute which is a generator of (worksheet name, cell range) tuples:
dest = wb.defined_names['fruits'].destinations
for title, coord in dest:
print(title)
print(coord)
Sheet1 #sheet name
$B$2:$D$8 #cell range
Now we can create a range (with sheet name and coordinates) from a defined name, then loop through the range as usual, i.e. rows and cells:
#create a range
for title,coord in dest:
fruits = wb[title][coord]
for row in fruits:
for cell in row:
print(cell.value)
Date
Item
Sales
2022-03-01 00:00:00
Apple
100
2022-03-02 00:00:00
Banana
200
2022-03-03 00:00:00
Orange
300
2022-03-04 00:00:00
Watermelon
400
2022-03-05 00:00:00
Cherry
500
2022-03-06 00:00:00
Peach
600
Get Values From A Private Named Range
Note we can’t access a private named range as we did with the global named range. It shows that the private range name isn’t inside the defined_names list.
'private_range' not in wb.defined_names
True
This design is intentional because we want to prevent accidentally accessing a private named range.
To access a private named range, we need to use the get() method with an argument scope:
wb.sheetnames.index('calc')
1
wb.defined_names.get('private_range',scope = wb.sheetnames.index('calc'))
<openpyxl.workbook.defined_name.DefinedName object>
Parameters:
name='private_range', comment=None, customMenu=None, description=None, help=None, statusBar=None, localSheetId=1, hidden=None, function=None, vbProcedure=None, xlm=None, functionGroupId=None, shortcutKey=None, publishToServer=None, workbookParameter=None, attr_text='calc!$C$6'
Now we have access to the private named range, let’s access its value:
private_dest = wb.defined_names.get('private_range',scope = wb.sheetnames.index('calc')).destinations
for title,coord in private_dest:
private_range = wb[title][coord]
private_range
<Cell 'calc'.C6>
private_range.value
"I'm private!"
Create An Excel Named Range Using Python
We can also create both global and private named ranges using Python. In Excel, we call this “Define Name”.
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See below code, the only difference between creating a global and a private named range is adding the localSheetId=sheetid for constructing a private named range.
NOTE: we have to append() the newly created named ranges to the wb.defiend_names object in order to keep them!
from openpyxl.workbook.defined_name import DefinedName
## enter some value into cell "calc!A1"
## then create a global named range
sheet = 'calc'
cell = 'A1'
wb[sheet][cell].value = 'hi from python'
python_global_range = DefinedName('python_global_range', attr_text=f'{sheet}!{cell}')
wb.defined_names.append(python_global_range)
## enter some value into cell "calc!A2"
## then create a private named range
sheet = 'calc'
cell2 = 'A2'
sheetid = wb.sheetnames.index(sheet)
wb[sheet][cell2].value = 'python private'
python_private_range = DefinedName('python_private_range', attr_text=f'{sheet}!{cell2}', localSheetId=sheetid)
wb.defined_names.append(python_private_range)
wb.save('Book1.xlsx')
The DefinedName object doesn’t seem to be iterable.
I need to programmatically access each range in the DefinedName list instead of manually indexing them.
Is there a way to do this?
Hi Jason,
Thanks for the comment, and apologies for the late response.
Indeed the
DefinedName
object isn’t easily iterable. However, you can access this attributewb.defined_names.definedName
, which returns a list of the defined names.For example, to get the name of the first defined range of a spreadsheet:
wb.defined_names.definedName[0].name
Hope that helps!
Jay