Reputation: 883
I looked at the previous threads regarding this topic, but they have not helped solve the problem.
I'm trying to open a password protected file in excel without any user interaction. I searched online, and found this code which uses win32com.client When I run this, I still get the prompt to enter the password...
from xlrd import *
import win32com.client
import csv
import sys
xlApp = win32com.client.Dispatch("Excel.Application")
print "Excel library version:", xlApp.Version
filename,password = r"\\HRA\Myfile.xlsx", 'caa team'
xlwb = xlApp.Workbooks.Open(filename, Password=password)
Upvotes: 23
Views: 114997
Reputation: 1499
Thank you so much for the great answers on this topic. Trying to collate all of it. My requirement was to open a bunch of password protected excel files ( all had same password ) so that I could do some more processing on those. Please find the code below.
import pandas as pd
import os
from xlrd import *
import win32com.client as w3c
import csv
import sys
from tempfile import NamedTemporaryFile
df_list=[]
# print(len(files))
for f in files:
# print(f)
if('.xlsx' in f):
xlwb = xlapp.Workbooks.Open('C:\\users\\files\\'+f, False, True, None, 'password')
temp_f = NamedTemporaryFile(delete=False, suffix='.csv')
temp_f.close()
os.unlink(temp_f.name)
xlwb.SaveAs(Filename=temp_f.name, FileFormat=xlCSVWindows)
df = pd.read_csv(temp_f.name,encoding='Latin-1') # Read that CSV from Pandas
df.to_excel('C:\\users\\files\\password_removed\\'+f)
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 619
I recently discovered a Python library that makes this task simple.
It does not require Excel to be installed and, because it's pure Python, it's cross-platform too!
msoffcrypto-tool supports password-protected (encrypted) Microsoft Office documents, including the older XLS binary file format.
Install msoffcrypto-tool:
pip install msoffcrypto-tool
You could create an unencrypted version of the workbook from the command line:
msoffcrypto-tool Myfile.xlsx Myfile-decrypted.xlsx -p "caa team"
Or, you could use msoffcrypto-tool as a library. While you could write an unencrypted version to disk like above, you may prefer to create an decrypted in-memory file and pass this to your Python Excel library (openpyxl
, xlrd
, etc.).
import io
import msoffcrypto
import openpyxl
decrypted_workbook = io.BytesIO()
with open('Myfile.xlsx', 'rb') as file:
office_file = msoffcrypto.OfficeFile(file)
office_file.load_key(password='caa team')
office_file.decrypt(decrypted_workbook)
# `filename` can also be a file-like object.
workbook = openpyxl.load_workbook(filename=decrypted_workbook)
Upvotes: 36
Reputation: 4161
I don't think that named parameters work in this case. So you'd have to do something like:
xlwb = xlApp.Workbooks.Open(filename, False, True, None, password)
See http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/office/ff194819.aspx for details on the Workbooks.Open method.
Upvotes: 26
Reputation: 47
If your file size is small, you can probably save that as ".csv". and then read
It worked for me :)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 623
Openpyxl Package works if you are using linux system. You can use secure the file by setting up a password and open the file using the same password.
For more info: https://www.quora.com/How-do-I-open-read-password-protected-xls-or-xlsx-Excel-file-using-python-in-Linux
Upvotes: -1