Yes give this a try (*Disclaimer I did not actually test these methods but I have used similar functionality in the past)
def merge_last_row(sheet,options ={})
last_row = sheet.rows.last.index + 1
first_col,last_col = options[:columns]
if first_col && last_col
sheet.merge_cells "#{first_col}#{last_row}:#{last_col}#{last_row}"
else
sheet.merge_cells sheet.rows.last
end
sheet.rows.last.style = style if options[:style]
end
so to do what you want it would be
merge_last_row sheet, columns:["A","E"]
sheet.add_row [I18n.t('foo.some_label').upcase]
merge_last_row sheet, columns:["B","E"], style:title
If the last row contains data in A-E then the columns can be left empty and it will merge the whole row. If it does not you could add an option for filling the columns like so
def fill_columns(sheet,column_count,options={})
row = options[:row_data] || []
(column_count - row.count).times do
row << nil
end
sheet.add_row row
end
calls as
my_row = ["Hello","World"]
fill_columns sheet, 5,row_data: my_row
# this will add a row like["Hello","World",nil,nil,nil]
# so that it will merge properly across the columns A-E
merge_last_row sheet
If you are going to use these consistently then patching these functions into Worksheet
might make more sense so you don't have to pass the sheet
object.
module Axlsx
class Worksheet
def merge_last_row(options={})
last_row = rows.last.index + 1
first_col,last_col = options[:columns]
if first_col && last_col
merge_cells "#{first_col}#{last_row}:#{last_col}#{last_row}"
else
merge_cells rows.last
end
rows.last.style = style if options[:style]
end
def fill_columns(column_count,options={})
row_data = options[:row_data] || []
(column_count - row.count).times do
row_data << nil
end
add_row row_data
end
end
end
Call
sheet.merge_last_row columns:["A","E"]
sheet.add_row [I18n.t('foo.some_label').upcase]
sheet.merge_last_row columns:["B","E"], style:title
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