Hi Alessio,

How are you? Your use case is *very* similar to mine, as our department also
goes down the SAP-XLS-PPT path weekly and I'm in charge of making this task
easier, faster and less error prone.

Have you moved forward with this project at all? I'd love to take a look at
some code, assuming you can share any of it. Have you decided on which chart
API to use? And did you run into any problems due to spreadsheets being too
large? Mine can have thousands and thousands of rows, so I wonder if the
performance is going to be reasonable.



Sincerely,

André Terra

PS. I'm working for an Italian multinational. I wonder if we're developing
for the same folks but in different departments... hah

On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 12:30 PM, alessio c <viandant...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi Javier,
>
> maybe we could have a talk, it sounds you need something similar to what I
> need. Most of the reports needs a lot of ad hoc features, that is why it is
> really difficult to find a proper level of abstraction. However, a robust
> django framework could at least help to organize the work. Most of the
> reports are run from data extracted from some IT syistem (SAP), this means
> that the row data is usually following a model (which the people then mess
> up in Excel). So, the approach model-view can be quite powerful.
>  Let me know. At the moment I only have spare scripts, but it would be
> nice to share.
> 2011/4/5 Javier Guerra Giraldez <jav...@guerrag.com>
>
>> On Tue, Apr 5, 2011 at 10:06 AM, alessio c <viandant...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> > yes I do. I need more basic stuff then that and I need tables. Think of
>> this
>> > as tentative to reduce Excel use (which is killing me).
>>
>> I feel your pain
>>
>> what i'm currently doing is to use jqGrid as a frontend for tables.  i
>> wrote a small framework adaptor that lets me write a small class with
>> a Queryset, a few column description and optionally some extra data
>> transformations.  the superclasses take care of generating the JS
>> description and AJAX-handling views.
>>
>> the advantage of jqGrid is that it makes very easy to handle record
>> selection, add/edit/delete/search operations, and sometimes in-cell
>> editing.  in sum, the users don't miss so much their excel sheets.
>>
>> i plan to eventually share the python code; but it's still in heavy
>> flux, every new project demands significant modifications.
>>
>> --
>> Javier
>>
>
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