not yet. Demand for the cocoon serializer hasn't been very high so it is mostly deprecated (unless there is some massive uptake of support for it).

Okay its time for my yearly rant on this subject (not aimed at you...you just reminded me I hadn't done it this year):

I'm always a little curious about this. XLS is a HORRIBLE format (which is why I started POI, I wanted to do something difficult). It is a HORRIBLY inefficient format and WAS NOT DESIGNED to stream. Yet people generate massive sheets in it. My pensiveness is that no human is likely to read such a large sheet or be able to do anything patricularly useful with it. So who are these sheets for? Often it turns out they are some kind of data transfer, which is frankly BAFFLING. Why? Because I could do the same transfer with like 1/10th of the storage, bandwidth, CPU, etc in a more well-thought out (or at least lightweight) format. Yet I saw a spreadsheet today that was 100mb. The power of Excel is that it can style the data and use some formulas. This is good for what is to me a summary report and not RAW 100m or gigs of data.. Of course this comes from someone who knows how to hack the underlying binary structures but barely knows how to run the Excel GUI. :-)

We now return you to your previously scheduled mail list activity.

-Andy

PS. I wish the open office GUI wasn't so crappy, sluggish and well...cruddy looking and printed nicely. Their file formats make so much more sense (and with compression they're reasonably efficient) and the brilliance of text is that it works nicely with revision control and revision control tags.

PPS. I also wish the open office developers would either learn C++, convert all of their code to C and/or port open office to a language they know how to write better structured code in.

Brule, Jon wrote:
Is it possible to generate a very large spreadsheet (e.g. several
thousand rows) in a low-memory, streaming manner? I am looking for a
corollary to the event model used to parse large spreadsheets.

If not, I assume that the Cocoon serializer, which I understand uses
HSSF, would not operate in a streaming manner either...

Thank you.

Regards,
Jon
_________________
Jon R. Brule
Paramount Computing Associates

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