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rpxl: Read password-protected Excel files

Lifecycle: experimental R-CMD-check Codecov test coverage

Uses the Python library msoffcrypto-tool to decrypt password protected Excel files (either .xlsx or .xlsb), which can then be read into R with e.g. the readxl or readxlsb R packages.

Installation

Install from GitHub with:

# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("epicentre-msf/rpxl")

Next, make sure Python is installed on your system. You can use the reticulate R package for this, which will already be installed alongside rpxl.

reticulate::py_available(initialize = TRUE)

If you don’t already have Python installed, it can be downloaded from www.python.org/downloads, or installed directly from R using the install_python() function in reticulate. See also Using Python with the RStudio IDE for more information on configuring RStudio to use Python.

reticulate::install_python()

Finally, use the rpxl::install_rpxl() function to install the required Python dependencies.

library(rpxl)
install_rpxl()

Usage

library(rpxl)

Read password-protected .xlsx files with function rp_xlsx(), a wrapper to read_xlsx() in the readxl package.

path_xlsx <- system.file("extdata", "xltest.xlsx", package = "rpxl")
df <- rp_xlsx(path_xlsx, password = "1234")

Read password-protected .xlsb files with function rp_xlsb(), a wrapper to read_xlsb() in the readxlsb package. Note that read_xlsb() requires the worksheet to be explicitly specified (either with argument ‘sheet’ or ‘range’), whereas read_xlsx() defaults to sheet 1.

path_xlsb <- system.file("extdata", "xltest.xlsb", package = "rpxl")
df <- rp_xlsb(path_xlsb, password = "1234", sheet = 1)

To decrypt a password-protected Excel file and save it under a different filename (without immediately reading it into R), you can use the function decrypt_wb(). The function returns the path to the decrypted file, which defaults to a temporary file created with tempfile(), but could alternatively be user-specified.

path_decrypted <- decrypt_wb(path_xlsx, password = "1234")

The decrypted file can then be read into R in a separate step.

df <- readxl::read_xlsx(path_decrypted)

You may want to explicitly delete the decrypted file afterwards, if its contents are sensitive. Otherwise, if it’s a temporary file created with tempfile(), it will be automatically deleted when the current R session is closed.

file.remove(path_decrypted)

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