1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
|
/*
* A simple formatting example that demonstrates how to add diagonal
* cell borders using the libxlsxwriter library.
*
* Copyright 2014-2026, John McNamara, jmcnamara@cpan.org
*
*/
#include "xlsxwriter.h"
int main() {
/* Create a new workbook and add a worksheet. */
lxw_workbook *workbook = workbook_new("diagonal_border.xlsx");
lxw_worksheet *worksheet = workbook_add_worksheet(workbook, NULL);
/* Add some diagonal border formats. */
lxw_format *format1 = workbook_add_format(workbook);
format_set_diag_type( format1, LXW_DIAGONAL_BORDER_UP);
lxw_format *format2 = workbook_add_format(workbook);
format_set_diag_type( format2, LXW_DIAGONAL_BORDER_DOWN);
lxw_format *format3 = workbook_add_format(workbook);
format_set_diag_type( format3, LXW_DIAGONAL_BORDER_UP_DOWN);
lxw_format *format4 = workbook_add_format(workbook);
format_set_diag_type( format4, LXW_DIAGONAL_BORDER_UP_DOWN);
format_set_diag_border(format4, LXW_BORDER_HAIR);
format_set_diag_color( format4, LXW_COLOR_RED);
worksheet_write_string(worksheet, CELL("B3"), "Text", format1);
worksheet_write_string(worksheet, CELL("B6"), "Text", format2);
worksheet_write_string(worksheet, CELL("B9"), "Text", format3);
worksheet_write_string(worksheet, CELL("B12"), "Text", format4);
workbook_close(workbook);
return 0;
}
|