183
Microsoft is bringing Python to Excel
(www.theverge.com)
Welcome to the Python community on the programming.dev Lemmy instance!
Past
November 2023
October 2023
July 2023
August 2023
September 2023
But why does it need to run in the cloud?
💰💰💰 By sending every calculation to Microsoft servers they can log what your company is doing and sell that data to ad-agencies. Also it forces you into a subscription.
I'm not a fan of it either, but I'm not sure how else this could work seamlessly. How would you ensure that everyone you share your Excel file that utilizes Python has the expected Python setup on their machine? What if they have an older version of a library you used that breaks your script? What if they don't have Python installed at all?
While this will only work on Windows desktop at first, Microsoft plans to roll this out to "other platforms" over time. Is there any other way for this integration to work for Excel for web, iPad, and/or Teams?
Would something like this work for the web or Teams versions of Excel?
Regardless, I agree. The license and remote only execution are horrible.
A python distribution could be bundled inside of excel.
That's true. It wouldn't solve the dependency issue though (eg - I'm using Pandas v1.5.3, you're using Pandas v2.0.3) and I'm not sure how well it would work for some platforms like the web or Teams.
I'm not sure exactly. Maybe it is one reason why they are pushing an online container. I guess then then it can have its own issues of dependency hell. At least with the container approach, everything either works or it is broken, and there is no having to verify which versions of Excel are installed to make the spreadsheet run.
I doubt the end user would have control over package versions, but I had not gotten around to playing with it yet.