Return to site

Import Data From Picture To Excel

broken image


In this article, I shall show you how to pull or extract data from a website into Excel automatically. This is one of the most used Excel features for those who use Excel for their data analysis job. If you are working for a financial analyst company, you might need to get or import daily stock prices from a website to your Excel workbook for analysis.

So, let's learn the technique…

Microsoft Excel now has image recognition technology that can make it easy to take a photo of a spreadsheet on paper and turn the data into digital format. How can I import this into Excel and parse it into columns? One way I have noticed I can view the data is using Codewright hex mode, but even a copy-paste from there doesn't work since the clipboard retains ascii data only. Do I need to use a macro to do this? Does anyone have the first few lines of an existing one - eg do I just read in byte.

Extracting data (data collection and update) automatically from a web page to your Excel worksheet might be important for some jobs. Excel gives you the opportunity to collect data from a web page.

Yes, Excel is awesome like that!!

Let's dive into the process of helping you out.

But first, a word of caution: the web page must have data in collectible formats like Table or Pre-data format. Otherwise, it would be another battle to convert it to a readable or excel-able format. You see text to columns feature isn't always your best friend.

So, we shall assume your life is easy like that and you have a website that has data in a compatible excel-able format.

Table of Contents

Extract Data from Google Finance Page to Excel Automatically

We will be using the Excel's From Web Command in the Data ribbon to collect data from the web. Say, I want to collect data from this page.

It is Google's finance-related web page.

In the Excel worksheet, open the Data ribbon and click on the From Web command.

Import Data From Picture To Excel Spreadsheet

New Web Query dialog box appears.

In the address bar, I paste the address of Google's finance web page: https://www.google.com/finance. Then I click on the Go button, placed right after the address bar.

The same web page comes in the query dialog box. Now spot the yellow arrows near the query box.

Move your mouse pointer over the yellow arrows. You see a zone is highlighted with a blue border and the yellow arrow becomes green.

[Click on the image to get a full view]

I have chosen World Markets data, Currency Data, and Sector Summary.

Now I click on the Import button. Import Data dialog box appears. It asks me the location. Currently, I am planning to save it in cell A1, you can save it anywhere and everywhere.

Import Data From Picture To Excel

Import Data From Picture To Excel Spreadsheets

You might see a cryptic message or two when you hit OK. Relax those aren't aliens trying to contact you, just your worksheet is populating data.

You see the data is inserted into the worksheet.

Now let me show you where Excel did the flip. I scroll down and find this column blank.

When I checked the website I found that there was a chart there which Excel was not able to pull. So, you have to be careful about what you are taking from a web page.

Now, you have got the data and can begin working and manipulating it.

The most important/interesting thing to note here is: you don't have to pull the updated data from time to time.

How to Refresh Excel Data for Any Update

Import Data From Picture To Excel File

You can manually or automatically refresh the data. How? Say Abracadabra! No, am just kidding. (But it's almost like magic).

Click on the drop-down part of the Refresh All command.

You can click on Refresh if you think you have only one data and you can click on Refresh All if you think you have more than one data to be refreshed.

You can even set a time period for refreshing data automatically. Click on this Connection Properties option from the list.

Connection Properties dialog box appears.

You can name the connection. Add a description to it.

Under Refresh Control, you get a command Refresh Every (by default 60 minutes), you can change it.

Or you can choose the option Refresh Data when opening the file. I click OK. So, the data of this worksheet will be updated when I will open the worksheet.

Read More:

So, this is how you can pull data from a web page, manipulate the data in your own way, and then you can set when the data will be updated automatically.

Cool, right? Now time for a coffee!!

Hello!
Welcome to my Excel blog! It took me some time to be a fan of Excel. But now I am a die-hard fan of MS Excel. I learn new ways of doing things with Excel and share here. Not only how to guide on Excel, but you will get also topics on Finance, Statistics, Data Analysis, and BI. Stay tuned!




broken image