Related
I've written a custom Google Apps Script that will receive an id and fetch information from a web service (a price).
I use this script in a spreadsheet, and it works just fine. My problem is that these prices change, and my spreadsheet doesn't get updated.
How can I force it to re-run the script and update the cells (without manually going over each cell)?
Ok, it seems like my problem was that google behaves in a weird way - it doesn't re-run the script as long as the script parameters are similar, it uses cached results from the previous runs. Hence it doesn't re-connect to the API and doesn't re-fetch the price, it simply returns the previous script result that was cached.
See more info here(Add a star to these issues, if you're affected):
https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/36753882
https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/36763858
and Henrique G. Abreu's answer
My solution was to add another parameter to my script, which I don't even use. Now, when you call the function with a parameter that is different than previous calls, it will have to rerun the script because the result for these parameters will not be in the cache.
So whenever I call the function, for the extra parameter I pass "$A$1".
I also created a menu item called refresh, and when I run it, it puts the current date and time in A1, hence all the calls to the script with $A$1 as second parameter will have to recalculate. Here's some code from my script:
function onOpen() {
var sheet = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
var entries = [{
name : "Refresh",
functionName : "refreshLastUpdate"
}];
sheet.addMenu("Refresh", entries);
};
function refreshLastUpdate() {
SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet().getRange('A1').setValue(new Date().toTimeString());
}
function getPrice(itemId, datetime) {
var headers =
{
"method" : "get",
"contentType" : "application/json",
headers : {'Cache-Control' : 'max-age=0'}
};
var jsonResponse = UrlFetchApp.fetch("http://someURL?item_id=" + itemId, headers);
var jsonObj = eval( '(' + jsonResponse + ')' );
return jsonObj.Price;
SpreadsheetApp.flush();
}
And when I want to put the price of item with ID 5 in a cell, I use the following formula:
=getPrice(5, $A$1)
When I want to refresh the prices, I simply click the "Refresh" -> "Refresh" menu item.
Remember that you need to reload the spreadsheet after you change the onOpen() script.
You're missing the fastidious caching bug feature. It works this way:
Google considers that all your custom functions depend only on their parameters values directly to return their result (you can optionally depend on other static data).
Given this prerequisite they can evaluate your functions only when a parameter changes. e.g.
Let's suppose we have the text "10" on cell B1, then on some other cell we type =myFunction(B1)
myFunction will be evaluated and its result retrieved. Then if you change cell B1 value to "35", custom will be re-evaluated as expected and the new result retrieved normally.
Now, if you change cell B1 again to the original "10", there's no re-evaluation, the original result is retrieved immediately from cache.
So, when you use the sheet name as a parameter to fetch it dynamically and return the result, you're breaking the caching rule.
Unfortunately, you can't have custom functions without this amazing feature. So you'll have to either change it to receive the values directly, instead of the sheet name, or do not use a custom function. For example, you could have a parameter on your script telling where the summaries should go and have an onEdit update them whenever a total changes.
What I did was similar to tbkn23. This method doesn't require any user action except making a change.
The function I want to re-evaluate has an extra unused parameter, $A$1. So the function call is
=myFunction(firstParam, $A$1)
But in the code the function signature is
function myFunction(firstParam)
Instead of having a Refresh function I've used the onEdit(e) function like this
function onEdit(e)
{
SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSheet().getRange('A1').setValue(Math.random());
}
This function is triggered whenever any cell in the spreadsheet is edited. So now you edit a cell, a random number is placed in A1, this refreshes the parameter list as tbkn23 suggested, causing the custom function to be re-evaluated.
There are settings where you can make NOW() update automatically:
If your custom function is inside a specific column, simply order your spreadsheet by that column.
The ordering action forces a refresh of the data, which invokes your custom function for all rows of that column at once.
Script Logic:
Custom Functions don't update unless it's arguments changes.
Create a onChange trigger to change all arguments of all custom functions in the spreadsheet using TextFinder
The idea to add a extra dummy parameter by #tbkn23 and use of the triggers by #Lexi Brush is implemented here with a random number as argument. This answer mainly differs due to usage of class TextFinder(a relatively new addition to Apps script), which is better because
No extra cell is required.
No menu is needed > No additional clicks needed. If you need a custom refresher, a checkbox is a better implementation
You can also change the formula itself instead of changing the parameters
The change/trigger can be configured to filter out only certain changes. For eg, the following sample script trigger filters out all changes except INSERT_GRID/REMOVE_GRID(Grid=Sheet). This is appropriate for the custom function that provides sheetnames. A edit anywhere isn't going to change the list of sheets/sheetnames, but inserting or removing sheet does.
Sample custom function(to refresh):
/**
* #customfunction
* #OnlyCurrentDoc
* #returns Current list of sheet names
*/
const sheetNames = () =>
SpreadsheetApp.getActive()
.getSheets()
.map((sheet) => sheet.getName());
Refresher function:
/**
* #description Automatically refreshes specified custom functions
* #author TheMaster https://stackoverflow.com/users/8404453
* #version 2.0.0
* #changelog
* Updated to support all custom functions and arguments
* Avoid eternal loops
*/
/**
* #listens to changes in a Google sheet
* #see https://developers.google.com/apps-script/guides/triggers/installable#managing_triggers_manually
*/
function onChange(e) {
/* Name of the custom function that is to be refreshed */
const customfunctionName = 'SHEETNAMES',
regexPattern = `=${customfunctionName}${String.raw`\(([^)]*?)?(?:,\s*?"RANDOM_ID_\d+")?\)`}`,
replacementRegex = `=${customfunctionName}${String.raw`($1,"RANDOM_ID_${
Math.floor(Math.random() * 500) + 1
}")`}`;
/* Avoid eternal loop
* Increase timeout if it still loops
*/
const cache = CacheService.getScriptCache(),
key = 'onChangeLastRun',
timeout = 5 * 1000 /*5s*/,
timediff = new Date() - new Date(JSON.parse(cache.get(key)));
if (timediff <= timeout /*5s*/) return;
cache.put(key, JSON.stringify(new Date()));
/* Following types of change are available:
* EDIT
* INSERT_ROW
* INSERT_COLUMN
* REMOVE_ROW
* REMOVE_COLUMN
* INSERT_GRID
* REMOVE_GRID
* FORMAT
* OTHER - This usually refers to changes made by the script itself or sheets api
*/
if (!/GRID|OTHER/.test(e.changeType)) return; //Listen only to grid/OTHER change
SpreadsheetApp.getActive()
.createTextFinder(regexPattern)
.matchFormulaText(true)
.matchCase(false)
.useRegularExpression(true)
.replaceAllWith(replacementRegex);
}
To Read:
Installable triggers
TextFinder
As noted earlier:
Custom Functions don't update unless it's arguments changes.
The possible solution is to create a checkbox in a single cell and use this cell as an argument for the custom function:
Create a checkbox: select free cell e.g. [A1], go to [Insert] > [Checkbox]
Make this cell an argument: =myFunction(A1)
Click checkbox to refresh the formula
Use a google finance function as a parameter. Like =GOOGLEFINANCE("CURRENCY:CADARS")
Those function force reload every x minutes
Since google app script is an extension of JS, functions should be able to handle more args than defined in function signature or fewer. So if you have some function like
function ADD(a, b) {
return CONSTANTS!$A$1 + a + b
}
then you'd call this func like
=ADD(A1, B1, $A$2)
where $A$2 is some checkbox (insert -> checkbox) that you can click to "refresh" after you needed to change the value from the sheet & cell CONSTANTS$A$1
I use a dummy variable in a function, this variable refers to a cell in the spreadsheet. Then I have a Myfunction() in script that writes a Math.Random number in that cell.
MyFunction is under a trigger service (Edit/Current Project Triggers) and you can choose different event-triggers, for example On-Open or time driven, there you can choose for example a time period, from 1 minute to a month.
Working off of Lexi's script as-is, it didn't seem to work anymore with the current Sheets, but if I add the dummy variable into my function as a parameter (no need to actually use it inside the function), it will indeed force google sheets to refresh the page again.
So, declaration like: function myFunction(firstParam,dummy) and then calling it would be as has been suggested. That worked for me.
Also, if it is a nuisance for a random variable to appear on all of your sheets that you edit, an easy remedy to limit to one sheet is as follows:
function onEdit(e)
{
e.source.getSheetByName('THESHEETNAME').getRange('J1').setValue(Math.random());
}
another solution to the caching problem.
have a dummy variable in your method.
pass
Filter(<the cell or cell range>,1=1)
as the value to that parameter.
e.g.
=getValueScript("B1","B4:Z10", filter(B4:Z10,1=1))
the output of filter is not used. however it indicates to the spreadsheet that this formula is sensitive to B4:Z10 range.
I had a similar issue creating a dashboard for work. Chamil's solution above (namely using Sheet's Filter function passed as the value to a dummy variable in your function) works just fine, despite the more recent comment from Arsen. In my case, I was using a function to monitor a range and could not use the filter on the same range since it created a circular reference. So I just had a cell (in my case E45 in the code below) in which I changed the number anytime I wanted my function to update:
=myFunction("E3:E43","D44",filter(E45,1=1))
As Chamil indicated, the filter is not used in the script:
function myFunction(range, colorRef, dummy) {
variable 'dummy' not used in code here
}
Today I solved this by
adding another parameter to my function:
function MY_FUNC(a, b, additional_param) { /* ... */ }
adding a value to this parameter as well, referencing a cell:
=MY_FUNC("a", "b", A1)
and putting a checkbox in that referenced cell (A1).
Now, it takes only one click (on the checkbox) to force recalculating my function.
What you could do is to set up another cell somewhere in the spreadsheet that will be updated every time a new sheet is added. Make sure it doesn't update for every change but only when you want to do the calculation (in your case when you add a sheet). You then pass the reference to this cell to your custom function. As mentioned the custom function can ignore this parameter.
Given that feature explained by Henrique Abreu, you may try the out-of-box spreadsheet function QUERY , that SQL liked query is what I use often in work
on raw data, and get data as summary to a different tab, result data is updated in real time following change in raw data.
My suggestion is based on the fact that your script has not advanced work such as URL fetch, just data work, as without actual data read, I cannot give a precise solution with QUERY.
Regarding the cache feature mentioned by Henrique Abreu (I don't have enough reputation to comment directly under his answer), I did testing and found that:
looks there is no cache working, testing function's script shown below:
function adder(base) {
Utilities.sleep(5000);
return base + 10;
}
applying that custom function adder() in sheet by calling a cell, and then changed that cell value forth and back, each time I see the loading message and total time more than 5 seconds.
It might be related to the update mentioned in this GAS issue:
This issue has now been fixed. Custom functions in New Sheets are now context aware and do not cache values as aggressively.
the issue mentioned in this topic remains, my testing suggests that, Google sheet recalculate custom function each time ONLY WHEN
value DIRECTLY called by function is changed.
function getCellValue(sheetName,row,col)
{
var ss= SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
var sh = ss.getSheetByName(sheetName);
return sh.getRange(row, col).getValue();
}
A change of any value in yellow cells will lead to recalculation of custom function; the real data source value change is ignored by function.
function containing cell's location is changed in sheet. ex. insert/remove a row/column above or left side.
I did not want to have a dummy parameter. YMMV on this.
1 A cell that is a 'List of Items', one is "Refresh"
2 Script with 'onEdit', if the cell is "Refresh":
a)Empty out the document cache
b)Fill doc cache with external data (a table in my case)
c)For all cells with my 'getStockoData(...' custom function
get the formula
set '=0'
set the fromula
d)Set the cell in (1) with a value of "Ready"
This does refresh the bits you want BUT IS NOT FAST.
I followed this video, from 1:44, and this worked for me.
You should use a specific update function, initialize a "current time" variable and pass this permanently updated variable to your custom function. Then go to Triggers and set up an "every-minute" time-driven trigger for the update function (or choose another time interval for updates).
The code:
function update() {
var dt = new Date();
var ts = dt.toLocaleTimeString();
var cellVal = '=CustomFunction("'+ ts + '")';
SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSheet().getRange('A1').setValue(cellVal);
}
Just add GOOGLEFINANCE("eurusd") as an additional argument to your custom function, like:
=myFunction(arg1, arg2, GOOGLEFINANCE("eurusd"))
As #Brionius said put an extra dinamic argument on the function. if you use now() you may have timeout problems make the update a little bit slower...
cell A1 = int(now()*1000)
cell A2 = function(args..., A1)
If you have written a custom function and used it in your spreadsheet as a formula, then each time you open the spreadsheet or any referencing cell is modified, the formula is recalculated.
If you want to just keep staring at the spreadsheet and want its values to change, then consider adding a timed trigger that will update the cells. Read more about triggers here
I have written a custom google apps script function that is being called by a google sheet. In this function an API is called and the result of this API is being returned so that it gets displayed in the calling cell of the google sheet.
My problem now is that the sheet calls this function everytime I open the document and there are over 80.000 cells with this function.
Is it possible to save the returned value to the cell and don't call the custom function again when an value has been returned? I want the function being called only once per cell, even if I close the document and reopen it. The returned value should be saved until something else is being written into to cell. That would make my sheets document much more usable than the current state.
From the question
Is it possible to save the returned value to the cell and don't call the custom function again when an value has been returned? I want the function being called only once per cell, even if I close the document and reopen it. The returned value should be saved until something else is being written into to cell. That would make my sheets document much more usable than the current state.
By solely using the custom function it's not possible. There isn't a straight forward solution is to achieve this, in order to keep things simple you should look for another way to implement what is being done by the custom funtion.
One option is to use a trigger (including a custom menu / a function assined to a drawing) to check if the cell that should have the value returned by the custom function is empty and in such case fill it with the corresponding value. The best trigger to use will depend on your spreadsheet workflow.
As specified by Ruben this is not possible, with a custom function.
In my particular case I have resorted to using an Apps Script function that is triggered by an edit event of the spreadsheet and verifies if the event is in the column where the function that I want to execute only once should be, later replacement its content with the result of calling the API.
function freezeValue(e) {
var rangeEvent = e.range;
var col = rangeEvent.getColumnIndex();
if (col === 2) { #Verify column of event
var value = rangeEvent.getValue();
/*Call your api*/
result_api = CALL_API(value)
rangeEvent.setValue(result_api);
}
}
Keep in mind that this implementation only works when each of the cells is edited one by one. To do the same with a row or a complete array of elements, you must go through each of the cells and follow the same procedure.
In a spreadsheet I can enter =SIN(45)+123 in a cell, and it will be evaluated.
How can I evaluate spreadsheet functions within a custom function, something like an "eval"
function that would work like this :
function myFunc() {
return Sheet.eval("=SIN(45)+123")
}
is it possible ?
Note that I don't care about the SIN function in particular, what I want is to have access to the complete arsenal of spreadsheet functions (PMT, QUERY, NPER, etc..)
Spreadsheet functions from Apps-Script
Not possible - This has been asked many times. Suggest you check the google-apps-script issue list to see if anything has changed. But last I checked, there is no way to do it, and they have no plan to add it. https://code.google.com/p/google-apps-script-issues/issues/list
Ethercalc - java script spreadsheet formulas
If you need to, you can always copy the code from "ethercalc" as it has a java script versions of the spreadsheet formulas.
https://github.com/audreyt/ethercalc
I know this is an old question, but it might help someone.
just assign the formula to a range, then grab the value.
//asign a formula to the range
var range = sheet.getRange("A1").setFormula("=SUM(D1:D100)");
//get the result
var result = range.getValue();
//clean up
range.setFormula("");
I got this working. Using set value will do the trick. Thus something like this:
function MyFun1(){
SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet().getActiveSheet().getRange('A1').setValue(Myfun2())
}
function MyFun2(){
return "=SIN(45)+123"
}
Hope this helps!
I think you need to divide this issue up into two different concerns.
Do you want to grab data that is already on the spreadsheet, perform a calculation, and then print a result, or do you want to use the sin() function on calculations in code unrelated to the data in the spreadsheet?
If you are trying to do the latter, you should be able to reference spreadsheet functions by using Math.sin() in your Google Apps Script. For more information on using the sin() function in JavaScript, check this post out: http://www.w3schools.com/jsref/jsref_sin.asp
If you are trying to do the former, then what you should do is use a readRows() function (more information available here: http://gassnippets.blogspot.com/2012/11/create-your-first-google-apps-script.html) to load your spreadsheet data into a variable (or variables) in memory, perform your calculations, and print the final result out to the spreadsheet using a similar function.
Let me know if this helps.
I came across this question in an attempt to find a way to evaluate part of a function like it is possible in Excel.
Here is my dirty workaround - instead of outputting the result in an msgbox, you could simply store the value or displayvalue of the activecell in a variable and use it to your liking.
Notice however, that the function will temporarily overwrite whatever you have in your currently selected cell and it will need to recalculate the sheet before the result is available. Hence it's not a viable solution if you need to evaluate multiple cell values.
function evalPart() {
var ui = SpreadsheetApp.getUi();
myPart = Browser.inputBox("Enter formula part:", ui.ButtonSet.OK_CANCEL);
if (myPart != "cancel") {
myActiveCell = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet().getActiveCell();
myBackup = myActiveCell.getFormula();
myActiveCell.setFormula(myPart);
Browser.msgBox("Result of \\n \\n" + myPart + " \\n \\n " + myActiveCell.getDisplayValue());
myActiveCell.setFormula(myBackup);
}
}
I don't know if it's possible with high-level functions. However, it's possible with some common and easy-to-understand functions like (sum, subtract etc).
Following is the code I used to set values after the calculation is done in scripting itself.
function MyFun1() {
SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet().getActiveSheet().getRange('A1').setValue(MyFun2());
}
function MyFun2() {
var one = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet().getSheetByName("Dashboard");
var two = one.getRange('A2').getValue();
var three = one.getRange('A3').getValue(); return two*three;
}
Don't forget to add a trigger "onEdit" on Myfun1() to automatically update the return value.
I've written a custom Google Apps Script that will receive an id and fetch information from a web service (a price).
I use this script in a spreadsheet, and it works just fine. My problem is that these prices change, and my spreadsheet doesn't get updated.
How can I force it to re-run the script and update the cells (without manually going over each cell)?
Ok, it seems like my problem was that google behaves in a weird way - it doesn't re-run the script as long as the script parameters are similar, it uses cached results from the previous runs. Hence it doesn't re-connect to the API and doesn't re-fetch the price, it simply returns the previous script result that was cached.
See more info here(Add a star to these issues, if you're affected):
https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/36753882
https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/36763858
and Henrique G. Abreu's answer
My solution was to add another parameter to my script, which I don't even use. Now, when you call the function with a parameter that is different than previous calls, it will have to rerun the script because the result for these parameters will not be in the cache.
So whenever I call the function, for the extra parameter I pass "$A$1".
I also created a menu item called refresh, and when I run it, it puts the current date and time in A1, hence all the calls to the script with $A$1 as second parameter will have to recalculate. Here's some code from my script:
function onOpen() {
var sheet = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
var entries = [{
name : "Refresh",
functionName : "refreshLastUpdate"
}];
sheet.addMenu("Refresh", entries);
};
function refreshLastUpdate() {
SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet().getRange('A1').setValue(new Date().toTimeString());
}
function getPrice(itemId, datetime) {
var headers =
{
"method" : "get",
"contentType" : "application/json",
headers : {'Cache-Control' : 'max-age=0'}
};
var jsonResponse = UrlFetchApp.fetch("http://someURL?item_id=" + itemId, headers);
var jsonObj = eval( '(' + jsonResponse + ')' );
return jsonObj.Price;
SpreadsheetApp.flush();
}
And when I want to put the price of item with ID 5 in a cell, I use the following formula:
=getPrice(5, $A$1)
When I want to refresh the prices, I simply click the "Refresh" -> "Refresh" menu item.
Remember that you need to reload the spreadsheet after you change the onOpen() script.
You're missing the fastidious caching bug feature. It works this way:
Google considers that all your custom functions depend only on their parameters values directly to return their result (you can optionally depend on other static data).
Given this prerequisite they can evaluate your functions only when a parameter changes. e.g.
Let's suppose we have the text "10" on cell B1, then on some other cell we type =myFunction(B1)
myFunction will be evaluated and its result retrieved. Then if you change cell B1 value to "35", custom will be re-evaluated as expected and the new result retrieved normally.
Now, if you change cell B1 again to the original "10", there's no re-evaluation, the original result is retrieved immediately from cache.
So, when you use the sheet name as a parameter to fetch it dynamically and return the result, you're breaking the caching rule.
Unfortunately, you can't have custom functions without this amazing feature. So you'll have to either change it to receive the values directly, instead of the sheet name, or do not use a custom function. For example, you could have a parameter on your script telling where the summaries should go and have an onEdit update them whenever a total changes.
What I did was similar to tbkn23. This method doesn't require any user action except making a change.
The function I want to re-evaluate has an extra unused parameter, $A$1. So the function call is
=myFunction(firstParam, $A$1)
But in the code the function signature is
function myFunction(firstParam)
Instead of having a Refresh function I've used the onEdit(e) function like this
function onEdit(e)
{
SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSheet().getRange('A1').setValue(Math.random());
}
This function is triggered whenever any cell in the spreadsheet is edited. So now you edit a cell, a random number is placed in A1, this refreshes the parameter list as tbkn23 suggested, causing the custom function to be re-evaluated.
There are settings where you can make NOW() update automatically:
If your custom function is inside a specific column, simply order your spreadsheet by that column.
The ordering action forces a refresh of the data, which invokes your custom function for all rows of that column at once.
Script Logic:
Custom Functions don't update unless it's arguments changes.
Create a onChange trigger to change all arguments of all custom functions in the spreadsheet using TextFinder
The idea to add a extra dummy parameter by #tbkn23 and use of the triggers by #Lexi Brush is implemented here with a random number as argument. This answer mainly differs due to usage of class TextFinder(a relatively new addition to Apps script), which is better because
No extra cell is required.
No menu is needed > No additional clicks needed. If you need a custom refresher, a checkbox is a better implementation
You can also change the formula itself instead of changing the parameters
The change/trigger can be configured to filter out only certain changes. For eg, the following sample script trigger filters out all changes except INSERT_GRID/REMOVE_GRID(Grid=Sheet). This is appropriate for the custom function that provides sheetnames. A edit anywhere isn't going to change the list of sheets/sheetnames, but inserting or removing sheet does.
Sample custom function(to refresh):
/**
* #customfunction
* #OnlyCurrentDoc
* #returns Current list of sheet names
*/
const sheetNames = () =>
SpreadsheetApp.getActive()
.getSheets()
.map((sheet) => sheet.getName());
Refresher function:
/**
* #description Automatically refreshes specified custom functions
* #author TheMaster https://stackoverflow.com/users/8404453
* #version 2.0.0
* #changelog
* Updated to support all custom functions and arguments
* Avoid eternal loops
*/
/**
* #listens to changes in a Google sheet
* #see https://developers.google.com/apps-script/guides/triggers/installable#managing_triggers_manually
*/
function onChange(e) {
/* Name of the custom function that is to be refreshed */
const customfunctionName = 'SHEETNAMES',
regexPattern = `=${customfunctionName}${String.raw`\(([^)]*?)?(?:,\s*?"RANDOM_ID_\d+")?\)`}`,
replacementRegex = `=${customfunctionName}${String.raw`($1,"RANDOM_ID_${
Math.floor(Math.random() * 500) + 1
}")`}`;
/* Avoid eternal loop
* Increase timeout if it still loops
*/
const cache = CacheService.getScriptCache(),
key = 'onChangeLastRun',
timeout = 5 * 1000 /*5s*/,
timediff = new Date() - new Date(JSON.parse(cache.get(key)));
if (timediff <= timeout /*5s*/) return;
cache.put(key, JSON.stringify(new Date()));
/* Following types of change are available:
* EDIT
* INSERT_ROW
* INSERT_COLUMN
* REMOVE_ROW
* REMOVE_COLUMN
* INSERT_GRID
* REMOVE_GRID
* FORMAT
* OTHER - This usually refers to changes made by the script itself or sheets api
*/
if (!/GRID|OTHER/.test(e.changeType)) return; //Listen only to grid/OTHER change
SpreadsheetApp.getActive()
.createTextFinder(regexPattern)
.matchFormulaText(true)
.matchCase(false)
.useRegularExpression(true)
.replaceAllWith(replacementRegex);
}
To Read:
Installable triggers
TextFinder
As noted earlier:
Custom Functions don't update unless it's arguments changes.
The possible solution is to create a checkbox in a single cell and use this cell as an argument for the custom function:
Create a checkbox: select free cell e.g. [A1], go to [Insert] > [Checkbox]
Make this cell an argument: =myFunction(A1)
Click checkbox to refresh the formula
Use a google finance function as a parameter. Like =GOOGLEFINANCE("CURRENCY:CADARS")
Those function force reload every x minutes
Since google app script is an extension of JS, functions should be able to handle more args than defined in function signature or fewer. So if you have some function like
function ADD(a, b) {
return CONSTANTS!$A$1 + a + b
}
then you'd call this func like
=ADD(A1, B1, $A$2)
where $A$2 is some checkbox (insert -> checkbox) that you can click to "refresh" after you needed to change the value from the sheet & cell CONSTANTS$A$1
I use a dummy variable in a function, this variable refers to a cell in the spreadsheet. Then I have a Myfunction() in script that writes a Math.Random number in that cell.
MyFunction is under a trigger service (Edit/Current Project Triggers) and you can choose different event-triggers, for example On-Open or time driven, there you can choose for example a time period, from 1 minute to a month.
Working off of Lexi's script as-is, it didn't seem to work anymore with the current Sheets, but if I add the dummy variable into my function as a parameter (no need to actually use it inside the function), it will indeed force google sheets to refresh the page again.
So, declaration like: function myFunction(firstParam,dummy) and then calling it would be as has been suggested. That worked for me.
Also, if it is a nuisance for a random variable to appear on all of your sheets that you edit, an easy remedy to limit to one sheet is as follows:
function onEdit(e)
{
e.source.getSheetByName('THESHEETNAME').getRange('J1').setValue(Math.random());
}
another solution to the caching problem.
have a dummy variable in your method.
pass
Filter(<the cell or cell range>,1=1)
as the value to that parameter.
e.g.
=getValueScript("B1","B4:Z10", filter(B4:Z10,1=1))
the output of filter is not used. however it indicates to the spreadsheet that this formula is sensitive to B4:Z10 range.
I had a similar issue creating a dashboard for work. Chamil's solution above (namely using Sheet's Filter function passed as the value to a dummy variable in your function) works just fine, despite the more recent comment from Arsen. In my case, I was using a function to monitor a range and could not use the filter on the same range since it created a circular reference. So I just had a cell (in my case E45 in the code below) in which I changed the number anytime I wanted my function to update:
=myFunction("E3:E43","D44",filter(E45,1=1))
As Chamil indicated, the filter is not used in the script:
function myFunction(range, colorRef, dummy) {
variable 'dummy' not used in code here
}
Today I solved this by
adding another parameter to my function:
function MY_FUNC(a, b, additional_param) { /* ... */ }
adding a value to this parameter as well, referencing a cell:
=MY_FUNC("a", "b", A1)
and putting a checkbox in that referenced cell (A1).
Now, it takes only one click (on the checkbox) to force recalculating my function.
What you could do is to set up another cell somewhere in the spreadsheet that will be updated every time a new sheet is added. Make sure it doesn't update for every change but only when you want to do the calculation (in your case when you add a sheet). You then pass the reference to this cell to your custom function. As mentioned the custom function can ignore this parameter.
Given that feature explained by Henrique Abreu, you may try the out-of-box spreadsheet function QUERY , that SQL liked query is what I use often in work
on raw data, and get data as summary to a different tab, result data is updated in real time following change in raw data.
My suggestion is based on the fact that your script has not advanced work such as URL fetch, just data work, as without actual data read, I cannot give a precise solution with QUERY.
Regarding the cache feature mentioned by Henrique Abreu (I don't have enough reputation to comment directly under his answer), I did testing and found that:
looks there is no cache working, testing function's script shown below:
function adder(base) {
Utilities.sleep(5000);
return base + 10;
}
applying that custom function adder() in sheet by calling a cell, and then changed that cell value forth and back, each time I see the loading message and total time more than 5 seconds.
It might be related to the update mentioned in this GAS issue:
This issue has now been fixed. Custom functions in New Sheets are now context aware and do not cache values as aggressively.
the issue mentioned in this topic remains, my testing suggests that, Google sheet recalculate custom function each time ONLY WHEN
value DIRECTLY called by function is changed.
function getCellValue(sheetName,row,col)
{
var ss= SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
var sh = ss.getSheetByName(sheetName);
return sh.getRange(row, col).getValue();
}
A change of any value in yellow cells will lead to recalculation of custom function; the real data source value change is ignored by function.
function containing cell's location is changed in sheet. ex. insert/remove a row/column above or left side.
I did not want to have a dummy parameter. YMMV on this.
1 A cell that is a 'List of Items', one is "Refresh"
2 Script with 'onEdit', if the cell is "Refresh":
a)Empty out the document cache
b)Fill doc cache with external data (a table in my case)
c)For all cells with my 'getStockoData(...' custom function
get the formula
set '=0'
set the fromula
d)Set the cell in (1) with a value of "Ready"
This does refresh the bits you want BUT IS NOT FAST.
I followed this video, from 1:44, and this worked for me.
You should use a specific update function, initialize a "current time" variable and pass this permanently updated variable to your custom function. Then go to Triggers and set up an "every-minute" time-driven trigger for the update function (or choose another time interval for updates).
The code:
function update() {
var dt = new Date();
var ts = dt.toLocaleTimeString();
var cellVal = '=CustomFunction("'+ ts + '")';
SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSheet().getRange('A1').setValue(cellVal);
}
Just add GOOGLEFINANCE("eurusd") as an additional argument to your custom function, like:
=myFunction(arg1, arg2, GOOGLEFINANCE("eurusd"))
As #Brionius said put an extra dinamic argument on the function. if you use now() you may have timeout problems make the update a little bit slower...
cell A1 = int(now()*1000)
cell A2 = function(args..., A1)
If you have written a custom function and used it in your spreadsheet as a formula, then each time you open the spreadsheet or any referencing cell is modified, the formula is recalculated.
If you want to just keep staring at the spreadsheet and want its values to change, then consider adding a timed trigger that will update the cells. Read more about triggers here
I am trying to set some value to a cell in a Google Spreadsheet:
function exampleFunction() {
var ss = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
var sheet = ss.getSheets()[0];
var range1 = sheet.getRange("A1");
var value1 = range1.getValue();
value1+=1;
range1.setValue(2);
return value1;
}
If I am trying to affect a cell with this function, this error appears:
You do not have the permission required to setValue. (line 10, file "ddd")
Do you know how I could make that possible? I actually want the affected cell to take the value of the cell A1 and increase the value of A1 by 1.
from the documentation :
Custom functions return values, but they cannot set values outside the cells they are in. In most circumstances, a custom function in cell A1 cannot modify cell A5. However, if a custom function returns a double array, the results overflow the cell containing the function and fill the cells below and to the right of the cell containing the custom function. You can test this with a custom function containing return [[1,2],[3,4]];.
reference : Custom Functions in Spreadsheets
It looks that you are using the above function as a custom function, in other words, it is called by cell formula on the Google Sheets UI, in the following way:
=exampleFunction()
Custom functions in Google Sheets have limitations like they can't be used to call Google Apps Script services that require permissions. The workaround is to use another mean to call the function:
Run it from the Google Apps Script Editor
Use a custom menu
Use a trigger
Also they could be called from dialogs and sidebars, Google Apps Script Web apps and by using the Google Apps Script execution API
It's just a little different than what we programmers think.
You can use setFormula in a Macro but not in a custom function.
Just create a simple macro from Tools > Macros > Record Macro, and then open the Script editor and change the Macro's code to your code...
Here is my Macro's code:
function SetFormula() {
var spreadsheet = SpreadsheetApp.getActive();
var formulaValue = spreadsheet.getRange('formulaText').getValue().toString();
spreadsheet.getRange('total').setFormula(formulaValue);
return formulaValue;
};
Then, to run your macro automatically (you can run that manually from Tools > Macros > YOUR-MACRO-NAME), just create a trigger as follows:
Open the Script Editor:
Then go to Triggers from the left side panel and tap on Add Trigger button:
Finally, create the trigger, select your Macro from the list (mine is SetFormula), select the Event Source as From SpreadSheet, the Event Type to On Edit, and save it.
That's it!
I named my ranges as FormulaText and total to be more flexible.
you can do that from here:
Custom functions do have permission limitations as noted above. They can run with a custom menu or you can insert an image and assign a custom script to it to use it like a button.
Using a Trigger is another way to accomplish something like this example, which makes it automatic.
A simple trigger in an App Script such as onSelectionChange(e) works without running into the permissions issue of putting a custom function into a cell. This trigger is newer than what was available in the original post. In the simple example below, cell A1 will turn white with an even integer and red with anything else. Granted, the speed at which the triggers fire may vary. It's not always as instantaneous as one might expect.
function onSelectionChange(e) {
const sheet = SpreadsheetApp.getActive()
var value1 = sheet.getRange("A1").getValue()
if(value1 % 2 == 0) {
sheet.getRange("A1").setBackground("#FFFFFF") //white
} else {
sheet.getRange("A1").setBackground("#FF0000") //red
}
}