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⇱ Excel Spreadsheet Automation on Bannerbear Data with the QUERY Formula


Excel Spreadsheet Automation on Bannerbear Data with the QUERY Formula

👁 Jerod Johnson
Jerod Johnson
Director, Technology Evangelism
Pull data from Bannerbear, automate spreadsheets, and more with the QUERY formula.

The CData Excel Add-In for Bannerbear provides formulas that can query Bannerbear data. The following three steps show how you can automate the following task: Search Bannerbear data for a user-specified value and then organize the results into an Excel spreadsheet.

The syntax of the CDATAQUERY formula is the following:

=CDATAQUERY(Query, [Connection], [Parameters], [ResultLocation]);

This formula requires three inputs:

  • Query: The declaration of the Bannerbear data records you want to retrieve, written in standard SQL.
  • Connection: Either the connection name, such as APIConnection1, or a connection string. The connection string consists of the required properties for connecting to Bannerbear data, separated by semicolons.

    Start by setting the Profile connection property to the location of the Bannerbear Profile on disk (e.g. C:\profiles\Bannerbear.apip). Next, set the ProfileSettings connection property to the connection string for Bannerbear (see below).

    Bannerbear API Profile Settings

    Retrieve your API keys from the Bannerbear dashboard. Specify the key type (Project or Master) via the KeyType property.

  • ResultLocation: The cell that the output of results should start from.

Pass Spreadsheet Cells as Inputs to the Query

The procedure below results in a spreadsheet that organizes all the formula inputs in the first column.

  1. Define cells for the formula inputs. In addition to the connection inputs, add another input to define a criterion for a filter to be used to search Bannerbear data, such as PaidPlanName.
  2. In another cell, write the formula, referencing the cell values from the user input cells defined above. Single quotes are used to enclose values such as addresses that may contain spaces.
  3. =CDATAQUERY("SELECT * FROM Account WHERE PaidPlanName = '"&B4&"'","Profile="&B1&";ProfileSettings="&B2&";Provider=API",B5)
    👁 Formula inputs used in this example. (Google Apps is shown.)
  4. Change the filter to change the data. 👁 The outputs of the formula. (Google Apps is shown.)