public final class Hyperlink
extends java.lang.Object
In Excel this function has special behaviour - it causes the displayed cell value to behave like a hyperlink in the GUI. From an evaluation perspective however, it is very simple.
Syntax:
HYPERLINK(link_location, friendly_name)
link_location The URL of the hyperlink
friendly_name (optional) the value to display
Returns last argument. Leaves type unchanged (does not convert to StringEval).
| Constructor and Description |
|---|
Hyperlink() |
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
ValueEval |
evaluate(int srcRowIndex,
int srcColumnIndex,
ValueEval arg0)
|
ValueEval |
evaluate(int srcRowIndex,
int srcColumnIndex,
ValueEval arg0,
ValueEval arg1)
|
ValueEval |
evaluate(ValueEval[] args,
int srcRowIndex,
int srcColumnIndex) |
public ValueEval evaluate(int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex, ValueEval arg0)
Function1Argpublic ValueEval evaluate(int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex, ValueEval arg0, ValueEval arg1)
Function2Argpublic final ValueEval evaluate(ValueEval[] args, int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex)
evaluate in interface Functionargs - the evaluated function arguments. Empty values are represented with
BlankEval or MissingArgEval, never null.srcRowIndex - row index of the cell containing the formula under evaluationsrcColumnIndex - column index of the cell containing the formula under evaluationErrorEval, never null.
Note - Excel uses the error code #NUM! instead of IEEE NaN, so when
numeric functions evaluate to Double.NaN be sure to translate the result to ErrorEval.NUM_ERROR.Copyright 2018 The Apache Software Foundation or its licensors, as applicable.