@roganjosh case in point: we used to track students' absence and whatnot in google docs. It's quite natural to leave a note on an entry saying "late 5 minutes" or "absent with notice", etc. I'd hate for that to be stuck in a separate column, having to look up items there.
Then I'm really confused because I can't see how that's possibly easier to search than having a "late_by" column that defaults to 0 and you just type the number in there
Then you just sum the column, or do a vlookup on the student with an array formula an add up all their lateness
Because it's not something I search by. It's something I might want to check when I look at the row of absences. And this was just an example, the point is any kind of free-form notes might be appropriate for various reasons, and having them stuffed in a separate column is just not feasible in some cases.
you're presuming that the contents of a note are compatible with something numerical
That note only conveys text. It cannot be used in any categorical form in Python. I'm not suggesting changing the text in any way, only putting it in a place that it might be also used in another way
The notes are lost. The question was pulling data into python in general, with an additional remark about notes and colouring in defense of using crappy excel :P
In this case, I've seen people have a spreadsheet, pull out a calculator and multiply two columns, then type results in. It is not a happy place, but you can't always expect people to transition.
just today I saw a spreadsheet where someone computed an average by first creating a sum cell, then dividing it by the number of items...with hard-wired denominator
the Google access required for gspread (at least , last I used it), makes 2-second polling of a sheet perfectly reasonable and free
You won't overstep the rate limits. I had it running 24/7. You could probably pull down to /sec polling and writing. Sometimes it's the best middle-ground