EDIT FOR COMMENTS
There might be a better way to do this.
Install the excellent psutil
import psutil
excelPids = []
for proc in psutil.process_iter():
if proc.name == "EXCEL.EXE": excelPids.append(proc.pid)
Now enumerate the windows, but get the window title and pid.
windowPidsAndTitle = []
win32gui.EnumWindows(lambda hwnd, resultList: resultList.append((win32gui.GetWindowThreadProcessId(hwnd),win32gui.GetWindowText(hwnd))), windowPidsAndTitle)
Now just find the first pid that is in our excelPids
for pid,title in windowPidsAndTitle:
if pid in excelPids:
return title
END EDITS
There is a number of things to take into consideration here:
Does one instance have multiple workbooks open? In this case
xl = win32com.client.Dispatch("Excel.Application")
xl.ActiveWorkbook.FullName
Will indeed give you the last active workbook.
Or are there separate instances of EXCEL.EXE running? You can get each instance with:
xl = win32com.client.GetObjec(None, "Excel.Application") #instance one
xl = win32com.client.GetObject("Name_Of_Workbook") #instance two
But this defeats the purpose because you need to know the name AND this will not tell you which one last had focus.
To @tgrays comment above, if your excel instance is guaranteed to be the foreground window then:
import win32gui
win32gui.GetWindowText(win32gui.GetForegroundWindow())
#parse this and use GetObject to get your excel instance
But worst case scenerio, multiple instances and you have to find which had focus last, you'll have to enumerate all the windows and find the one you care about:
windows = []
win32gui.EnumWindows(lambda hwnd, resultList: resultList.append(win32gui.GetWindowText(hwnd)),windows)
#enumerates all the windows open from the top down
[i for i in windows if "Microsoft Excel" in i].pop(0)
#this one is closest to the top
Good luck with this one!