I've created a word document generator in C sharp and I want that generated word document to be save in a specific place in the client. I'm looking for a similar functionality like FolderBrowserDialog in Windows Form. I'm using ASP.Net and I tried may solutions but still no luck. Anyone can help me.
No! server (web-app) program don't have an ability to save a generated document at specific place at client.
try to use the HttpResponse in behind's code:
like:
// Clear the content of the response
Response.ClearContent();
// Add the file name and attachment, which will force the open/cancel/save dialog box to show, to the header
Response.AddHeader("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=" + savedNameWithExtension);
// Add the file size into the response header
Response.AddHeader("Content-Length", myfile.Length.ToString());
// Set the ContentType
Response.ContentType = ReturnExtension(myfile.Extension.ToLower());
// Write the file into the response (TransmitFile is for ASP.NET 2.0. In ASP.NET 1.1 you have to use WriteFile instead)
Response.TransmitFile(myfile.FullName);
// End the response
Response.End();
This section of code will prompt the user to save the specified file on a certain location on his machine.
Hope this is clear.
When you download a file from the browser its the browser to show the save file dialog and this works on all browsers and on all platforms. Just keep the default behavior and let users decide location and file name. I guess any hacky implementation of that part if possible at all, it is likely to break in some browsers or platforms, like mac, ipad, android...
you do not need to specify any control to be used, once you call the methods to download a file like
Response.WriteFile or Response.BinaryWrite or any other, the browser takes care of everything else for you and let it be like that ;-)
Related
I got a requirement to create pdf on the fly from the data stored in database.
I am using html, jquery and WCF in my application.
I don't find a way to generate pdf (Show in a browser or as an attachment) using client technology (jquery, or any other client plugins). I tried to use pdf.js, but could not able to succeed. Later I used .net generic handler to generate pdf. I was passing bytearray to handler, in turn pdf started rendering on client.
I got some random issue, then I wrote a sample application to make sure handler is working fine. I used same code with a static text to generate pdf, but it started throwing a error on the client.
Below is the code snippet I used
context.Response.Clear();
context.Response.ContentType = "application/pdf";
context.Response.AddHeader("content-disposition", "inline; filename=download");
context.Response.Write("Hello World");
//context.Response.BinaryWrite(System.Text.Encoding.Default.GetBytes("Hello world"));
//context.Response.BinaryWrite(System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes("Hello world"));
context.Response.Flush();
context.Response.End();
I am getting errors on all the browsers
Failed to load pdf document on Chrome.
An error occurred while loading the PDF. PDF.js v0.8.505 (build: da1c944) Message: InvalidPDFException - In mozilla firefox
File does not begin with '%PDF-' in IE.
Note: I tried with aspx page too. I cant create physical file due security issues. If there is any better way of achieving it please let me know. Thanks in advance.
PDF is a standard file format.You cannot write a normal text file and rename it to filename.pdf and wish it to work.
You will need .Net libraries for that.There are lot try googling .Net pdf library
Some Info.
pdf.js is just for viewing in browser.
setting context.Response.ContentType just tells the browser the file its gonna receive,So it can use existing mapped application to open it.Like Adobe browser plugin for pdf file.
When I upload a docx, xlsx or pptx to amazon S3 using aws .net sdk the file is getting uploaded fine and I am able to view the file directly from S3 without any issues. But when I download the file in ASP.net using C# I am getting a warning message (see below) when opening the file:
"Excel found unreadable content in test.xlsx. Do you want to recover the contents of this workbook?" If I click yes, I am able to see all the contents in the document.
similarly I am getting a warning message for .docx file as well.
This is the C# code I am using:
Response.Clear();
Response.ContentType = "application/octet-stream";
Response.AddHeader("content-disposition", "attachment; filename=" + fileName);
Response.OutputStream.Write(Content, 0, Content.Length);
Response.Flush();
HttpContext.Current.ApplicationInstance.CompleteRequest();
Update: When I download the file in windows forms app it is working fine and the problem is with web app only.
What am I doing wrong?
Please help...
More information is needed to figure this out. The code snippet you provided looks OK. The problem looks to be elsewhere in your code... For example, what are you loading inside "Content"?
Also, it would help if you tried uploading and downloading a simple text file, to see what kind of data gets appended.
If Content is a byte[] created from a MemoryStream, make sure you're calling .ToArray() and not .GetBuffer() to get it. If you use .GetBuffer(), you'll potentially get extra bytes on the end, which the office file format probably doesn't like. Your other file types you've tried it with might be more tolerant of extra data they weren't expecting on the end.
I have some images in my Asp.net web page. My requirement is to save a selected image to users disk while clicking a save button.Normally all browser has the provision for right click save as option.But I have to implement this feature on an html input button click. I have the following questions.
How can I make a script to do this functionality which should work on all major browsers
Do we get any jQuery library which does this functionality
Can I get any alternative in asp.net technology rather than java script/jQuery for doing the same functioanlity
Can anyone please help me?
jQuery is a client-side javascript library. It is not involved with serving files to download.
You can provide a download on any button click in asp.net. jQuery is not required for downloading files.
Your code in the event handler would look as follows:
Response.ContentType = "application/octet-stream";
Response.AddHeader("Content-Disposition", string.Format("attachment; filename=\"{0}\"", fileName));
Response.WriteFile(filePath + fileName);
Response.Flush();
Response.End();
You cannot write a file straight to disk from a website, period. That's just sensible security. A regular download link/button will always invoke the standard download process of the browser, in which you have no say whether the file will be saved at all or where to. The only way to circumvent that is to create a native browser plugin which the user will have to install first, which will write files from your site straight to a specific location on disk. Please be extremly careful writing such a plugin should you do so so it does not become a gaping security hole for everybody.
I am saving a .doc file to a SQL Server database as varbinary(max) using the C# code below.
I am able to save the file, but when I retrieve the file back and want to display the contents on the web page, my code is downloading the file and I am in great confusion about how to handle it.
The exact functionality I am looking for is the way naukri.com uploads the resume and gives a preview of it. My code is :
byte[] fileContent = new byte[fuResume.PostedFile.ContentLength];
fuResume.PostedFile.InputStream.Read(fileContent, 0, fuResume.PostedFile.ContentLength);
//lblAppliedMessage.Text = ByteArrayToString(fileContent);
//lblAppliedMessage.Text = BitConverter.ToString(fileContent).Replace("-", string.Empty);
byte[] btYourDoc;
btYourDoc = fileContent;
Response.ContentType = "application/ms-word";
Response.AddHeader("Content-Disposition", "inline;filename=yourfilename.doc");
Response.OutputStream.Write(btYourDoc, 0, fileContent.Length);
Response.BinaryWrite(btYourDoc);
Response.End();
The reason your file is getting downloaded instead of displayed is because you're setting the content type to application/ms-word. This tells a browser to download the file (they can't natively handle files of that type so they delegate to an external app).
You'll need to have code that knows how to interpret the MS Word format and convert that to something viewable in a browser (HTML, some kind of plugin that will do that for you, etc). Saving the raw Word document and then sending it back to the client in the same state is basically just having them download a Word file.
squillman is right. There are tons of third party components that do Word -> HTML conversion.
One other option, which may be more appropriate for an intranet site, is to install Word on the server.
An example of this is here:
http://www.c-sharpcorner.com/UploadFile/munnamax/WordToHtml03252007065157AM/WordToHtml.aspx
Effectively, the doc is opened, saved out as HTML, then subsequent requests can retrieve the HTML version of the file for preview.
Office automation server side has many pitfalls, however - see http://support.microsoft.com/kb/257757 for more information.
Here's a good one where the end result it's up to the user whether to download or view the file here's the link but #Squillman is right by putting the Response headers you're telling it to download.
I am dynamically generating html file. It is formated with Css and Images. I am looking for code which should able to execute on button click, and ask the location for saving file. also it should download concern resource files which has referenced in html file. What code i have to do ? Can i use WebClient for the same ?
There is no "Save As" dialog in ASP.NET. Since it is running in a browser. You have no access to the user's file system, including the Save As dialog.
But you can send the user a file, as an attachment, most browsers will display a dialog asking the user whether to save the file or open it. Maybe the user will choose to save it.
Response.ContentType = "application/octet-stream" (or content type of your file).
Response.AppendHeader("content-disposition", "attachment;filename=" & strFileName)
You could create a situation where you can use WebClient if you make your file available through a uri, see this post.
Yes, you can use WebClient. Option is to use HttpRequest and HttpResponse.