Creating Pdf output from Html with .NET on Windows using the WebView2 control
MIT License
Library | Nuget Package |
---|---|
Westwind.WebView.HtmlToPdf | |
Westwind.WebView.HtmlToPdf.Extended |
Please note this is a very new project and there's significant churn at the moment. While below v1.0 semantic versioning is not used and there may be significant breaking changes between minor versions.
This library provides a quick way to print Html to Pdf on Windows using the WebView control. You can generate Pdf from Html of a Url or file by using a few different mechanisms:
The base library uses the built-in WebView2 Runtime in Windows so it has no external dependencies for your applications assuming you are running on a recent version of Windows that has the WebView2 Runtime installed. The extended package version provides additional features, but it also has additional dependencies and is slower to run and has a larger distribution footprint. In order to keep the base functionality very small and lean these two packages have been separated.
If you would like to find out more how this library works and how the original code and Pdf code was build, you can check out this blog post here:
The library is Windows specific, but it works in a variety of environments on Windows.
The component does not support:
Deployed applications have the following dependencies:
WebView2 Runtime On recent updates of Windows 11 and 10, the WebView is pre-installed as a system component. On Servers however, you may have to explicitly install the WebView Runtime.
Windows Desktop Runtime The WebView2 component is dependent on Windows Desktop Runtime libraries and therefore requires the Desktop runtime to be installed even for server applications.
There are two versions of the library:
Westwind.WebView.HtmlToPdf The base Html to Pdf conversion library. This library only has a single dependency on the WebView control and provides very fast base Html to Pdf conversion. This library is lean and fast and does just base Pdf conversion.
Westwind.WebView.HtmlToPdf.Extended This library provides all the base features and adds Table of Contents generation and CSS injection (in progress) and document information configuration (in progress). This library has additional dependencies, a larger footprint, and renders considerably slower as it has to parse the incoming URL/file multiple times.
You can install either one of these NuGet packages (no need for both):
dotnet add package westwind.webview.htmltopdf
dotnet add package westwind.webview.htmltopdf.Extended
Note the .Extended
package has a dependency on the base package so no need to include both. Both libraries have the same base interface, other than the top level class name:
There are a few additional properties specific to the added functionality of the extended version, but the core processing interface is the same.
There are 4 separate output methods:
result.ResultStream
result.ResultStream
All of the methods take a file or Url as input. File names have to be fully qualified with a path. Output to file requires that you provide a filename.
All requests return a PdfPrintResult
structure which has a IsSuccess
flag you can check. For stream results, the ResultStream
property will be set with a MemoryStream
instance on success. Errors can use the Message
or LastException
to retrieve error information.
var htmlFile = Path.GetFullPath("HtmlSampleFileLonger-SelfContained.html");
var outputFile = Path.GetFullPath(@".\test3.pdf");
File.Delete(outputFile);
var host = new HtmlToPdfHostExtended(); // or new HtmlPdfHost()
// optional Pdf/Print settings
var pdfPrintSettings = new WebViewPrintSettings()
{
// default margins are 0.4F
MarginBottom = 0.2F,
MarginLeft = 0.2f,
MarginRight = 0.2f,
MarginTop = 0.4f,
ScaleFactor = 0.8F
ShouldPrintHeaderAndFooter = true,
HeaderTitle = "Blog Post Title"
};
// We're interested in result.ResultStream
var result = await host.PrintToPdfStreamAsync(htmlFile, pdfPrintSettings);
Assert.IsTrue(result.IsSuccess, result.Message);
Assert.IsNotNull(result.ResultStream); // This is what we're after
// Copy resultstream to output file so we can display it
File.Delete(outputFile);
using var fstream = new FileStream(outputFile, FileMode.OpenOrCreate, FileAccess.Write);
result.ResultStream.CopyTo(fstream);
result.ResultStream.Close(); // Close returned stream!
ShellUtils.OpenUrl(outputFile);
[HttpGet("rawpdf")]
public async Task<IActionResult> RawPdf()
{
// source file or URL to render to Pdf
var file = Path.GetFullPath("./HtmlSampleFile-SelfContained.html");
var pdf = new HtmlToPdfHostExtended();
var pdfResult = await pdf.PrintToPdfStreamAsync(file, new WebViewPrintSettings { PageRanges = "1-10"});
if (pdfResult == null || !pdfResult.IsSuccess)
{
Response.StatusCode = 500;
return new JsonResult(new
{
isError = true,
message = pdfResult.Message
});
}
return new FileStreamResult(pdfResult.ResultStream, "application/pdf");
}
// Url or full qualified file path
var htmlFile = Path.GetFullPath("HtmlSampleFileLonger-SelfContained.html");
var outputFile = Path.GetFullPath(@".\test2.pdf");
File.Delete(outputFile);
var host = new HtmlToPdfHost(); // or new HtmlToPdfHostExtended()
var result = await host.PrintToPdfAsync(htmlFile, outputFile);
Assert.IsTrue(result.IsSuccess, result.Message);
ShellUtils.OpenUrl(outputFile); // display the Pdf file you specified
var htmlFile = Path.GetFullPath("HtmlSampleFile-SelfContained.html");
var outputFile = Path.GetFullPath(@".\test.pdf");
File.Delete(outputFile);
var host = new HtmlToPdfHost();
// Callback when complete
var onPrintComplete = (PdfPrintResult result) =>
{
if (result.IsSuccess)
{
ShellUtils.OpenUrl(outputFile);
Assert.IsTrue(true);
}
else
{
Assert.Fail(result.Message);
}
};
var pdfPrintSettings = new WebViewPrintSettings()
{
// default margins are 0.4F
MarginBottom = 0.2F,
MarginLeft = 0.2f,
MarginRight = 0.2f,
MarginTop = 0.4f,
ScaleFactor = 0.8f,
PageRanges = "1,2,5-7"
};
host.PrintToPdf(htmlFile, outputFile, onPrintComplete, pdfPrintSettings);
// make sure app keeps running
// File or URL
var htmlFile = Path.GetFullPath("HtmlSampleFile-SelfContained.html");
var host = new HtmlToPdfHost();
// Callback on completion
var onPrintComplete = (PdfPrintResult result) =>
{
if (result.IsSuccess)
{
// create file so we can display
var outputFile = Path.GetFullPath(@".\test1.pdf");
File.Delete(outputFile);
using var fstream = new FileStream(outputFile, FileMode.OpenOrCreate, FileAccess.Write);
result.ResultStream.CopyTo(fstream);
result.ResultStream.Close(); // Close returned stream!
ShellUtils.OpenUrl(outputFile);
Assert.IsTrue(true);
}
else
{
Assert.Fail(result.Message);
}
};
var pdfPrintSettings = new WebViewPrintSettings()
{
MarginBottom = 0.2F,
MarginLeft = 0.2f,
MarginRight = 0.2f,
MarginTop = 0.4f,
ScaleFactor = 0.8f,
};
host.PrintToPdfStream(htmlFile, onPrintComplete, pdfPrintSettings);
// make sure app keeps running
The Task
based methods are easiest to use so that's the recommended syntax. The callback based methods are there so you can more easily use this if you are running in a non-async and can't easily transition to async.
Both approaches run on a separate STA thread to ensure that the WebView can run regardless of whether you are running inside of an application that has a main UI/STA thread and it works inside of Windows Service contexts.
If you use this project and it provides value to you, please consider supporting by contributing or supporting via the sponsor link or one time donation at the top of this page. Value for value.