How to render pdfs using C#
Google has open sourced its excellent PDF rendering engine - PDFium - that it wrote with Foxit Software.
There is a C# nuget package called PdfiumViewer which gives a C# wrapper around PDFium and allows PDFs to be displayed and printed.
I have used it and was very impressed with the quality of the rendering.
PDFium works directly with streams so it doesn't require any data to be written to disk.
This is my example from a WinForms app
public void LoadPdf(byte[] pdfBytes)
{
var stream = new MemoryStream(pdfBytes);
LoadPdf(stream)
}
public void LoadPdf(Stream stream)
{
// Create PDF Document
var pdfDocument = PdfDocument.Load(stream);
// Load PDF Document into WinForms Control
pdfRenderer.Load(pdfDocument);
}
Edit: To get the pdfRenderer control in WinForm: Add the PdfiumViewer
NuGet package to the project; open the projects packages folder in Windows Explorer and drag the PdfiumViewer.dll
file onto the Toolbox
window; A control called PdfRenderer
will be available to add:
There are a few other choices in case the Adobe ActiveX isn't what you're looking for (since Acrobat must be present on the user machine and you can't ship it yourself).
For creating the PDF preview, first have a look at some other discussions on the subject on StackOverflow:
- How can I take preview of documents?
- Get a preview jpeg of a pdf on windows?
- .NET open PDF in winform without external dependencies
- PDF Previewing and viewing
In the last two I talk about a few things you can try:
You can get a commercial renderer (PDFViewForNet, PDFRasterizer.NET, ABCPDF, ActivePDF, XpdfRasterizer and others in the other answers...).
Most are fairly expensive though, especially if all you care about is making a simple preview/thumbnails.In addition to Omar Shahine's code snippet, there is a CodeProject article that shows how to use the Adobe ActiveX, but it may be out of date, easily broken by new releases and its legality is murky (basically it's ok for internal use but you can't ship it and you can't use it on a server to produce images of PDF).
You could have a look at the source code for SumatraPDF, an OpenSource PDF viewer for windows.
There is also Poppler, a rendering engine that uses Xpdf as a rendering engine. All of these are great but they will require a fair amount of commitment to make make them work and interface with .Net and they tend to be be distributed under the GPL.
You may want to consider using GhostScript as an interpreter because rendering pages is a fairly simple process.
The drawback is that you will need to either re-package it to install it with your app, or make it a pre-requisite (or at least a part of your install process).
It's not a big challenge, and it's certainly easier than having to massage the other rendering engines into cooperating with .Net.
I did a small project that you will find on the Developer Express forums as an attachment.
Be careful of the license requirements for GhostScript through.
If you can't leave with that then commercial software is probably your only choice.
Here is my answer from a different question.
First you need to reference the Adobe Reader ActiveX Control
Adobe Acrobat Browser Control Type Library 1.0
%programfiles&\Common Files\Adobe\Acrobat\ActiveX\AcroPDF.dll
Then you just drag it into your Windows Form from the Toolbox.
And use some code like this to initialize the ActiveX Control.
private void InitializeAdobe(string filePath)
{
try
{
this.axAcroPDF1.LoadFile(filePath);
this.axAcroPDF1.src = filePath;
this.axAcroPDF1.setShowToolbar(false);
this.axAcroPDF1.setView("FitH");
this.axAcroPDF1.setLayoutMode("SinglePage");
this.axAcroPDF1.Show();
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
throw;
}
}
Make sure when your Form closes that you dispose of the ActiveX Control
this.axAcroPDF1.Dispose();
this.axAcroPDF1 = null;
otherwise Acrobat might be left lying around.