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//Create a byte array that will eventually hold our final PDF Byte[] bytes; //Boilerplate iTextSharp setup here //Create a stream that we can write to, in this case a MemoryStream using (var ms = new MemoryStream()) { //Create an iTextSharp Document which is an abstraction of a PDF but **NOT** a PDF using (var doc = new Document()) { //Create a writer that's bound to our PDF abstraction and our stream using (var writer = PdfWriter.GetInstance(doc, ms)) { //Open the document for writing doc.Open(); //Our sample HTML and CSS var example_html = @"<p>This <em>is </em><span class=""headline"" style=""text-decoration: underline;"">some</span> <strong>sample <em> text</em></strong><span style=""color: red;"">!!!</span></p>"; var example_css = @".headline{font-size:200%}"; /************************************************** * Example #1 * * * * Use the built-in HTMLWorker to parse the HTML. * * Only inline CSS is supported. * * ************************************************/ //Create a new HTMLWorker bound to our document using (var htmlWorker = new iTextSharp.text.html.simpleparser.HTMLWorker(doc)) { //HTMLWorker doesn't read a string directly but instead needs a TextReader (which StringReader subclasses) using (var sr = new StringReader(example_html)) { //Parse the HTML htmlWorker.Parse(sr); } } /************************************************** * Example #2 * * * * Use the XMLWorker to parse the HTML. * * Only inline CSS and absolutely linked * * CSS is supported * * ************************************************/ //XMLWorker also reads from a TextReader and not directly from a string using (var srHtml = new StringReader(example_html)) { //Parse the HTML iTextSharp.tool.xml.XMLWorkerHelper.GetInstance().ParseXHtml(writer, doc, srHtml); } /************************************************** * Example #3 * * * * Use the XMLWorker to parse HTML and CSS * * ************************************************/ //In order to read CSS as a string we need to switch to a different constructor //that takes Streams instead of TextReaders. //Below we convert the strings into UTF8 byte array and wrap those in MemoryStreams using (var msCss = new MemoryStream(System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(example_css))) { using (var msHtml = new MemoryStream(System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(example_html))) { //Parse the HTML iTextSharp.tool.xml.XMLWorkerHelper.GetInstance().ParseXHtml(writer, doc, msHtml, msCss); } } doc.Close(); } } //After all of the PDF "stuff" above is done and closed but **before** we //close the MemoryStream, grab all of the active bytes from the stream bytes = ms.ToArray(); } //Now we just need to do something with those bytes. //Here I'm writing them to disk but if you were in ASP.Net you might Response.BinaryWrite() them. //You could also write the bytes to a database in a varbinary() column (but please don't) or you //could pass them to another function for further PDF processing. var testFile = Path.Combine(Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.Desktop), "test.pdf"); System.IO.File.WriteAllBytes(testFile, bytes);
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