Reputation: 449
I need to use C# programatically to append several preexisting docx
files into a single, long docx
file - including special markups like bullets and images. Header and footer information will be stripped out, so those won't be around to cause any problems.
I can find plenty of information about manipulating an individual docx
file with .NET Framework 3, but nothing easy or obvious about how you would merge files. There is also a third-party program (Acronis.Words) that will do it, but it is prohibitively expensive.
Automating through Word has been suggested, but my code is going to be running on ASP.NET on an IIS web server, so going out to Word is not an option for me. Sorry for not mentioning that in the first place.
Upvotes: 29
Views: 32409
Reputation: 2683
For anyone who wants to work with a list of file names:
void AppendToExistingFile(string existingFile, IList<string> filenames)
{
using (WordprocessingDocument document = WordprocessingDocument.Open(existingFile, true))
{
MainDocumentPart mainPart = document.MainDocumentPart;
for (int i = filenames.Count - 1; i >= 0; --i)
{
string altChunkId = "AltChunkId" + i;
AlternativeFormatImportPart chunk = mainPart.AddAlternativeFormatImportPart(AlternativeFormatImportPartType.WordprocessingML, altChunkId);
using (FileStream fileStream = File.Open(filenames[i], FileMode.Open))
{
chunk.FeedData(fileStream);
}
AltChunk altChunk = new AltChunk { Id = altChunkId };
mainPart.Document.Body.InsertAfter(altChunk, mainPart.Document.Body.Elements<Paragraph>().Last());
}
mainPart.Document.Save();
}
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1996
In spite of all good suggestions and solutions submitted, I developed an alternative. In my opinion you should avoid using Word in server applications entirely. So I worked with OpenXML, but it did not work with AltChunk. I added text to original body, I receive a List of byte[] instead a List of file names but you can easily change the code to your needs.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Globalization;
using System.IO;
using System.Xml.Linq;
using DocumentFormat.OpenXml.Packaging;
using DocumentFormat.OpenXml.Wordprocessing;
namespace OfficeMergeControl
{
public class CombineDocs
{
public byte[] OpenAndCombine( IList<byte[]> documents )
{
MemoryStream mainStream = new MemoryStream();
mainStream.Write(documents[0], 0, documents[0].Length);
mainStream.Position = 0;
int pointer = 1;
byte[] ret;
try
{
using (WordprocessingDocument mainDocument = WordprocessingDocument.Open(mainStream, true))
{
XElement newBody = XElement.Parse(mainDocument.MainDocumentPart.Document.Body.OuterXml);
for (pointer = 1; pointer < documents.Count; pointer++)
{
WordprocessingDocument tempDocument = WordprocessingDocument.Open(new MemoryStream(documents[pointer]), true);
XElement tempBody = XElement.Parse(tempDocument.MainDocumentPart.Document.Body.OuterXml);
newBody.Add(tempBody);
mainDocument.MainDocumentPart.Document.Body = new Body(newBody.ToString());
mainDocument.MainDocumentPart.Document.Save();
mainDocument.Package.Flush();
}
}
}
catch (OpenXmlPackageException oxmle)
{
throw new OfficeMergeControlException(string.Format(CultureInfo.CurrentCulture, "Error while merging files. Document index {0}", pointer), oxmle);
}
catch (Exception e)
{
throw new OfficeMergeControlException(string.Format(CultureInfo.CurrentCulture, "Error while merging files. Document index {0}", pointer), e);
}
finally
{
ret = mainStream.ToArray();
mainStream.Close();
mainStream.Dispose();
}
return (ret);
}
}
}
I hope this helps you.
Upvotes: 27
Reputation: 1166
This is a very late to the original question and quite a bit has change but thought I would share the way I have written my merge logic. This makes use of the Open XML Power Tools
public byte[] CreateDocument(IList<byte[]> documentsToMerge)
{
List<Source> documentBuilderSources = new List<Source>();
foreach (byte[] documentByteArray in documentsToMerge)
{
documentBuilderSources.Add(new Source(new WmlDocument(string.Empty, documentByteArray), false));
}
WmlDocument mergedDocument = DocumentBuilder.BuildDocument(documentBuilderSources);
return mergedDocument.DocumentByteArray;
}
Currently this is working very well in our application. I have changed the code a little because my requirements is that each document that needs to be processed first. So what gets passed in is a DTO object with the template byte array and the various values that need to be replaced. Here is how my code currently looks. Which takes the code a little bit further.
public byte[] CreateDocument(IList<DocumentSection> documentTemplates)
{
List<Source> documentBuilderSources = new List<Source>();
foreach (DocumentSection documentTemplate in documentTemplates.OrderBy(dt => dt.Rank))
{
// Take the template replace the items and then push it into the chunk
using (MemoryStream templateStream = new MemoryStream())
{
templateStream.Write(documentTemplate.Template, 0, documentTemplate.Template.Length);
this.ProcessOpenXMLDocument(templateStream, documentTemplate.Fields);
documentBuilderSources.Add(new Source(new WmlDocument(string.Empty, templateStream.ToArray()), false));
}
}
WmlDocument mergedDocument = DocumentBuilder.BuildDocument(documentBuilderSources);
return mergedDocument.DocumentByteArray;
}
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 795
You want to use AltChunks and the OpenXml SDK 1.0 (at a minimum, 2.0 if you can). Check out Eric White's blog for more details and just as a great resource!. Here is a code sample that should get you started, if not work immediately.
public void AddAltChunkPart(Stream parentStream, Stream altStream, string altChunkId)
{
//make sure we are at the start of the stream
parentStream.Position = 0;
altStream.Position = 0;
//push the parentStream into a WordProcessing Document
using (WordprocessingDocument wordDoc = WordprocessingDocument.Open(parentStream, true))
{
//get the main document part
MainDocumentPart mainPart = wordDoc.MainDocumentPart;
//create an altChunk part by adding a part to the main document part
AlternativeFormatImportPart chunk = mainPart.AddAlternativeFormatImportPart(altChunkPartType, altChunkId);
//feed the altChunk stream into the chunk part
chunk.FeedData(altStream);
//create and XElement to represent the new chunk in the document
XElement newChunk = new XElement(altChunk, new XAttribute(relId, altChunkId));
//Add the chunk to the end of the document (search to last paragraph in body and add at the end)
wordDoc.MainDocumentPart.GetXDocument().Root.Element(body).Elements(paragraph).Last().AddAfterSelf(newChunk);
//Finally, save the document
wordDoc.MainDocumentPart.PutXDocument();
}
//reset position of parent stream
parentStream.Position = 0;
}
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 3270
I had made an application in C# to merge RTF files into one doc,Iam hopeful it should work for DOC and DOCX files as well.
Word._Application wordApp;
Word._Document wordDoc;
object outputFile = outputFileName;
object missing = System.Type.Missing;
object vk_false = false;
object defaultTemplate = defaultWordDocumentTemplate;
object pageBreak = Word.WdBreakType.wdPageBreak;
string[] filesToMerge = new string[pageCounter];
filestoDelete = new string[pageCounter];
for (int i = 0; i < pageCounter; i++)
{
filesToMerge[i] = @"C:\temp\temp" + i.ToString() + ".rtf";
filestoDelete[i] = @"C:\temp\temp" + i.ToString() + ".rtf";
}
try
{
wordDoc = wordApp.Documents.Add(ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing);
}
catch(Exception ex)
{
Console.WriteLine(ex.Message);
}
Word.Selection selection= wordApp.Selection;
foreach (string file in filesToMerge)
{
selection.InsertFile(file,
ref missing,
ref missing,
ref missing,
ref missing);
selection.InsertBreak(ref pageBreak);
}
wordDoc.SaveAs(ref outputFile, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing,
ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing,
ref missing, ref missing);
Hope this helps!
Upvotes: 0
Reputation:
Its quit complex so the code is outside the scope of a forum post, I'd be writing your App for you, but to sum up.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 6859
You don't need to use automation. DOCX files are based on the OpenXML Formats. They are just zip files with a bunch of XML and binary parts (think files) inside. You can open them with the Packaging API (System.IO.Packaging in WindowsBase.dll) and manipulate them with any of the XML classes in the Framework.
Check out OpenXMLDeveloper.org for details.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 914
I wrote a little test app a while ago to do this. My test app worked with Word 2003 documents (.doc) not .docx, but I imagine the process is the same - I should think all you'd have to change is to use a newer version of the Primary Interop Assembly. This code would look a lot neater with the new C# 4.0 features...
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using Microsoft.Office.Interop.Word;
using Microsoft.Office.Core;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
using System.IO;
namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
new Program().Start();
}
private void Start()
{
object fileName = Path.Combine(Environment.CurrentDirectory, @"NewDocument.doc");
File.Delete(fileName.ToString());
try
{
WordApplication = new ApplicationClass();
var doc = WordApplication.Documents.Add(ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing);
try
{
doc.Activate();
AddDocument(@"D:\Projects\WordTests\ConsoleApplication1\Documents\Doc1.doc", doc, false);
AddDocument(@"D:\Projects\WordTests\ConsoleApplication1\Documents\Doc2.doc", doc, true);
doc.SaveAs(ref fileName,
ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing,
ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing,
ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing);
}
finally
{
doc.Close(ref missing, ref missing, ref missing);
}
}
finally
{
WordApplication.Quit(ref missing, ref missing, ref missing);
}
}
private void AddDocument(string path, Document doc, bool lastDocument)
{
object subDocPath = path;
var subDoc = WordApplication.Documents.Open(ref subDocPath, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing,
ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing,
ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing, ref missing,
ref missing, ref missing);
try
{
object docStart = doc.Content.End - 1;
object docEnd = doc.Content.End;
object start = subDoc.Content.Start;
object end = subDoc.Content.End;
Range rng = doc.Range(ref docStart, ref docEnd);
rng.FormattedText = subDoc.Range(ref start, ref end);
if (!lastDocument)
{
InsertPageBreak(doc);
}
}
finally
{
subDoc.Close(ref missing, ref missing, ref missing);
}
}
private static void InsertPageBreak(Document doc)
{
object docStart = doc.Content.End - 1;
object docEnd = doc.Content.End;
Range rng = doc.Range(ref docStart, ref docEnd);
object pageBreak = WdBreakType.wdPageBreak;
rng.InsertBreak(ref pageBreak);
}
private ApplicationClass WordApplication { get; set; }
private object missing = Type.Missing;
}
}
Upvotes: 2