John M Gant
John M Gant

Reputation: 19308

Make PDF display inline instead of separate Acrobat Reader window

I've got an ASP.NET ashx class that retrieves data from a database, creates a PDF file using iTextSharp, and streams the PDF to the browser. The browser (IE and Firefox at least) is launching Acrobat Reader as a separate window to open the file. I'd like for it to display inline within the browser.

Is that something I can completely control from the server side? I'm already setting the Content-Type header to application/pdf, and I've tried setting Content-Disposition and Content-Length. Nothing so far has worked.

Is there another header I'm missing? Is there something in the PDF itself that tells the browser how to display it? Any other ideas?

Upvotes: 8

Views: 19117

Answers (8)

John M Gant
John M Gant

Reputation: 19308

OK, turns out it was a stupid question, but I'm glad I asked it because I had never heard of Fiddler (which led me to the answer, which is why I'm accepting tspauld's answer). The PDF is generated by a web service that serves the file to a couple of different front-end sites. I was setting the content disposition to inline in the service, but that didn't matter, because the browser never got that header; it got the header from the front-end site (which was attachment). I changed it in the front-end site and that fixed it.

So the answer is that you have to have Content-Type=application/pdf and Content-Disposition=inline; filename=Something.pdf, as others have said.

Upvotes: 4

Iralda Mitro
Iralda Mitro

Reputation: 7356

So, I have a sample in one of my works that is what you need:

<cc1:ShowPdf ID="ShowPdf1" runat="server" BorderStyle="None"  BorderWidth="0px"
        Height="750px" Style="z-index: 103; "
        Width="750px"/>

and in server side :

  ShowPdf1.FilePath = String.Format("~/Handlers/Pdf.ashx?id={0}#view=FitH&page=1&pagemode=none&navpanes=1", myPublicationId);

I place here also some code from my PDF Handler :

Response.ContentType = "application/pdf";
    byte[] bytes = YourBinaryContent;

    using (BinaryWriter writer = new BinaryWriter(context.Response.OutputStream))
    {
        writer.Write(bytes, 0, bytes.Length);
    }

Anyway If my post doesn't seem clear to you, have a look at this sample How to Display PDF documents with ASP.NET

Upvotes: 1

tspauld
tspauld

Reputation: 3522

Setting the content-disposition and content-type headers should do it, but you might also need to call Response.ClearHeaders() to clear other headers that have been set.

Also, try using Fiddler to see the actual headers and content from the response and compare them to those from a site that works like you want.

Upvotes: 9

Christopher Edwards
Christopher Edwards

Reputation: 6659

If you are using an ashx (web handler) try this:-

context.Response.AddHeader("content-disposition", "inline; filename=Something.pdf")

Upvotes: 5

plinth
plinth

Reputation: 49189

If you have the budget, my company sells a set of products that includes an AJAX based image viewer that will let you view the PDF pages in line without Acrobat at all. In its simplest form, it is just a viewer, but you can layer in interactivity as you need.

Upvotes: -1

Fermin
Fermin

Reputation: 36081

Here is an article on using the embed tag to do it:http://blogs.adobe.com/pdfdevjunkie/2007/08/using_the_html_embed_tag_to_di.html

Upvotes: 0

bmb
bmb

Reputation: 6248

I think this header will do what you want

Content-type: application/pdf

Since you say that is not working, then I suspect it is a configuration setting on the client side.

Check your installed version of Adobe Acrobat. There is a setting in preferences for "Internet" and a checkbox that says "Display PDF in Browser".

--
bmb

Upvotes: 0

Serapth
Serapth

Reputation: 7162

Try generating them into your page using html OBJECT.

<OBJECT WIDTH=640 HEIGHT=480>
    <PARAM NAME="SRC" VALUE="<%=filePath%>"> 
    <EMBED SRC=<%=filename.pdf%> WIDTH=1000 HEIGHT=680> 
        <NOEMBED> PDF should have displayed here!</NOEMBED> 
        </EMBED>
</OBJECT>

If you need to stream the response with an ashx instead of being able to return an aspx, I think you may be out of luck.

Otherwise, I believe the settings to show in browser or not, is completely client driven and out of your hands.

Upvotes: 1

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