This is a simple library wraps mozilla's pdfjs and viewerjs into an angular2+ component.
$ npm install ng2-pdfjs-viewer --save
And then configure it in your Angular AppModule
:
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';
// Import PdfJsViewerModule module
import { PdfJsViewerModule } from 'ng2-pdfjs-viewer';
@NgModule({
declarations: [
AppComponent,
],
imports: [
BrowserModule,
// Add to declarations
PdfJsViewerModule
],
providers: [],
bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule { }
-
Using modified version of viewerJs available in the package (Recommended approach)
- Either copy
node_modules\ng2-pdfjs-viewer\pdfjs
to your public or asset folder Or useTransferWebpackPlugin
or something similar to make sure the static files are accessible from the public folder in your application/webserver. Please note, if you decide to putpdfjs
folder anywhere else other than theassets
folder, make sure you also set[pdfJsFolder]
property to help locate the folder.
TransferWebpackPlugin
Sample codevar TransferWebpackPlugin = require('transfer-webpack-plugin'); ... plugins: [ new TransferWebpackPlugin([ { from: 'node_modules\ng2-pdfjs-viewer\pdfjs', to: path.join(__dirname, 'assets') } ]) ]
Now you can use additional settings such as
[pdfJsFolder]
: To set the folder path underweb
andbuild
resides.
[externalWindow]
: To decide pdf should be inline or in a new tab
[openFile]
: Show/hide open file icon
[viewBookmark]
: Show/hide bookmark icon
[download]
: Show/hide download icon
[showSpinner]
: Show a simple css based spinner/progress before the pdf loads - Either copy
OR
- Using pdf-js-gh-pages
- Download pdfjs-gh-pages from here: https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/archive/gh-pages.zip and extract it.
- Create a
pdfjs
folder under your angular2+ applicationsassets
folder - Copy
pdf.js-gh-pages/build
andpdf.js-gh-pages/web
folders from extracted package topdfjs
folder. - The web/ directory contains a 1 MB PDF file called "compressed.tracemonkey-pldi-09.pdf". This file is a sample and can safely be removed.
ps: More info can be found here: https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/wiki/setup-pdf.js-in-a-website
For your convenience a sample app using angular6 is available under this repository, if you would like to see it in action (Folder ng6SampleApp). It shows many ways to configure this component for different needs.
Once your PdfJsViewerComponent is imported you can use it in your Angular application like this:
<!-- You can now use your library component in app.component.html -->
<h1>
{{title}}
</h1>
<ng2-pdfjs-viewer pdfSrc="your pdf file path"></ng2-pdfjs-viewer>
Here is a use case to download and open the pdf as byte array and open in new tab/window: Please note, pdfSrc can be a Blob or Uint8Array as well For [externalWindow]="true" to work, pop-ups needs to be enabled at browser level
<!-- your.component.html -->
<button (click)="openPdf();">Open Pdf</button>
<!-- Please note, you need a copy of https://github.com/intbot/ng2-pdfjs-viewer/tree/master/pdfjs for some of the below features to work -->
<div style="width: 800px; height: 400px">
<ng2-pdfjs-viewer
#pdfViewer
[pdfJsFolder]="'pdfjs'"
[externalWindow]="true"
[downloadFileName]="'mytestfile.pdf'"
[openFile]="false"
[viewBookmark]="false"
[download]="false"></ng2-pdfjs-viewer>
</div>
<!-- your.component.ts-->
export class RateCardComponent implements OnInit {
@ViewChild('pdfViewer') pdfViewer
...
private downloadFile(url: string): any {
return this.http.get(url, { responseType: ResponseContentType.Blob }).map(
(res) => {
return new Blob([res.blob()], { type: "application/pdf" });
});
}
public openPdf() {
let url = "url to fetch pdf as byte array";
// url can be local url or remote http request to an api/pdf file.
// E.g: let url = "assets/pdf-sample.pdf";
// E.g: https://github.com/intbot/ng2-pdfjs-viewer/tree/master/sampledoc/pdf-sample.pdf
// E.g: http://localhost:3000/api/GetMyPdf
// Please note, for remote urls to work, CORS should be enabled at the server. Read: https://enable-cors.org/server.html
this.downloadFile(url).subscribe(
(res) => {
this.pdfViewer.pdfSrc = res; // pdfSrc can be Blob or Uint8Array
this.pdfViewer.refresh(); // Ask pdf viewer to load/reresh pdf
}
);
}
Given below are examples of writing server apis(In aspnetcore c#) which returns pdfs as byte array. You can choose any server side technology as long as pdf is returned as byte array
Use case 1. As a RDLC local report viewer
[HttpGet]
[Route("MyReport")]
public IActionResult GetReport()
{
// var reportObjectList1
// var reportObjectList2
var reportViewer = new ReportViewer {ProcessingMode = ProcessingMode.Local};
reportViewer.LocalReport.ReportPath = "Reports/MyReport.rdlc";
reportViewer.LocalReport.DataSources.Add(new ReportDataSource("NameOfDataSource1", reportObjectList1));
reportViewer.LocalReport.DataSources.Add(new ReportDataSource("NameOfDataSource2", reportObjectList1));
Warning[] warnings;
string[] streamids;
string mimeType;
string encoding;
string extension;
var bytes = reportViewer.LocalReport.Render("application/pdf", null, out mimeType, out encoding, out extension, out streamids, out warnings);
// The below content-disposition is lost when we create Blob() object in client browser. Hence commented out
//var cd = new System.Net.Mime.ContentDisposition
//{
// FileName = "somepdf.pdf",
// Inline = true
//};
//Response.Headers.Add("Content-Disposition", cd.ToString());
return File(bytes, "application/pdf")
}
Use case 2. Return a physical pdf from server
[HttpGet]
[Route("GetMyPdf")]
public IActionResult GetMyPdf()
{
var stream = await {{__get_stream_here__}}
return File(stream, "application/pdf")); // FileStreamResult
// OR
// var bytes = await {{__get_bytes_here__}}
// return File(bytes, "application/pdf")
}
There are several how to questions being posted in issues section of this repository. Questions would be better answered if posted on www.stackoverflow.com with tag ng2-pdfjs-viewer (Please create this tag if not already present)
- Angular 5+ ng2-pdf-viewer
- AngularJS angular-pdfjs-viewer
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