Question

I have a bit of code that will open a Word 2007 (docx) document and update the appropriate CustomXmlPart (thus updating the Content Controls in the document itself as they are mapped to the CustomXmlPart) but can't work out how to save this as a new file.! Surely it can't be that hard!

My current thinking is that I need to open the template and copy the content into a new, blank document - file by file, updating the CustomXmlPart when I encounter it. Call me old fashioned but that sounds a little bit clunky to me!

Why can't I just do a WordprocessingDocument.SaveAs(filename); ...?

Please tell me I am missing something simple here.

Thanks in advance

Was it helpful?

Solution

Are you referring to the OpenXml SDK? Unfortunately, as of OpenXml SDK 2.0, there's no SaveAs method. You'll need to:

  1. Make a temporary copy of your template file, naming it whatever you want.
  2. Perform your OpenXml changes on the above file.
  3. Save the appropriate sections (ie. using the .myWordDocument.MainDocumentPart.Document.Save() method for the main content or someHeaderPart.Header.Save() method for a particular header).

OTHER TIPS

Indeed you can, at least, in OpenXml SDK 2.5. However, watchout to work with a copy of the original file, because changes in the XML will be actually reflected in the file. Here you have the methods Load and Save of my custom class (after removing some validation code,...):

    public void Load(string pathToDocx)
    {
        _tempFilePath = CloneFileInTemp(pathToDocx);
        _document = WordprocessingDocument.Open(_tempFilePath, true);
        _documentElement = _document.MainDocumentPart.Document;
    }    

    public void Save(string pathToDocx)
    {
        using(FileStream fileStream = new FileStream(pathToDocx, FileMode.Create))
        {
            _document.MainDocumentPart.Document.Save(fileStream);
        }
    }

Having "_document" as a WordprocessingDocument instance.

In Open XML SDK 2.5 Close saves changes when AutoSave is true. See my answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/36335092/3285954

You can use a MemoryStream to write the changes, rather than in the original file. Consequently, you can save that MemoryStream to a new file:

byte[] byteArray = File.ReadAllBytes("c:\\temp\\mytemplate.docx");
using (var stream = new MemoryStream())
{
    stream.Write(byteArray, 0, byteArray.Length);
    using (var wordDoc = WordprocessingDocument.Open(stream, true))
    {
       // Do work here
       // ...
       wordDoc.MainDocumentPart.Document.Save(); // won't update the original file 
    }
    // Save the file with the new name
    stream.Position = 0;
    File.WriteAllBytes("C:\\temp\\newFile.docx", stream.ToArray()); 
}
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