Click here to Skip to main content
65,938 articles
CodeProject is changing. Read more.
Articles
(untagged)

Create and download a text file from a web page

0.00/5 (No votes)
12 Feb 2007 1  
This article will demonstrate how to create a text file and view it.

Introduction

It is often a common requirement in a web application to have the ability to download some sort of file to the client's computer. This article will illustrate how to create and download a text file to the user's computer.

Using the code

Although in the example I actually create the text file before I stream it out to the client, I feel it is important to highlight that you don't necessarily have to do this, as the file could actually exist on the file system and you may want to stream it out to the client. If that is the case, you may need to use FileStream to read the already existing document.

We first open the file for reading and we actually read the file byte for byte into a stream, then once we have the file into a stream, we then just use the Response object and download the file via the output stream.

Response.AddHeader("Content-disposition", "attachment; filename=" + sGenName);
Response.ContentType = "application/octet-stream";
Response.BinaryWrite(btFile);
Response.End();

The real power in this snippet is in the lines above; by adding a header, you are telling the browser to download the file as an attachment. Then you set the ContentType header which is added, and set your MIME type so that the browser knows what kind of file it is about to download. You can choose any of the following MIME types for the browser:

".asf" = "video/x-ms-asf"
".avi" = "video/avi"
".doc" = "application/msword"
".zip" = "application/zip"
".xls" = "application/vnd.ms-excel"
".gif" = "image/gif"
".jpg"= "image/jpeg"
".wav" = "audio/wav"
".mp3" = "audio/mpeg3"
".mpg" "mpeg" = "video/mpeg"
".rtf" = "application/rtf"
".htm", "html" = "text/html"
".asp" = "text/asp"
 
'Handle All Other Files
= "application/octet-stream"

A full example of how to go about downloading a text file would like the code below:

C#
protected void Button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    string sFileName = System.IO.Path.GetRandomFileName();
    string sGenName = "Friendly.txt";

    //YOu could omit these lines here as you may
    //not want to save the textfile to the server
    //I have just left them here to demonstrate that you could create the text file 
    using (System.IO.StreamWriter SW = new System.IO.StreamWriter(
           Server.MapPath("TextFiles/" + sFileName + ".txt")))
    {
        SW.WriteLine(txtText.Text);
        SW.Close();
    }

    System.IO.FileStream fs = null;
    fs = System.IO.File.Open(Server.MapPath("TextFiles/" + 
             sFileName + ".txt"), System.IO.FileMode.Open);
    byte[] btFile = new byte[fs.Length];
    fs.Read(btFile, 0, Convert.ToInt32(fs.Length));
    fs.Close();
    Response.AddHeader("Content-disposition", "attachment; filename=" + 
                       sGenName);
    Response.ContentType = "application/octet-stream";
    Response.BinaryWrite(btFile);
    Response.End();
}
VB.NET
Dim strFileName As String = System.IO.Path.GetRandomFileName()
Dim strFriendlyName As String = "Friendly.txt"

Using sw As New System.IO.StreamWriter(Server.MapPath(_
      "TextFiles/" + strFileName + ".txt"))
    sw.WriteLine(txtText.Text)
    sw.Close()
End Using

Dim fs As System.IO.FileStream = Nothing


fs = System.IO.File.Open(Server.MapPath("TextFiles/" + strFileName + _
     ".txt"), System.IO.FileMode.Open)
Dim btFile(fs.Length) As Byte
fs.Read(btFile, 0, fs.Length)
fs.Close()
With Response
    .AddHeader("Content-disposition", "attachment;filename=" & strFriendlyName)
    .ContentType = "application/octet-stream"
   .BinaryWrite(btFile)
    .End()
end with

Conclusion

Using this approach, you should be able to download all types files on Windows systems, but there are some issues with Macintosh systems. Specifically, you may not be able to download files, instead they will always open up in the browser as expected.

References

License

This article has no explicit license attached to it but may contain usage terms in the article text or the download files themselves. If in doubt please contact the author via the discussion board below.

A list of licenses authors might use can be found here