Workbook.LoadDocumentAsync(String, IProgress<Int32>) Method
SECURITY NOTE
Downloading documents passed into the Suppress Control Requests to Download Data from External URLsLoadDocument
method may create security issues. Review the following help topic and learn how to spot, analyze, and prohibit unwanted download requests:
Asynchronously loads a document from a file and allows you to implement progress notifications. The file format is determined based on document content.
You need a license for the DevExpress Office File API Subscription or DevExpress Universal Subscription to use this method in production code.
Namespace: DevExpress.Spreadsheet
Assembly: DevExpress.Docs.v24.1.dll
NuGet Package: DevExpress.Document.Processor
Declaration
Parameters
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
fileName | String | The full path to the loaded file. |
progress | IProgress<Int32> | An object used to report the task progress in percentage. Use a Progress<T> class instance to report progress. |
Returns
Type | Description |
---|---|
Task<Boolean> | A task that returns true if the document was loaded successfully; otherwise, false. |
Remarks
The Spreadsheet uses the built-in IFormatDetectorService service implementation to detect the loaded document format. If format detection fails, the Workbook.InvalidFormatException event fires.
Handle the Workbook.DocumentLoaded event to determine when you can safely modify the loaded document.
Important
Take into account the following when you call this method:
The events fired by this method call may occur in a different thread than the target operation.
The operation is not thread safe (the document should not be accessed simultaneously by different threads). Wait until the operation is completed before you continue to work with the document (for example, use the
await
operator).
Example: Report Progress of Workbook Operations
The following example asynchronously loads and exports a workbook to PDF. The console window displays the progress of each operation.
using System;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using DevExpress.Spreadsheet;
// ...
static async Task Main(string[] args) {
using (Workbook workbook = new Workbook())
{
Console.WriteLine("Loading a document...");
await workbook.LoadDocumentAsync("Document.xlsx",
new Progress<int>((progress) => Console.WriteLine($"{progress}%")));
Console.WriteLine("Exporting to PDF...");
await workbook.ExportToPdfAsync("Result.pdf",
new Progress<int>((progress) => Console.WriteLine($"{progress}%")));
Console.WriteLine("Done!");
}
}
Calculate Formulas in the Loaded Document
The default calculation mode for a Workbook is Manual. This mode implies that the Spreadsheet does not recalculate formulas when you load a document. Call the Workbook.Calculate or Workbook.CalculateFull method to recalculate all formulas in the workbook.
using (Workbook workbook = new Workbook())
{
// Load a document.
// ...
// Calculate formulas in the document.
workbook.Calculate();
// ...
}
Change Calculation Mode
Use the Workbook.Options.CalculationMode property to change the calculation mode for a Workbook.
The following calculation modes are available:
Manual (default) - Formulas are calculated only on demand (after the Calculate method call). It allows you to improve document generation speed for large workbooks with multiple formulas.
UseDocumentSettings - Uses the calculation mode specified in the loaded document (this value is stored in the Workbook.DocumentSettings.Calculation.Mode property).
Automatic - Recalculates formulas each time a cell value, formula, or defined name changes.
using (Workbook workbook = new Workbook())
{
// Change the calculation mode.
workbook.Options.CalculationMode = WorkbookCalculationMode.UseDocumentSettings;
// ...
// Load a document.
// ...
}