The Syncfusion Blazor PDF library makes it easy to merge or combine multiple PDF files into a single PDF document in C#. The process is simple and efficient, and the merged PDF files retain their original formatting, layout, annotations, bookmarks, form fields, and appearance.
Here is an example of how to merge PDF files in C# using the Syncfusion .NET PDF library. You can merge multiple PDF files into a single PDF document with just a few lines of code.
//Create a PDF document
using (PdfDocument finalDocument = new PdfDocument())
{
//Get the stream from an existing PDF document
using (FileStream firstStream = new FileStream("File1.pdf", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
using (FileStream secondStream = new FileStream("File2.pdf", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
{
//Create a PDF stream for merging
Stream[] streams = { firstStream, secondStream };
//Merge PDF documents
PdfDocumentBase.Merge(finalDocument, streams);
//Save the document into a stream
using (MemoryStream outputStream = new MemoryStream())
{
finalDocument.Save(outputStream);
}
}
}
Merging specific ranges of pages from different PDF documents is a quick and easy way to combine different parts of documents into a single PDF document.
//Create a new PDF document
using (PdfDocument finalDocument = new PdfDocument())
{
//Open the first PDF file
using (FileStream firstStream = new FileStream("File1.pdf", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
{
//Load the first PDF document
PdfLoadedDocument loadedDocument1 = new PdfLoadedDocument(firstStream);
//Import a range of pages from the first PDF document into the final document
//The range starts at page 2 and ends at the last page
finalDocument.ImportPageRange(loadedDocument1, 1, loadedDocument1.Pages.Count - 1);
//Open the second PDF file
using (FileStream secondStream = new FileStream("File2.pdf", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
{
//Load the second PDF document
PdfLoadedDocument loadedDocument2 = new PdfLoadedDocument(secondStream);
//Import a range of pages from the second PDF document into the final document.
//The range starts at page 2 and ends at page 5
finalDocument.ImportPageRange(loadedDocument2, 2, 5);
//Save the final document into a memory stream
using (MemoryStream outputStream = new MemoryStream())
{
finalDocument.Save(outputStream);
}
}
}
}
Extend the margin of PDF pages while merging PDF documents.
//Create a new PDF document
using (PdfDocument outputDocument = new PdfDocument())
{
//Create a new instance for the document margin
PdfMargins documentMargins = new PdfMargins();
//Set the margin to 50 points on all sides
documentMargins.All = 50;
//Set the document margins
outputDocument.PageSettings.Margins = documentMargins;
//Load the first PDF document
using (FileStream firstPDFStream = new FileStream("File1.pdf", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
{
//Load the second PDF document
using (FileStream secondPDFStream = new FileStream("File2.pdf", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
{
//Create a list of streams to merge
Stream[] streams = { firstPDFStream, secondPDFStream };
//Create a merge options object
PdfMergeOptions mergeOptions = new PdfMergeOptions();
//Enable the extend margin option
mergeOptions.ExtendMargin = true;
//Merge the PDF documents
PdfDocumentBase.Merge(outputDocument, mergeOptions, streams);
//Save the document to a memory stream
using (MemoryStream outputMemoryStream = new MemoryStream())
{
outputDocument.Save(outputMemoryStream);
}
}
}
}
Optimize PDF resources when merging multiple PDF documents into a single PDF document.
//Create a new PDF document
using (PdfDocument outputDocument = new PdfDocument())
{
//Load the first PDF document
using (FileStream firstPDFStream = new FileStream("File1.pdf", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
{
//Load the second PDF document
using (FileStream secondPDFStream = new FileStream("File2.pdf", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
{
//Create a list of streams to merge
Stream[] streams = { firstPDFStream, secondPDFStream };
//Create a merge options object
PdfMergeOptions mergeOptions = new PdfMergeOptions();
//Enable the optimize resources option
mergeOptions.OptimizeResources = true;
//Merge the PDF documents
PdfDocumentBase.Merge(outputDocument, mergeOptions, streams);
//Save the document to a memory stream
using (MemoryStream outputMemoryStream = new MemoryStream())
{
outputDocument.Save(outputMemoryStream);
}
}
}
}
When merging multiple PDF files, users can create bookmarks based on the titles of individual files. This will help quickly navigate to specific sections of the merged file.
//Create a PDF document
using (PdfDocument finalDocument = new PdfDocument())
{
//Load the first PDF document
using (FileStream firstStream = new FileStream("File1.pdf", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
//Load the second PDF document
using (FileStream secondStream = new FileStream("File2.pdf", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
{
//Create a list of streams to merge
Stream[] streams = { firstStream, secondStream };
//Merge PDF documents
PdfDocumentBase.Merge(finalDocument, streams);
//Create a bookmark for the first PDF file
PdfBookmark bookmark1 = finalDocument.Bookmarks.Add("Chapter 1 - Barcodes");
//Set the destination page for the first bookmark
bookmark1.Destination = new PdfDestination(finalDocument.Pages[0]);
//Set the destination for the first bookmark
bookmark1.Destination.Location = new PointF(20, 20);
//Create a bookmark for the second PDF file
PdfBookmark bookmark2 = finalDocument.Bookmarks.Add("Chapter 2 - HTTP Succinctly");
//Set the destination page for the second bookmark
bookmark2.Destination = new PdfDestination(finalDocument.Pages[3]);
//Set the destination for the second bookmark
bookmark2.Destination.Location = new PointF(20, 20);
// Save the document into a stream
using (MemoryStream outputStream = new MemoryStream())
{
finalDocument.Save(outputStream);
}
}
}
Merging PDF files using the Syncfusion.NET PDF library is a fast and efficient way to manage multiple PDF documents using C#. Besides this process, developers can also:
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