PdfSharpCore
Cursively
PdfSharpCore | Cursively | |
---|---|---|
5 | 3 | |
1,000 | 39 | |
- | - | |
4.8 | 3.2 | |
8 days ago | over 3 years ago | |
C# | C# | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
PdfSharpCore
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(Free) Open-source PDF Generation/Export
PdfSharpCore https://github.com/ststeiger/PdfSharpCore, a .NET Core port of PdfSharp, might come to the rescue as it has largely removed GDI+.
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Advice on Printing?
a) create PDF with https://github.com/ststeiger/PdfSharpCore and then display by using https://www.nuget.org/packages/PdfiumViewer.Updated/ - tested and works in .net 6 desktop app
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Looking for a free software that allows me to compress pdf files in c# windows forms
PdfSharpCore has a compression feature and it's MIT licenced. https://github.com/ststeiger/PdfSharpCore
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https://np.reddit.com/r/dotnet/comments/meejg4/best_free_net_core_50_html_to_pdf_to_use/gskec0u/
In one of my pet projects I use PdfSharpCore https://github.com/ststeiger/PdfSharpCore + HtmlRendererCore.PdfSharpCore https://www.nuget.org/packages/HtmlRendererCore.PdfSharpCore. The way it works is something like this:
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【.NET 5】【WPF】Edit and print PDF files 1
GitHub - ststeiger/PdfSharpCore: Port of the PdfSharp library to .NET Core - largely removed GDI+ (only missing GetFontData - which can be replaced with freetype2)
Cursively
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Ask HN: Examples of Top C# Code?
I was looking at the CSV parser Cursively recently, and I think it is a good simple example of a high performance C# parser and API design.
https://github.com/airbreather/Cursively
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The Fastest Csv Parser In Net
Agreed, and agreed. #21 and #22 seek to address this, but these have actually been very low priority for me: as your benchmarks show, if you primarily need a bunch of objects that must be UTF-16 strings, then are other libraries out there that will do the job just fine. The main reason to use Cursively for that would be if you have some use cases where you need the unusual qualities that Cursively offers, but other use cases where you can live with something more traditional, and you don't want to have two different CSV processing libraries.
The usage instructions are in the README on https://github.com/airbreather/Cursively. The most straightforward way to get started (for now) is:
What are some alternatives?
DCSSReplay - PuTTY based DCSS TTYRec Tiles renderer written in C#
CsvExport - Very simple CSV-export tool for C#
NETCoreAPIBoilerplate - Net Core Web API Boilerplate for My Project
Sylvan - A collection of .NET libraries, including the fastest general-purpose CSV parser for .NET.
RestClient.Net - .NET REST Client Framework for all platforms
AlterNats - An alternative high performance NATS client for .NET.
ReactiveUI - An advanced, composable, functional reactive model-view-viewmodel framework for all .NET platforms that is inspired by functional reactive programming. ReactiveUI allows you to abstract mutable state away from your user interfaces, express the idea around a feature in one readable place and improve the testability of your application.
H.Pipes - A simple, easy to use, strongly-typed, async wrapper around .NET named pipes.
scryber.core - Scryber.Core is a dotnet html to pdf engine written entirely in C# for creating beautiful flexible, flowing documents from html templates including css styles, data binding, svg drawing and encryption
oqtane.framework - CMS & Application Framework for Blazor & .NET MAUI
PuppeteerSharp - Headless Chrome .NET API
CsvBenchmarks - Benchmarks for various .NET libraries.