4

I have coded up a ListView report using xaml, mvvm and it works just fine. The xaml code deploys ListView.GroupStyle and the resulting report has a group header, items listing and group totals and counts.
It looks like this: enter image description here

I would like to print this same report to the printer. It is multipage and the groups alone could span more than a page, depending on the reporting date span. I would also want to show the column headers at the top of each printed page.

I have read (and practiced) printing ListView reports before to a FixedPage / Fixed Document and calculating the item source for each page to spread the printed report over multiple pages.

This time because I am using the groupings, the problems appear more difficult? I cannot see how to calculate the item source for each page. I’m thinking I need to somehow construct the report as a single unbound (no page size restriction) ListView, pluck out the ListViewItems and then use those items to construct my report.

I have read solutions using FlowDocument, but do not see an answer there?

Can anyone give me some ideas how to solve this problem?

1 Answer 1

2

Here is advice in the acepted answer to StackOverflow link you quoted:

It turned out that the flowdocument / XPS method was a completely wrong headed way of approaching this task, and in fact the built in RDLC reports allowed us to achieve everything we needed for our invoice documents, in a relatively straight forward manner.

This is the route I would take.

Here is a link to a CodeProject article which prints a datagrid with repeating headers, pretty much what you are asking, if you still want to continue with your oirignal approach:

CodeProject - Custom Data Grid Document Paginator

And there are several good answers with other approaches in this StackOverflow question -

StackOverflow - Whats the best approach to printing reporting from wpf

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.