In my asp.net application, I am trying to open a particular report. I have the ReportViewer Control set with width of 100% and height of 100%. Now I expect that to mean that the report will take up the entire page. Well to my surprise, it does not. In IE7 while it takes the entire width of the page, it only takes up a small portion of the height. In Firefox, both the width and the height are messed up. I have the browser open up a new page that takes up almost all of the screen. Any ideas?

Thanks!

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7 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

Give is a static height that is enough for the entire height of the report, as far as I know 100% will not work because the ReportViewer control is essentially wrapped by one big div tag.

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I tried the static height and it seems to work for both IE7 and FireFox. Thanks – Dan Appleyard Apr 22 '09 at 19:19
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This is the way I fixed, take a look

<div style="Width:auto;"> 
<form id="form1" runat="server" style="width:100%; height:100%;">
    <asp:ScriptManager ID="ScriptManager1" runat="server">
    </asp:ScriptManager>
    <rsweb:ReportViewer ID="rptViewer" runat="server" Width="100%" Height="100%" AsyncRendering="False" SizeToReportContent="True">
    </rsweb:ReportViewer>
</form></div>

The thing doing the magic is AsyncRendering="False" SizeToReportContent="True" the rest is basic HTML. The report will be displayed as it was designed.

There might be some code extra, but see if it works for you.

Hope it helps

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I like this solution - it seems most clean of all those provided, but when I execute reports larger than a max window on my machine I'm not provided with any scrollbars. Any advice on that? – Bobby B Nov 17 '10 at 12:20
I have the same problem with the scrollbars not being displayed. – Patrick J Collins Jul 4 '11 at 9:25
pretty simple solution – sudheshna Sep 6 '11 at 3:29
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this is the way i fixed it, setting the height dynamically using javascript, it works with both IE and Firefox. also works with reports larger than the maximum window size.

<rsweb:ReportViewer ID="ReportViewer1" runat="server" Width="100%" ShowBackButton="True" ProcessingMode="Remote" />

<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript">
    ResizeReport();

    function ResizeReport() {
        var viewer = document.getElementById("<%= ReportViewer1.ClientID %>");
        var htmlheight = document.documentElement.clientHeight;
        viewer.style.height = (htmlheight - 30) + "px";
    }

    window.onresize = function resize() { ResizeReport(); }
</script>
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This is an issue with XHTML 1.1 standard. Change your page doctype to transitional to get 100% height working:

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"/>

Or if you still struggle, remove it completely.

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It was using transitional already. If I remove the doctype entirely, the issue goes away in IE7, but not in FireFox. – Dan Appleyard Apr 22 '09 at 19:18
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I recently sat down and fought the ReportViewer control to expand to the height of the report content while still allowing .AsyncRendering = true. Here's what I did, which requires jQuery, and has only been tested with Report Viewer 2008 (9.0.0.0).

<script type="text/javascript">

    $(function() {

        $('#<%= uxReportViewer.ClientID %> > iframe:eq(0)').bind('load', function() {
            ReportViewerResize(this);
        });

    });

    function ReportViewerResize(frame) {
        var container = $('#<%= uxReportViewer.ClientID %>');
        try {
            var reportFrame = $(frame).contents().find('html')[0].document.frames["report"].document;
            var reportHeight = $('div#oReportDiv > table > tbody > tr > td#oReportCell', reportFrame).height();
            $(container).css({ height: '' + (reportHeight + 10) + 'px' });
        } catch (e) { }
    }

</script>
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I know this is an old question, but I still struggled with this one recently. It appears the following works well in all modern browsers (only tested IE8/9, Firefox, and Chrome). The kickers for me were doctype and html element height.

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
    <style type="text/css">
        html, body, form { width: 100%; height: 100%; margin: 0; padding: 0 }
    </style>
</head>
<body>
  <form runat="server">
    <asp:scriptmanager runat="server" />
    <rsweb:ReportViewer ID="ReportViewerControl" Width="100%" Height="100%" runat="server" />
  </form>
</body>
</html>
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Dan, here is what we ended up doing with a little jQuery magic.

All reports used the same Report.Master as the master page:

<%@ Master Language="VB" AutoEventWireup="false" CodeBehind="Report.master.vb" Inherits=".Report" %>
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head id="Head1" runat="server">
     <style type="text/css">
        html, body
        {
            margin: 0;
            padding: 0;            
            border: none;
            background-color: #FFFFFF;     
            overflow: hidden;       
        }
    </style>
    <script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.7.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
    <script type="text/javascript">
        $(document).ready(function () {
            setWindowSize();
        });

        $(window).resize(function () {
            setWindowSize();
        });

        function setWindowSize() {
            // http://www.howtocreate.co.uk/tutorials/javascript/browserwindow
            var myWidth = 0, myHeight = 0;
            if (typeof (window.innerWidth) == 'number') {
                //Non-IE
                myWidth = window.innerWidth;
                myHeight = window.innerHeight;
            } else if (document.documentElement && (document.documentElement.clientWidth || document.documentElement.clientHeight)) {
                //IE 6+ in 'standards compliant mode'
                myWidth = document.documentElement.clientWidth;
                myHeight = document.documentElement.clientHeight;
            } else if (document.body && (document.body.clientWidth || document.body.clientHeight)) {
                //IE 4 compatible
                myWidth = document.body.clientWidth;
                myHeight = document.body.clientHeight;
            }

            var r = $('div[id*="_report_"]:first');
            r.width(myWidth);
            r.height(myHeight - 32);
        }

    </script>
</head>
<body>
    <form id="form1" runat="server">    
        <asp:ScriptManager ID="rptScriptManager1" runat="server" />
        <asp:ContentPlaceHolder ID="report" runat="server"/>                
    </form>
</body>
</html>

Then, each report page contained the ReportViewer and it's properties.

<%@ Page Title="This Cool Report" MasterPageFile="~/masterpages/Report.Master" Language="vb" AutoEventWireup="false" CodeBehind="viewmycoolreport.aspx.vb" Inherits=".viewmycoolreport" %>
<%@ Register Assembly="Microsoft.ReportViewer.WebForms, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a" Namespace="Microsoft.Reporting.WebForms" TagPrefix="rsweb" %>

<asp:Content ID="reportContent" ContentPlaceHolderID="report" runat="server">    
    <rsweb:ReportViewer ID="rptCoolReport" runat="server" Width="100%" ProcessingMode="Remote" SizeToReportContent="True" />
</asp:Content>

Now, when the report loads, the ReportViewer control ends up sizing itself to the size of the content window both on ready and resizing the window. The jQuery selector grabs the first div with an ID that contains "_report_" (since the ReportViewer control renders with a client id of ctl_report_<report_id>). The height ends up having to be less 32 pixels because of the header in the ReportViewer control (for paging, exporting, etc).

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