I was in the same situation, wanting to .NET instead of a third party library. As another poster mentioned above, simply using the ZipPackage class (introduced in .NET 3.5) is not quite enough. There is an additional file that MUST be included in the archive in order for the ZipPackage to work. If this file is added, then the resulting ZIP package can be opened directly from Windows Explorer - no problem.
All you have to do is add the [Content_Types].xml file to the root of the archive with a "Default" node for every file extension you wish to include. Once added, I could browse the package from Windows Explorer or programmatically decompress and read its contents.
More information on the [Content_Types].xml file can be found here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/cc163372.aspx
Here is a sample of the [Content_Types].xml (must be named exactly) file:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<Types xmlns=
"http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/package/2006/content-types">
<Default Extension="xml" ContentType="text/xml" />
<Default Extension="htm" ContentType="text/html" />
<Default Extension="html" ContentType="text/html" />
<Default Extension="rels" ContentType=
"application/vnd.openxmlformats-package.relationships+xml" />
<Default Extension="jpg" ContentType="image/jpeg" />
<Default Extension="png" ContentType="image/png" />
<Default Extension="css" ContentType="text/css" />
</Types>
And the C# for creating a ZIP file:
var zipFilePath = "c:\\myfile.zip";
var tempFolderPath = "c:\\unzipped";
using (Package package = ZipPackage.Open(zipFilePath, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
{
foreach (PackagePart part in package.GetParts())
{
var target = Path.GetFullPath(Path.Combine(tempFolderPath, part.Uri.OriginalString.TrimStart('/')));
var targetDir = target.Remove(target.LastIndexOf('\\'));
if (!Directory.Exists(targetDir))
Directory.CreateDirectory(targetDir);
using (Stream source = part.GetStream(FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read))
{
source.CopyTo(File.OpenWrite(target));
}
}
}
Note: