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I am trying to create a Word document in my Swift app; just some plain text in a certain font as a .docx file. I haven't found a way to create a word document, but my best guess is that I could import a word document into my Xcode project with just the text "Hello World" in it, then in my code replace every occurrence of "Hello World" with the desired text.

How might I go about altering the text of a .docx file in my swift project?

Edit (here's why I need this): I want to create a .docx file so that the user can export whatever text the type in into the Google Docs app or Pages app. I understand the usage of UIDocumentInteractionController to export preexisting documents, but I need to figure out how I can write and save text to a Word document.

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  • 3
    This question is too broad and not a good fit for Stack Overflow. The only reason it hasn't been closed yet is because of the bounty attached.
    – JAL
    Aug 6, 2016 at 21:14
  • 1
    It's a shame you cannot flag a poor post for closure once someone has added a bounty to it. Aug 8, 2016 at 23:35
  • I do not agree with the negative reaction to this question. It may be poorly phrased but that is just lack of experience. I would encourage the community to be more supportive. How to programmatically create/edit word documents is a perfectly valid question imo (as proven by the popular answer).
    – de.
    Jan 24, 2023 at 7:02

3 Answers 3

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+50

Unfortunately, it is nearly impossible to create a .docx file in Swift, given how complicated they are (you can see for yourself by changing the file extension on any old .docx file to .zip, which will reveal their inner structure). The next best thing is to simply create a .txt file, which can also be opened into Pages (though sadly not Docs). If you're looking for a more polished format, complete with formatting and possibly even images, you could choose to create a .pdf file.


Here are some code samples that might be of assistance:

Creating and sharing a .txt file in Swift 3:

func export(_ string: String, title: String) throws {
    // create a file path in a temporary directory
    let fileName = "\(title).txt"
    let filePath = (NSTemporaryDirectory() as NSString).appendingPathComponent(fileName)

    // save the string to the file
    try string.write(toFile: filePath, atomically: true, encoding: String.Encoding.utf8)

    // open share dialog

        // Initialize Document Interaction Controller
    self.interactionController = UIDocumentInteractionController(url: URL(fileURLWithPath: filePath))
        // Configure Document Interaction Controller
        self.interactionController!.delegate = self
        // Present Open In Menu
    self.interactionController!.presentOptionsMenu(from: yourexportbarbuttonoutlet, animated: true) // create an outlet from an Export bar button outlet, then use it as the `from` argument
}

This can be called with

export("Hello World", title: "HelloWorld")

to instantly create a txt file and open the share dialog for it.


Creating and sharing a simple .pdf file in Swift 3:

func openPDF(_ string: String, title: String) throws {
    // 1. Create a print formatter

    let html = "<h2>\(title)</h2><br><h4>\(string)</h4>" // create some text as the body of the PDF with html.

    let fmt = UIMarkupTextPrintFormatter(markupText: html)

    // 2. Assign print formatter to UIPrintPageRenderer

    let render = UIPrintPageRenderer()
    render.addPrintFormatter(fmt, startingAtPageAt: 0)

    // 3. Assign paperRect and printableRect

    let page = CGRect(x: 10, y: 10, width: 595.2, height: 841.8) // A4, 72 dpi, x and y are horizontal and vertical margins
    let printable = page.insetBy(dx: 0, dy: 0)

    render.setValue(NSValue(cgRect: page), forKey: "paperRect")
    render.setValue(NSValue(cgRect: printable), forKey: "printableRect")

    // 4. Create PDF context and draw

    let pdfData = NSMutableData()
    UIGraphicsBeginPDFContextToData(pdfData, CGRect.zero, nil)

    for i in 1...render.numberOfPages {

        UIGraphicsBeginPDFPage();
        let bounds = UIGraphicsGetPDFContextBounds()
        render.drawPage(at: i - 1, in: bounds)
    }

    UIGraphicsEndPDFContext();

    // 5. Save PDF file

    var path = "\(NSTemporaryDirectory())\(title).pdf"
    pdfData.write(toFile: path, atomically: true)
    print("open \(path)") // check if we got the path right.
        // open share dialog
        print("opening share dialog")
        // Initialize Document Interaction Controller
        self.interactionController = UIDocumentInteractionController(url: URL(fileURLWithPath: path))
        // Configure Document Interaction Controller
        self.interactionController!.delegate = self
        // Present Open In Menu
        self.interactionController!.presentOptionsMenu(from: yourexportbarbuttonoutlet, animated: true) // create an outlet from an Export bar button outlet, then use it as the `from` argument
}

This can be called with

openPDF("Hello World", title: "HelloWorld")

to instantly create a pdf file and open the share dialog for it.


Edit: Found an interesting (though not polished) workaround to getting text to open up in Google Docs: use the function from the "creating a .txt file" section here, and just change the filename to "\(title).docx". This will fool Docs into thinking it's a .docx document, which will allow the text to open in Docs successfully. Unfortunately, this creates an invalid document that can't be opened by Pages, Word, or really any other app because it doesn't actually create a real document file. And the Interaction Controller will make it look to the user like they can also open it in Pages, though that invariably fails.

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  • Though you didn't really solve the total problem here, you offered a good explanation and some decent alternatives, so here are some internet points.
    – owlswipe
    Aug 14, 2016 at 1:10
  • @JohnRamos Yes, it's a bit unfortunate, but this is really the only answer I could find.
    – John Ramos
    Aug 14, 2016 at 1:11
  • Awesome post! Thanks so much for the pdf tutorial! Feb 23, 2017 at 0:05
  • @LinusG. You're welcome! Happy to help out :D
    – John Ramos
    Mar 2, 2017 at 3:39
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You can't directly "edit the text" in the Word document. A .docx file is actually a ZIP file with a certain file/folder structure inside (try to rename it to .zip & extract it and you'll see), which conforms to the "Office Open XML" format (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_Open_XML).

If there are no libraries to modify the Office OpenXML format in Swift, you may just have to resort to writing the code yourself. However, if you have simple requirements (just some plain text, as you state), this shouldn't be too complicated.

Microsoft has an OpenXML library in GitHub at https://github.com/OfficeDev/Open-XML-SDK which may be of help to you.

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  • I haven't found any libraries. If you could point me to a relevant file of the Github project, that would be really great (it's so massive).
    – owlswipe
    Aug 13, 2016 at 3:29
  • Yes, it's quite large... they have lots of classes for all the elements and the parse them and add the restrictions as well. It would take a bit to piece it all together. Another options is to save a basic DOCX file and kind of reverse engineer/figure out what you would need to modify. Aug 15, 2016 at 7:56
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Given that you mention a user wanting to transfer documents to Google Docs, you could consider working with the RTF format instead. You can also export a docx file to RTF format, work on that and when you are done, import the modified RTF file directly into Google docs.

I suggest this since RTF is also a workable open format: See https://www.safaribooksonline.com/library/view/rtf-pocket-guide/9781449302047/ch01.html. Based on that reference, you can generate this simple (ascii) output:

{\rtf1\ansi\deff0 {\fonttbl {\f0 Verdana;}}
\f0\fs16
Hello World!
}

and save it as a file with the .rtf extension.

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  • Ok, I can successfully create and share the rtf file, but the UIDocumentInteractionController doesn't have Open In Pages or Open In Docs as options, unlike a txt file which at least has Pages as an option. What can I do to get Pages to open the rtf? And I know I'm creating the file correctly because when I export it to my Mac via airdrop, it looks great.
    – owlswipe
    Aug 13, 2016 at 3:35
  • Pages can't open RTFs. Neither can Docs. So even though I can successfully make an RTF with this, I can't open it.
    – owlswipe
    Aug 13, 2016 at 13:59
  • Ok, I was not aware that neither Pages nor Docs can open RTF files.
    – R. Estevan
    Aug 14, 2016 at 8:10
  • Yeah, neither was I...no worries, thanks for your help.
    – owlswipe
    Aug 14, 2016 at 17:01

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