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While I do not have the full context of all that goes on in the generation of reports using SRS, I have recently been tasked with creating customized reports which are used to print labels ( a fairly daunting task, considering the ease that the designer is supposed to offer ). Since these were all custom documents, I created them from the ground-up in a very iterative "how about now?" fashion when working with error messages that I was able to produce. These were all XML documents following the general syntax of:

<XML>
<Definitions>
    <Definition>
        <Report>
            <Body>
                <ReportItems>
                 . . .
                </ReportItems>
            </Body>
            <Page />
            <ReportParameters />
        </Report>
    </Definition>
</Definitions>

My problem resides in the mystical realm of the " . . . " shown in the sample template listed above. Rather sadly, I have not found a template even this simple online at any of the MSDN resources or otherwise, only some outdated instructions on how I might use the designer to achieve some fairly minimal adjustments.

Does anyone know where I might be able to find more detail as to where the XML node definitions might be laid out? For instance, within a

<Textbox>

node, you have a set up like this:

<Paragraphs>
    <Paragraph>
        <TextRun>
            <Value>Here's some text that will display on the report</Value>

before you get down to actually flushing the thing out. At this point, I may want to do other things with my text, like adjust the size, weight etc. Only through intentionally breaking things am I able to get information regarding what is expected in this region, which would include (but probably is not limited to) the following:

Border, TopBorder, BottomBorder, LeftBorder, RightBorder, BackgroundColor, BackgroundGradientType, BackgroundGradientEndColor, BackgroundHatchType, BackgroundImage, FontStyle, FontFamily, FontSize, FontWeight, Format, TextDecoration, TextAlign, TextEffect, VerticalAlign, Color, ShadowColor, ShadowOffset, PaddingLeft, PaddingRight, PaddingTop, PaddingBottom, LineHeight, Direction, WritingMode, Language, UnicodeBiDi, Calendar, NumeralLanguage, NumeralVariant.

That's much more useful than stabbing around in the dark dark world of blackboxed SRS, but I now have no context of knowing what each one of these nodes would expect unless I then break that node intentionally (throwing some garbage node in there like

<asdflolbutts>

and getting it to maybe spit me back a similar message. As you can see, very inefficient.

Any and all help would be appreciated in running down some more useful information, otherwise I may just conjure up something myself and try to put it up online. Meh.

Cheers, and thank you for at least taking the time to read about my plight. devKev

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The .rdl file or "report definition language" file has documentation located here and here. This maybe useful if you are doing some type of dynamic/custom report creation, however, Visual Studio contains a complete designer already. There are third party tools that extend and add to the api, telerik, for example, has an mvc report viewer for ssrs.

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  • Ah HA! This is exactly the sort of thing that I am looking for - searching in the wrong places it seems. Thank you very much!
    – devKev
    Jun 5, 2015 at 18:16

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