7

I have a question here..

I have used buffering to get the pdf files using mpdf..

but I got a little confused here..

I have some javascript on the page that I was buffering.. but the generated content from javascript is not getting converted into pdf..

let me get this straight..

lets say I have this element

<div id='text'></div>

and on my page i have a javascript code to add text to that div.. and the results is...

[open page via browser]

<div id='text'>TEXT I ADDED USING JAVASCRIPT</div>

but when i convert it to pdf...

<div id='text'></div> (I DIDNT GET THAT TEXT)

This is the script that is used.. template.php

ob_start();

// content of page (included inline javascript code)

$yourfile = ob_get_content();
$_SESSION[forms] = $yourfile;
echo $yourfile;

convert.php

session_start();
include("MPDF54/mpdf.php");

$mpdf=new mPDF('c','A4','','' , 0 , 0 , 0 , 0 , 0 , 0); 

$mpdf->SetDisplayMode('fullpage');

$mpdf->list_indent_first_level = 0; // 1 or 0 - whether to indent the first level of a list

$mpdf->WriteHTML($_SESSION[forms]);

$mpdf->Output();

Anybody can help me with this???

1
  • I'd guess it doesn't support JavaScript.
    – ceejayoz
    Dec 12, 2012 at 18:21

2 Answers 2

12

mpdf supports basic javascript.

PDF readers understands basic javascript functions.

like print(); you can add it using SetJS() function of mpdf library.

include("MPDF54/mpdf.php");

$mpdf=new mPDF('c','A4','','' , 0 , 0 , 0 , 0 , 0 , 0); 

$mpdf->SetDisplayMode('fullpage');

$mpdf->list_indent_first_level = 0; // 1 or 0 - whether to indent the first level of a list

$mpdf->WriteHTML($_SESSION[forms]);

$mpdf->SetJS('print();')  //JS code with <script></script> tags.

$mpdf->Output();
4

PHP *PDF libraries (tcpdf, fpdf, mpdf etc...) cannot run javascript code, because that would require javascript interpreter and browser rendering capabilities, or if it supports javascript it will not run it the way you are used to using it in client side programming. Along with that, css and markup interpretation is also very poor.

However, if you are looking for alternatives that are capable of rendering javascript and css like a normal browser would, i suggest wkhtmltopdf.

wkhtmltopdf is shell utility to convert html to pdf using the webkit rendering engine, and qt. It is run as a console program with parameters specifying what to render and has tons of options. Basically you can tell it to load a page wait 5 seconds for javascript to complete then create pdf. There are linux and windows versions available, though for linux it requires X11 library to be installed.

I'm sure there are some other options out there, but I am using wkhtmltopdf for years and it produces PDF file looking exactly as the webpage would look in Chrome or Safari browsers, and also javascript execution works perfectly.

3
  • tcpdf does include javascript check the documentation. Including "this.print();" for example causes the pdf file to run the print dialog once loaded. Feb 1, 2013 at 11:11
  • 1
    @YassirEnnazk yes, docs does say "methods to publish some XHTML + CSS code, Javascript and Forms;", but javascript engine is terrible so don't expect you will be able to do all the things you are used to do in a regular browser Feb 1, 2013 at 12:25
  • Correct. At least it does the job for auto printing. Feb 1, 2013 at 16:48

Your Answer

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

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