Found 4 relevant articles
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Technical Implementation of Automatically Generating PDF from RDLC Reports in Background
This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of technical solutions for automatically generating PDF files from RDLC reports in background processes. By examining the Render method of the ReportViewer control, we demonstrate how to render reports as PDF byte arrays and save them to disk. The article also discusses key issues such as multithreading, parameter configuration, and error handling, offering complete implementation guidance for automation scenarios like month-end processing.
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The Evolution and Solutions of RDLC Report Designer in Visual Studio
This article provides a comprehensive analysis of the changes in RDLC report designer across different Visual Studio versions, from the built-in component in Visual Studio 2015 to standalone extensions in newer versions. It offers complete installation and configuration guidelines, including setup through SQL Server Data Tools for VS2015, Marketplace extensions for VS2017-2022, and NuGet deployment for ReportViewer controls. Combined with troubleshooting experiences for common issues, it delivers a complete RDLC report development solution for developers.
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Resolving the Invisible "Report Data" Window Issue in RDLC Report Design with Visual Studio 2010
This paper provides an in-depth analysis of the common issue where the "Report Data" window becomes invisible during RDLC report design in Visual Studio 2010. By examining the best answer from the Q&A data, it details the method of using the keyboard shortcut Ctrl+Alt+D to restore window visibility, supplemented by explanations from other answers regarding menu display conditions. The article also discusses the essential distinction between HTML tags and character escaping to ensure technical documentation accuracy and readability.
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SSRS Numeric Formatting Issues: Solutions for Zero Value Display in Two Decimal Places
This technical paper provides an in-depth analysis of zero value display issues in SQL Server Reporting Services (SSRS) numeric formatting. When using custom format strings like "##.##", values of zero or near-zero decimals fail to display correctly. The article compares the differences between Format and FormatNumber functions, explains the working principles of the "F2" standard format string and FormatNumber function in detail, and provides comprehensive code examples and best practices. By integrating related cases, it discusses core concepts of numeric formatting and practical application scenarios, helping developers thoroughly resolve numeric display problems in SSRS reports.