About the Open XML SDK 2.0 for Microsoft Office
Applies to: Excel 2010 | Office 2010 | PowerPoint 2010 | Word 2010
In this article
Structure of an Open XML Package
The Open XML SDK 1.0
The Open XML Software Development Kit 2.0 for Microsoft Office
Open XML is an open standard for word-processing documents, presentations, and spreadsheets that can be freely implemented by multiple applications on different platforms. Open XML is designed to faithfully represent existing word-processing documents, presentations, and spreadsheets that are encoded in binary formats defined by Microsoft Office applications. The reason for Open XML is simple: billions of documents now exist but, unfortunately, the information in those documents is tightly coupled with the programs that created them. The purpose of the Open XML standard is to de-couple documents created by Microsoft Office applications so that they can be manipulated by other applications independent of proprietary formats and without the loss of data.
Structure of an Open XML Package
An Open XML file is stored in a ZIP archive for packaging and compression. You can view the structure of any Open XML file using a ZIP viewer. An Open XML document is built of multiple document parts. The relationships between the parts are themselves stored in document parts. The ZIP format supports random access to each part. For example, an application can move a slide from one presentation to another presentation without parsing the slide content. Likewise, an application can strip all of the comments out of a word processing document without parsing any of its contents.
The document parts in an Open XML package are created as XML markup. Because XML is structured plain text, you can view the contents of a document part using text readers or you can parse the contents using processes such as XPath.
Structurally, an Open XML document is an Open Packaging Conventions (OPC) package. As stated previously, a package is composed of a collection of document parts. Each part has a part name that consists of a sequence of segments or a pathname such as "/word/theme/theme1.xml." The package contains a [Content_Types].xml part that allows you to determine the content type of all document parts in the package. A set of explicit relationships for a source package or part is contained in a relationships part that ends with the .rels extension.
Word processing documents are described by using WordprocessingML markup. For more information, see Working with WordprocessingML Documents. A WordprocessingML document is composed of a collection of stories where each story is one of the following:
Main document (the only required story)
Glossary document
Header and footer
Comments
Text box
Footnote and endnote
Presentations are described by using PresentationML markup. For more information, see Working with PresentationML Documents. Presentation packages can contain the following document parts:
Slide master
Notes master
Handout master
Slide layout
Notes
Spreadsheet workbooks are described by using SpreadsheetML markup. For more information, see Working with SpreadsheetML Documents. Workbook packages can contain:
Workbook part (required part)
One or more worksheets
Charts
Tables
Custom XML
The Open XML SDK 1.0
Version 1 of the Open XML SDK simplified the manipulation of Open XML packages. The Open XML SDK Application Programming Interface (API) encapsulates many of the common tasks that you typically perform on Open XML packages, so you can perform complex operations with just a few lines of code. Some common tasks:
Search. With a few lines of code, you can search a collection of Excel 2007 worksheets for some arbitrary data.
Document assembly. You can create documents by combining the document parts of existing documents programmatically. For example, you can pull slides from various PowerPoint 2007 presentations to create a single presentation.
Validation. With a few lines of code, you can validate the document parts in a package or validate an entire package against a schema.
Data update. With the Open XML object model, you can easily modify the data in multiple packages.
Privacy. With a few lines of code, you can remove comments and other personal information from a document before it is distributed.
The Open XML Software Development Kit 2.0 for Microsoft Office
The Open XML SDK 2.0 for Microsoft Office extends the strongly typed class support from the part classes, which are provided in version 1.0, to the XML content in each part. All functions available in version 1.0 are still supported. Now with version 2.0, you are able to program against the XML content inside the part. The SDK supports programming in the style of LINQ to XML which makes coding against the XML content much easier than the traditional W3C XML DOM programming model.
The SDK supports the following common tasks/scenarios:
Strongly Typed Classes and Objects Instead of relying on generic XML functionality to manipulate XML, which requires that you be aware of element/attribute/value spelling as well as namespaces, you can use the Open XML SDK to accomplish the same solution simply by manipulating objects that represent elements/attributes/values. All schema types are represented as strongly typed Common Language Runtime (CLR) classes and all attribute values as enumerations.
Content Construction, Search, and Manipulation The LINQ technology is built directly into the SDK. As a result, you are able to perform functional constructs and lambda expression queries directly on objects representing Open XML elements. In addition, the SDK allows you to easily traverse and manipulate content by providing support for collections of objects, like tables and paragraphs.
Validation The Open XML SDK 2.0 for Microsoft Office provides validation functionality, enabling you to validate Open XML documents against different variations of the Open XML Format.
You can use the classes in the Open XML SDK in any language supported by the Microsoft .NET Framework®. The help topics presented in this SDK provide code samples in Microsoft Visual C#® and Microsoft Visual Basic® .NET.
Using the code samples in the help topics in this SDK as a starting point, you can take advantage of the Open XML standards programmatically. The Open XML SDK relieves much of the complexity of working with Open Packaging Conventions documents and is worth your time to explore.