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Beta 2 of the XML Paper Specification Essentials Pack released to Web!

Beta 2 of the XML Paper Specification (XPS) Essentials Pack has been released. The Essentials Pack contains XPS technologies that are based on the Win32 API. This pack is supported on Windows XP, Windows Server 2003, and Windows 2000 (latest service pack).

This beta release of the Essentials Pack contains:

  • A stand-alone XPS Document Viewer
  • Microsoft XPS Document Writer to output files to the XPS Document format through the print command of any Windows application. 
  • iPreview and iFilter interface implementations for XPS Documents
  • XPSDrv printer driver to enable printing to XPS devices.
  • Shell extensions for inspecting and changing XPS Document properties in Windows Explorer

We built the Essentials Pack on Win32 platforms to provide XPS Services for Windows systems without the Microsoft .Net Framework 3.0.

Our iFilter implementation enables searching the contents of an XPS Document by search applications such as Windows Desktop. Our iPreview interface implementation enables previewing XPS Documents directly inside applications that support the interface such as Outlook 2007. If you have the latest beta of Outlook 2007 and the Essentials Pack, you can try this feature on an email in your inbox that contains and XPS Document attachment. By selecting the XPS Document attachment int he reading pane, the contents will display directly below the attachment within the reading pane.

Your feedback is very valuable in shaping the future of these technologies, so please keep it coming, and stay tuned for future updates! You can provide feedback by emailing XPSinfo@microsoft.com or by joining the community in the XPS Developers Forum of MSDN. For ongoing updates on XPS technologies, visit us on this blog and at https://www.microsoft.com/xps.

Install the Essentials Pack at: https://www.microsoft.com/whdc/xps/viewxps.mspx

Comments

  • Anonymous
    September 08, 2006
    Some really interesting things to note for the week:

    New blog on Math in Office – Murray Sargent...

  • Anonymous
    September 09, 2006
    Now we will finally be able to really start using XPS files. PDFs are big in the pharmaceutical industry and the lack of a XPS reader has been holding XPS back (for so far you can hold back a beta product ;-)

  • Anonymous
    September 10, 2006
    Beta 2 of the XPS essentials pack is out.  Read about the details and how to download at the XPS...

  • Anonymous
    September 11, 2006
    The IPreview interface sounds interesting - any information somewhere how it can be used to implement custom preview viewers?

  • Anonymous
    September 11, 2006
    Is it just me?  I only found a viewer, I didn't find a document writer, a printer driver, or shell extensions...

  • Anonymous
    September 11, 2006
    Installing the XPS Essentials Pack package gives you the document writer, the shell extension as well as the XPSDrv printer driver. To see the shell extensions in action, right click on an XPS Document and go to "Properties". For the Document writer, pick an application, go to File-->Print and you will see "Microsoft XPS Document Writer" listed as one of the printers available.

  • Anonymous
    September 12, 2006
    I was surprised by the fast load time of the XPS Viewer. It takes less than a second to load.

    As an aside, I found an interface glitch in the XPS viwer. The "E" is underlined the "Exit" command, rather than the "x".

  • Anonymous
    September 12, 2006
    iPreview interfaces are documented by Windows Shell. We include the XPS provider for these interfaces. You can read about iPreview technology at http://windowssdk.msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa361578.aspx

  • Anonymous
    September 14, 2006
    It has been great to see the web buzz over the past few days over the availability on the Microsoft Download...

  • Anonymous
    September 21, 2006
    Is there any constraint that for embedding of jpg files into XPS Document , some markers are mandatorily to be supported else the Beta 2 version will not open the XPS document.

  • Anonymous
    September 21, 2006
    Is there any constraint that for embedding of jpg files into XPS Document , some markers are mandatorily to be supported else the Beta 2 version will not open the XPS document.

  • Anonymous
    September 21, 2006
    Is there any constraint that for embedding of jpg files into XPS Document , some markers are mandatorily to be supported else the Beta 2 version will not open the XPS document.

  • Anonymous
    September 21, 2006
    Is there any constraint that for embedding of jpg files into XPS Document , some markers are mandatorily to be supported else the Beta 2 version will not open the XPS document.

  • Anonymous
    October 17, 2006
    As a very simple test, after installing the Essentials Pack Beta2 I printed to XPS from an HTML format email that I had received in Outlook. The way that browsers (eg, IE7 RC1 which I am using) deal with the problem of objects that don't entirely fit on one page, is to stuff in a lot of whitespace on the first page and put the entire object (eg, an image) onto the next. What happens with the XPS writer is that the object (image) appears in context, but is truncated at the page boundary. I don't know how I would recommend handling this (since HTML is regarded like a piece of continuous paper). But there must be some standard way of handling this problem, that you have discussed - yes? The matter of 'continuous paper' brings up the often-used technical / scientific printing device, the PLOTTER. And that relates closely to the fact that for data interchange, most GIS (geographic information system) practitioners curently rely on an Adobe PDF document - which ofetn is not actualy printed (ever), but does retain the vector objects so that the saved disk file has scaleable / zoomable information. Of course, to produce the PDF disk file (whether it will be actually printed or not) at a suitable 'paper size' requires some settings within the GIS or via the PDF printer driver that is used (not just Adobe's, of course). Often though, the paper size chosen corresponds to a common PLOTTER - usually a Hewlett Packard model, in my business. I'm sure that the hardware manufacturers are interested in the XPS and that you have looked at the problem of paper width restrictions (typical of plotters), but essentially unlimited paper length. Where can I find out about all of these matters?

  • Anonymous
    October 17, 2006
    Here, I've separated out stuff which really didn't apply in my previous post, on HTML printing. A lot of technical and scientific work uses plotters to render design work that is created out of CAD or GIS or other special-purpose software, onto a hard copy (paper or transparent sheets, etc). This is 'continuous paper': the plotter devices have a confined plotting width, but essentially unrestricted length. Native file formats of the technical/scientific applications are used, but there is such a plethora of incompatible standards that the PDF file format is commonly chosen. The latest PDF specifications are suitable for most technical purposes. So for data interchange, most GIS (geographic information system) practitioners curently rely on an Adobe PDF document - which often is not actually printed (ever), but does retain the vector objects so that the saved disk file has scaleable / zoomable information. Of course, to produce the PDF disk file (whether it will be actually printed or not) at a suitable 'paper size' requires some settings within the GIS or via the PDF printer driver that is used (PDF prnter drivers are not just produced by Adobe, of course). Often though, the paper size chosen corresponds to a common PLOTTER - usually a Hewlett Packard model, in my business. I'm sure that the hardware manufacturers are interested in the XPS and that you have looked at the problem of paper width restrictions (typical of plotters), but essentially unlimited paper length. Where can I find out about all of these matters?

  • Anonymous
    October 17, 2006
    I have downloaded the test documents (not really of great use for me), and also the XPS document on Tim Sneath's blog ("A Guided Tour of the Windows Presentation Foundation") - which is both informative, and provides a useful test for your iFilter - or, so  thought. It don't work, mate! Tim's got lots of words there, and I thought the iFilter would show most of them - but zilch? Wot's wrong??

  • Anonymous
    October 19, 2006
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    November 10, 2006
    It depends on IE's ability to print that particular page. I have seen other pages where images are not truncated and instead printed at the beginning of the following page. I would recommend you engage with the IE team (blog: http://blogs.msdn.com/IE/) to get a better understanding of how printing works within IE. For the XPS Document writer, if you have suspicion that we are doing something wrong, the best way to verify it is to print to a physical printer and compare the two outputs. MXDW solely relies on how the printing application lays out the content. So if the CAD/GIS software do print well to the physical printer, the output to XPS using MXDW would be similar.

  • Anonymous
    November 10, 2006
    XPS has no special restrictions on jpegs. However, XPS Viewer EP uses GDI plus to render the images, so if there for any reason, GDI plus rejects a jpeg (say for security reasons), we will not load it. If you are still seeing this issue and you don't mind sharing the XPS document, would you kindly share it by emailing xpsinfo@microsoft.com and the XPS Essentials Pack team will look into it.

  • Anonymous
    November 10, 2006
    Ian, thanks for all your feedback. I am assuming you are using Windows Desktop Search on Windows XP to search for words in Tim Sneath's document. Our iFilter looks at words exactly as specified in the document. It does not try to do any intelligent concatination. If the document was authored in such a way that a word was split into 2 glyph-runs, then while it shows up as 1 word visually, it is represented as 2 in markup. This will not be found. However, we will look at this particular document and try out some searches. If you would be kind enough to email xpsinfo@microsoft.com to confirm what words you were looking for and what search engine you were using, we'll get right on it and try to reproduce this.

  • Anonymous
    March 12, 2007
    The specified download does not support Windows 2000. Only Windows 2003 Server and Windows XP is supported. Is there any Windows 2000 XPS Viewer available?

  • Anonymous
    May 23, 2007
    The Microsoft .NET Framework 3.0 redistributable has been failing to deploy through Windows Update (with

  • Anonymous
    January 24, 2008
    This is more of a question.  I am looking for a solution to a problem I am investigating.  I have a program that has the ability to print to file in a xps file format. The problem I am having is trying to figure out how I can make this file viewable in a secondary program that uses microsoft word as a document viewer and generator.  My first idea was to see if I could insert the xps document as an object into a newly created word document in this secondary program.  Is it possible to do this without converting the xps files to jpegs and inserting them as jpegs.  In all honesty I am looking for a solution to make the process simpler and less time consuming.  Any feed back would be appreciated.  Xiame

  • Anonymous
    October 03, 2008
    Is there anyway to download beta 2? I've looked everywhere on WayBack machine...

  • Anonymous
    November 13, 2008
    Just wondering if there is any word on the download working with Windows 2000?

  • Anonymous
    June 01, 2009
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