<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><title>officeimo</title><id>https://evotec.xyz/es/tags/officeimo/index.atom.xml</id><updated>2022-06-12T16:14:01.0000000Z</updated><subtitle>Evotec Main Website</subtitle><link href="https://evotec.xyz/es/tags/officeimo" /><link href="https://evotec.xyz/es/tags/officeimo/index.atom.xml" rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" /><entry><title>OfficeIMO – Free cross-platform Microsoft Word .NET library</title><id>https://evotec.xyz/es/blog/officeimo-free-cross-platform-microsoft-word-net-library</id><link href="https://evotec.xyz/es/blog/officeimo-free-cross-platform-microsoft-word-net-library" /><updated>2022-06-12T16:14:01.0000000Z</updated><summary>I’ve created a cross-platform (Windows, Linux, macOS) Word library based on Open XML SDK that heavily simplifies creating and modifying Word documents. Open XML SDK, while excellent, requires you to do a lot of work to make even simple documents. For example, if you want to use Table styles, you need first to define those styles, put them in a specific place, and assign them to a table. The same goes for lists, images, hyperlinks, bookmarks, and many other Microsoft Word types. Creating sections, managing headers, and footers – all that is possible using Open XML SDK, but it’s far from easy. At least for a noob like me. You have to know the order to put them into the document; you must know the places and track IDs to all the elements. And trust me – it’s not fun.</summary><category term="c#" /><category term="csharp" /><category term="docx" /><category term="microsoft office" /><category term="Office 365" /><category term="officeimo" /><category term="Windows" /><category term="word" /></entry></feed>