html2pdf converts any webpage or element into a printable PDF entirely client-side using html2canvas and jsPDF.
The simplest way to use html2pdf is to download dist/html2pdf.bundle.min.js
to your project folder and include it in your HTML with:
<script src="html2pdf.bundle.min.js"></script>
Note: Click here for more information about using the unbundled version dist/html2canvas.min.js
.
Install html2pdf and its dependencies using NPM with npm install --save html2pdf.js
(make sure to include .js
in the package name).
Note: You can use NPM to create your project, but html2pdf will not run in Node.js, it must be run in a browser.
Install html2pdf and its dependencies using Bower with bower install --save html2pdf.js
(make sure to include .js
in the package name).
Once installed, html2pdf is ready to use. The following command will generate a PDF of #element-to-print
and prompt the user to save the result:
var element = document.getElementById('element-to-print');
html2pdf(element);
html2pdf can be configured using an optional opt
parameter:
var element = document.getElementById('element-to-print');
html2pdf(element, {
margin: 1,
filename: 'myfile.pdf',
image: { type: 'jpeg', quality: 0.98 },
html2canvas: { dpi: 192, letterRendering: true },
jsPDF: { unit: 'in', format: 'letter', orientation: 'portrait' }
});
The opt
parameter has the following optional fields:
Name | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
margin | number or array | 0 | PDF margin (in jsPDF units). Can be a single number, [vMargin, hMargin] , or [top, left, bottom, right] . |
filename | string | 'file.pdf' | The default filename of the exported PDF. |
image | object | {type: 'jpeg', quality: 0.95} | The image type and quality used to generate the PDF. See the Extra Features section below. |
enableLinks | boolean | true | If enabled, PDF hyperlinks are automatically added ontop of all anchor tags. |
html2canvas | object | { } | Configuration options sent directly to html2canvas (see here for usage). |
jsPDF | object | { } | Configuration options sent directly to jsPDF (see here for usage). |
You may add html2pdf
-specific page-breaks to your document by adding the CSS class html2pdf__page-break
to any element (normally an empty div
). For React elements, use className=html2pdf__page-break
. During PDF creation, these elements will be given a height calculated to fill the remainder of the PDF page that they are on. Example usage:
<div id="element-to-print">
<span>I'm on page 1!</span>
<div class="html2pdf__page-break"></div>
<span>I'm on page 2!</span>
</div>
You may customize the image type and quality exported from the canvas by setting the image
option. This must be an object with the following fields:
Name | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
type | string | 'jpeg' | The image type. HTMLCanvasElement only supports 'png', 'jpeg', and 'webp' (on Chrome). |
quality | number | 0.95 | The image quality, from 0 to 1. This setting is only used for jpeg/webp (not png). |
These options are limited to the available settings for HTMLCanvasElement.toDataURL(), which ignores quality settings for 'png' images. To enable png image compression, try using the canvas-png-compression shim, which should be an in-place solution to enable png compression via the quality
option.
html2pdf depends on the external packages html2canvas, jsPDF, and es6-promise. These dependencies are automatically loaded when using NPM or the bundled package.
If using the unbundled dist/html2pdf.min.js
(or its un-minified version), you must also include each dependency. Order is important, otherwise html2canvas will be overridden by jsPDF's own internal implementation:
<script src="es6-promise.auto.min.js"></script>
<script src="jspdf.min.js"></script>
<script src="html2canvas.min.js"></script>
<script src="html2pdf.min.js"></script>
html2pdf currently uses this fork of html2canvas to resolve a few bugs and add support for box-shadows and custom resolutions (via the dpi
/scale
options).
When submitting an issue, please provide reproducible code that highlights the issue, preferably by creating a fork of this template jsFiddle (which has html2pdf already loaded). Remember that html2pdf uses html2canvas and jsPDF as dependencies, so it's a good idea to check each of those repositories' issue trackers to see if your problem has already been addressed.
If you want to create a new feature or bugfix, please feel free to fork and submit a pull request! Use the develop
branch, which features the latest development, and make changes to /src/
rather than directly to /dist/
. You can test your changes by rebuilding with npm run build
.
Copyright (c) 2017 Erik Koopmans <http://www.erik-koopmans.com/>