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This article will explore how to use IronPDF to generate new file, extract content and save PDFs.
IronPDF for Java is built for generating PDF documents or PDF forms from HTML code, whether from a file, HTML string, HTML pages, or URL. It generates PDF files with accuracy, and formatting is also preserved. It is designed in a way that developers find it easy to use.
IronPDF is built on top of the .NET Framework, allowing it to be a versatile tool for generating PDFs in various contexts.
IronPDF provides the following functions for generating and manipulating large documents:
To use IronPDF to create a PDF generating tool, the following software needs to be installed on the computer:
IronPDF - Finally, IronPDF is required to create PDF files in Java. This needs to be added as a dependency in your Java Maven Project. Include the IronPDF artifact along with the slf4j dependency in the pom.xml
file as shown below:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.ironsoftware</groupId>
<artifactId>com.ironsoftware</artifactId>
<version>2024.9.1</version>
</dependency>
First of all, add the following line at the top of the Java main class source code file to import all the required important class methods from the IronPDF library.
import com.ironsoftware.ironpdf.*;
Next, configure IronPDF with a valid license key to use its methods. Invoke the setLicenseKey
method in the main method.
License.setLicenseKey("Your license key");
Note: You can get a free trial license key to create and read PDFs.
Creating PDF files from HTML string is very easy and usually takes one or two lines of code to do it. Here, an HTML code is written as a string in a variable and then passed to the renderHtmlAsPdf
method found in the PdfDocument
class. The following code generates a new PDF document instance:
String htmlString = "<h1>Hello World!</h1><p>This is an example of an HTML string in Java.</p>";
PdfDocument pdf = PdfDocument.renderHtmlAsPdf(htmlString);
Now, use the saveAs
method to save the generated PDF to a path on your local system:
pdf.saveAs(Paths.get("htmlstring.pdf"));
The above line of code creates a PDF called "htmlstring.pdf" containing the contents of the HTML string.
The output is as follows:
HTML String to PDF Output
The following code creates a PDF file from an HTML file:
PdfDocument myPdf = PdfDocument.renderHtmlFileAsPdf("example.html");
myPdf.saveAs(Paths.get("html_file.pdf"));
HTML file code:
<html>
<head>
<title>Example HTML File</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>HTML File Example</h1>
<p style="font-style:Italic;">This is an example HTML file</p>
</body>
</html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Example HTML File</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>HTML File Example</h1>
<p style="font-style:Italic;">This is an example HTML file</p>
</body>
</html>
In the above code, the renderHtmlFileAsPdf
method generates PDF files from HTML files. This method accepts a string argument containing the path to the HTML file.
IronPDF renders the HTML file elements along with the CSS and JavaScript attached to it, if any. You can see in the output below that the CSS styling is also maintained by IronPDF, and the output is the same as it would have been in a web browser.
HTML File to PDF Output
The renderUrlAsPdf
method is used to create PDF files from a web page. It accepts the web page's URL as an argument.
PdfDocument urlToPdf = PdfDocument.renderUrlAsPdf("https://ironpdf.com");
urlToPdf.saveAs(Paths.get("urlToPdf.pdf"));
URL to PDF Output
Additional rendering options can be set to configure PDF generation. You can get more information on the URL to PDF Code Example page.
IronPDF can be used to create a password-protected PDF file with the SecurityOptions
class. All file permissions can be set if you integrate the PDF functionalities of IronPDF. The code goes as follows:
SecurityOptions securityOptions = new SecurityOptions();
securityOptions.setUserPassword("shareable");
setUserPassword
is used to set a secure password. The below code sample applies password protection to the PDF document that was created in the URL to PDF example:
SecurityManager securityManager = urlToPdf.getSecurity();
securityManager.setSecurityOptions(securityOptions);
urlToPdf.saveAs("protected.pdf");
The PDF file is now password protected. Now open the PDF file, and a password option will appear:
Password Protected File
After entering the password correctly, the PDF document will open.
PDF document
More security settings and metadata about the PDF files can be explored in the related code example.
This article demonstrated the capability of the IronPDF library to create PDFs using multiple methods. IronPDF is a pure Java library and is powerfully built to easily work with PDF files in Java.
IronPDF's Engine makes it easy to create PDFs from HTML files, image files, XML documents, Jasper reports, or any other sources. It complies with the standard Java printing API, which helps print documents with ease, and you can also digitally sign PDF files. IronPDF helps to get all the PDF-related tasks done quickly and easily.
IronPDF is not an open-source Java library. It provides a commercial license which starts from $749. You can also get a free trial to test it in production within your Java applications.
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