Microsoft KB Archive/276488

= How To Use the ADODB.Stream Object to Send Binary Files to the Browser through ASP =

Article ID: 276488

Article Last Modified on 7/15/2004

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Data Access Components 2.5
 * Microsoft Active Server Pages 4.0
 * Microsoft ActiveX Data Objects 2.5
 * Microsoft Visual InterDev 1.0 Standard Edition
 * Microsoft Visual InterDev 6.0 Standard Edition

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This article was previously published under Q276488



SUMMARY
Web developers often need to read binary files from the Web server's file system through Active Server Pages (ASP) and then send the content to the Web browser (for example, to write an Excel file to the browser). Although developers often attempt this with the File System Object (FSO), the FSO is designed to read only ASCII data from the file system and, therefore, does not work.

To read binary data from the file system, you must use a component that has the ability to read binary data. For additional information about to create your own component, click the article number below to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

193998 How To Read and Display Binary Data in ASP

In Microsoft ActiveX Data Objects 2.5, the ADODB.Stream object offers this functionality. When you call ADODB.Stream from ASP and use the intrinsic BinaryWrite method from the ASP Response object, you can send binary data to any type of browser with very little code.



MORE INFORMATION
The following steps illustrate how to use this method to write an Excel file to the browser:   Create a new ASP page, and paste the following code: <% 'Set the content type to the specific type that you are sending. Response.ContentType = &quot;application/x-msexcel&quot;

Const adTypeBinary = 1 Dim strFilePath

strFilePath = &quot;C:\ExcelFiles\Excel1.xls&quot; 'This is the path to the file on disk.

Set objStream = Server.CreateObject(&quot;ADODB.Stream&quot;) objStream.Open objStream.Type = adTypeBinary objStream.LoadFromFile strFilePath

Response.BinaryWrite objStream.Read

objStream.Close Set objStream = Nothing %>                    Save the file to the Web server. In the browser, browse to the file.

