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You're reading from  Mastering Data Visualization with Microsoft Visio Professional 2016

Product typeBook
Published inMay 2016
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781785882661
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (2):
David Parker
David Parker
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David Parker

David J Parker's background has been in data visualization ever since he struggled to produce lists of hospital equipment from Computer Aided Design models of buildings as a budding architect in the '80s. He moved into building and infrastructure asset management in the late '80s using a Unix system and gradually migrated to Windows-based systems throughout the '90s. He became a European Business partner of Visio Corporation in 1996 and presented the database-linked Visio solutions that he was providing merchant banks in London and New York with at several international conferences. David started bVisual Ltd. in 1998, which provides Visio-based solutions to various industries, and became a Silver-level Microsoft partner. He has been a Microsoft MVP (Visio) for the last 12 years and has helped Microsoft Corp, UK and Western Europe, by providing Visio solutions, training, website content, and presentations. David has had several books on Visio published and has been presenting Visio/SharePoint integration courses for many years for Microsoft Western Europe, from Oslo in the North down to Lisbon in the South. He has presented at SQL and SharePoint Saturday conferences and writes a regular blog for people interested in Microsoft Visio.
Read more about David Parker

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Exporting a Visio document


The following screenshot shows the File | Export options that are available:

Creating a PDF or XPS document

Microsoft has included the ability to create PDF and XPS documents from a Visio document. These have the ability to set the specific pages and some graphical properties. However, neither method provides the option to include Shape Data, and they only enable the first hyperlink on each shape. This is disappointing since both PDF and XPS are capable of much more.

These outputs can be created in code using the Document.ExportAsFixedFormat() method; take a look at https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/office/ff766893.aspx for more information.

The following screenshot is of the Options dialog for PDF, but XPS is the same except for the PDF options, ISO 19005-1 compliant (PDF/A):

I have always felt that XPS (Extensible Paper Specification) is a good idea that has not been exploited by Microsoft. XPS has an API (take a look at https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library...

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Mastering Data Visualization with Microsoft Visio Professional 2016
Published in: May 2016Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781785882661

Authors (2)

author image
David Parker

David J Parker's background has been in data visualization ever since he struggled to produce lists of hospital equipment from Computer Aided Design models of buildings as a budding architect in the '80s. He moved into building and infrastructure asset management in the late '80s using a Unix system and gradually migrated to Windows-based systems throughout the '90s. He became a European Business partner of Visio Corporation in 1996 and presented the database-linked Visio solutions that he was providing merchant banks in London and New York with at several international conferences. David started bVisual Ltd. in 1998, which provides Visio-based solutions to various industries, and became a Silver-level Microsoft partner. He has been a Microsoft MVP (Visio) for the last 12 years and has helped Microsoft Corp, UK and Western Europe, by providing Visio solutions, training, website content, and presentations. David has had several books on Visio published and has been presenting Visio/SharePoint integration courses for many years for Microsoft Western Europe, from Oslo in the North down to Lisbon in the South. He has presented at SQL and SharePoint Saturday conferences and writes a regular blog for people interested in Microsoft Visio.
Read more about David Parker