I use CarlosAG-Dll which creates a XML-Excel-file for me (inside a MemoryStream).
Response.ContentType = "application/vnd.ms-excel";
Response.AppendHeader("content-disposition", "myfile.xml");
memory.WriteTo(Response.OutputStream);
My Problem here is, that I get at client side a myfile.xls (IE) or a myfile.xml.xls (FF) and therefore get an annoying security warning from excel.
I tried it as well with application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet (xlsx) but then it won't even open.
So I need to either cut the .xml and send it as vnd.ms-excel (how?) or take another MIME-type (but which one?).
I wonder if this is still open and why?
Use like this
Response.ContentType = "application/vnd.ms-excel";
Response.AppendHeader("content-disposition", "attachment; filename=myfile.xls");
For Excel 2007 and above the MIME type differs
Response.ContentType = "application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet";
Response.AppendHeader("content-disposition", "attachment; filename=myfile.xlsx");
See list of MIME types
Office 2007 File Format MIME Types
EDIT:
If the content is not a native Excel file format, but is instead a text based format (such as CSV, TXT, XML), then the web site can add the following HTTP header to their GET response to tell IE to use an alternate name, and in the name you can set the extension to the right content type:
Response.AddHeader "Content-Disposition", "Attachment;Filename=myfile.csv"
For more details see this link
If your document is an Excel Xml 2003 document, you should use the text/xml content type.
Response.ContentType = "text/xml";
Do not specifiy content-disposition.
This technichs works great with Handler, not with WebForm.
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