(Draft17cpi and Bold) / (Printers font in the screen)
Hi...
1) Why when I using Draft17cpi the Bold Style does not work in printer. It
works only in the Screen.
2) When I using Draft17cpi or Draft12cpi or Draft20cpi and the Report has
many fields, sometimes the Report in the Screen be different Report in the
printer. Why does it happen ? Is there a way to solve that? It's very hard
to develope report in one that fonts cause that. It would be nice if Report
Builder let font in screen equal printer in that cases. I don't know if it's
possible, but I think if you use Courier font in the screen you can
simulate the Draft printer font.
I hope you undestand me
Thanks
Regards
1) Why when I using Draft17cpi the Bold Style does not work in printer. It
works only in the Screen.
2) When I using Draft17cpi or Draft12cpi or Draft20cpi and the Report has
many fields, sometimes the Report in the Screen be different Report in the
printer. Why does it happen ? Is there a way to solve that? It's very hard
to develope report in one that fonts cause that. It would be nice if Report
Builder let font in screen equal printer in that cases. I don't know if it's
possible, but I think if you use Courier font in the screen you can
simulate the Draft printer font.
I hope you undestand me
Thanks
Regards
This discussion has been closed.
Comments
-----------------------------------------------------
Article: Why Your Preview Won't Match Your Output
-----------------------------------------------------
We have two choices when we create a preview - compose for the screen, or
compose for the printer. Most programs such as MS Word compose to the screen
when they create a preview. This makes for attractive previews but they tend
to
be inaccurate. And it means that they then compose again for the printer
when you print the document. Most of the time things will print effectively
similar to the preview, but we have seen many times when the printed output
was different - a word wrapped to the next line, or some such problem. If
you use a program meant for accurate page layout, such as PageMaker, you
will notice that the Page Setup dialog asks you for which printer you wish
to compose. When PageMaker displays a page, it may not look exactly how
you think it should, but you do get a preview where the element placement
is guaranteed to match the printed output's element placement.
We have chosen to follow this second model.
Note that when we say element placement, we are referring to X and Y
placement and not height and width. While the X and Y placement of
our previews will be accurate, the height and width of text elements
may vary based on zoom percentage. This is a normal artifact of
composing for the printer and not for the screen.
Your preview can not match your printed output. It will
differ in one of two ways:
1- It can look good on the screen, but items on the page may not
display in the same location they will when printed.
or
2- It can be less attractive, but items will display on the preview
exactly where they will when printed.
We give you the second because it is more accurate and more reliable.
Not to mention more in keeping with professional page layout products.
--
Tech Support mailto:support@digital-metaphors.com
Digital Metaphors http://www.digital-metaphors.com
--
Cheers,
Jim Bennett
Digital Metaphors
http://www.digital-metaphors.com
info@digital-metaphors.com