XPS is Microsoft's proprietary answer to PDFs. You can extrapolate from there. 
If you're all Windows all the time, the fact that it's built into the OS could 
offer the advantages mentioned by Paul.  Good luck using those docs outside the 
context of Windows.

--

rk

-----Original Message-----
From: ProfoxTech [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
[email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, November 07, 2017 2:34 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Windows XPS Document printer

On 2017-11-07 13:44, Paul Hemans wrote:
> Yes it was easier. I needed the application to have no user interface. 
> I
> had a lot of problems getting a seamless print to happen using PDF 
> without
> looking to pay for licenses which I didn't want to do at the time.
> 


That's interesting.  I'm working with a fellow who's using PDFCreator on 
the web server to serve up PDFs generated out of a WestWind WebConnect 
app.  I wonder if XPS could preview in a web page the same as a PDF 
could?  I recall years ago systems didn't seem to know what to do or how 
to handle XPS files.  That's why my interest dropped at that time.


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