Richard:
> they still offer a business card size with rounded corners -
> I'm taking it as a challenge to bring the card content
> down to just the essentials. ;)
> https://www.avery.com/products/cards/88220
Thanks for that link - good idea! Mini cards look great.
I doubt my own hands can man
> Why? On a LiveCode list you have to ask why? :)
It was more of a rhetorical question / suggestion... Output PDF of
1-Up card pages from LiveCode and then use imposition software or a
page layout app, link the layout to the LC PDF file and print, that's
the way it's done by printers. And most of t
Curry Kenworthy wrote:
Richard:
> 1. Because we can. It's fun to figure stuff out.
Yes, it is! :)
> 2. Print-and-Play tabletop games.
This special printer paper looks way too fun:
https://www.avery.com/products/cards/4785
(Discontinued already? Que lastima!
This thread is giving me inten
On 03/02/2021 05:33, Richard Gaskin via use-livecode wrote:
Paul McClernan wrote:
> I'm sure this could all be worked out as far as how to do the
> layout and printing directly from LiveCode... but why?
Why? On a LiveCode list you have to ask why? :)
For what it's worth, a while back (when
Paul:
>> ... but why?
Richard:
> 1. Because we can. It's fun to figure stuff out.
Yes, it is! :)
> 2. Print-and-Play tabletop games.
This special printer paper looks way too fun:
https://www.avery.com/products/cards/4785
(Discontinued already? Que lastima!
This thread is giving me inten
Paul McClernan wrote:
> I'm sure this could all be worked out as far as how to do the
> layout and printing directly from LiveCode... but why?
Why? On a LiveCode list you have to ask why? :)
Two reasons come to mind, but doubtless there are many more:
1. Because we can. It's fun to figure stu
Paul:
> I'm sure this could all be worked out as far as
> how to do the layout and printing directly from LiveCode... but why?
Good question! Might be a good reason, but not much point in guessing.
The bigger question is: what was the true original problem?
Brian:
> The problem is, printing
I've worked in the printing industry for 30+ years now. What you're
talking about is called page impositions, and it sounds like you're
doing a work-and-tumble" ("the cards are now face down"), you could
also do a work-and-turn instead (flip the pile on the "landscape"
side, instead of portrait sid
Brian:
> I’d like to print decks of cards, front and back
This post has become a master puzzle of its own!
Enough detail to elicit solutions, yet still open-ended.
Each answer makes its own assumptions, and solves a different problem.
But I like it. So OK, I'll join. Here goes
My own assump
On 1/29/2021 11:16 AM, Bob Sneidar via use-livecode wrote:
As an IT technician working for a copier sales and service company, I always
discourage page imposition in the document itself. Most print drivers have a
means of producing booklets and handle the imposition for you. If you are
indeed
As an IT technician working for a copier sales and service company, I always
discourage page imposition in the document itself. Most print drivers have a
means of producing booklets and handle the imposition for you. If you are
indeed producing booklets, I assume they need to be center stapled a
I may be missing something, but a document itself is not double sided. I think
you may be saying that you want to automate the process of printing and force
the output to be double sided. I do not think that is possible, although I can
see how that would be useful to push print properties before
I’m thinking (guessing) that he’s into the more general problem that you get
when you are trying to print say a booklet with multiple pages of the book per
printed sheet. You do have to print double-sided (and your printer may help you
with that) but the key is lay it out so that page 2 of the b
Right after I sent the message below, I think I understand what you meant.
You want to print double-sided pages of all the cards in a stack. Is that
right? On a regular printer you don't have to do anything special; if the
printer driver supports double-sided printing then it just works.
For P
Brian K. Duck wrote:
> I’d like to print decks of cards, front and back
Are you making components for a tabletop game? Is it one of your own
design?
I've begun designing games here myself as something to do that takes me
away from the computer now and then. Modern tabletop games are
fasci
I'm confused. Are you writing a card game with decks of cards? Or do you
mean the cards in a lC stack? What is "flipping the page"?
--
Jacqueline Landman Gay | jac...@hyperactivesw.com
HyperActive Software | http://www.hyperactivesw.com
On January 28, 2021 11:15:51 PM "Brian K. Duck via use-live
I’d like to print decks of cards, front and back
The front page is always easy.
Cards print left to right: 1-3
Flipping the pages, in portrait layout, the cards are now face down, in order
but reversed: 3,2, 1.
The problem is, printing 3 wide by 4 tall, aligining the two.
Any existing solution
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