On 1/25/05 6:08 AM, Mark Smith wrote:
Well, it's not just text, it's the whole printed card, including my nice, neat graphic boxes. The size difference translates to about 2 points of text size. I don't generally do much printing with my rev apps, but the two or three times I've had a go, this size difference has come up. I doubt if I'd have minded much, except for the fact that it generally means the card won't fit on the page, so it's not especially subtle....is it just me? This has been on two different OS X laptops, and two different printers, across perhaps 3 or 4 versions of Rev, which is why I've assumed that it's Rev that's doing or not doing something that it should. Is there some OS setting I should know about?
Not an OS setting, but it may be due to the printable page area of the printer. All printing scripts have to account for that. It sounds like your card is too large to accomodate the printable page area.
Every printer has a minimum side-edge margin beyond which it will not print. Laser printers are usually about half an inch, most inkjets are about a quarter of an inch. To be safe and keep things simple, I usually allow half an inch on each side for a total of one inch of paper where I can't put anything.
That means that the maximum card width that will fit on a page is 7.5 inches (U.S. paper size). Multiply screen resolution at 72 pixels per inch times that printable area and you get a card size that can't be larger than 540 pixels wide. If your card is wider than that, you'll run off the page.
The actual, visual printing margins are a combination of the allowable printer page width and the printmargins that you set in your handler. If your printer needs .25 inch on each edge before it will lay down ink (18 pixels) and you want a half-inch visual margin, then you'd set the printmargins to 18 on all sides ("18,18,18,18"). This would give you 18 pixels white space where the printer won't print, plus 18 pixels from the printmargins settings, for a total of 36 pixels of white space, which is half an inch. If you were to set the printmargins to "0,0,0,0" instead, you'd get a quarter-inch margin because the printer won't print any closer to the edge than that.
The top and bottom of the printable area varies widely from one printer to another. Almost always, if you allow a one inch top and bottom margin, your page will fit. My inkjet will print down to a quarter inch at the bottom of the page but requires a half inch at the top. Other printers are different. You have to do the same math for top and bottom margins as you do with the left and right margins, but allow a full inch to be safe.
The other solution, which you discovered, is to ignore all this math and just scale the entire page down to 85% or whatever fits.
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