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Print contextThe Print context is the folder in the Designer that can contain one or more Print templates. Print templates, also called Print sections, are part of the Print context. They are meant to be printed to a printer or printer stream, or to a PDF file (see Generating Print output). Creating the Print contextYou can start creating a Print template with a Wizard (see Creating a Print template with a Wizard), or add the Print context to an existing template (see Adding a context). Editing PDF files in the Designer is not possible, but when they're used as a section's background, you can add text and other elements, such as a barcode, to them. To create a new Print template from a PDF file, use the PDF-based Print template (see Creating a Print template with a Wizard). To use a PDF file as background image for an existing section, see Using a PDF file as background image. When a Print template is created, the following happens:
In Print sections, there are often elements that need to be repeated across pages, like headers, footers and logos. In addition, some elements should appear on each first page, or only on pages in between the first and the last page, or only on the last page. Examples are a different header on the first page, and a tear-off slip that should show up on the last page. This is what Master Pages are used for. Master Pages can only be used in the Print context. See Master Pages.Initially, the (empty) master page that has been created with the Print context will be applied to all pages in the Print section, but more Master Pages can be added and applied to different pages. Print settings in the Print context and sectionsThe following settings in the Print context and Print sections have an impact on how the Print context is printed. Arranging and selecting sectionsThe Print context can contain one or more Print sections. When generating output from the Print context, each of the Print sections is added to the output document, one after the other in sequence, for each record. The sections are added to the output in the order in which they appear on the Resources pane. This order can be changed; see Print sections. It is also possible to exclude sections from the output, or to include a section only on a certain condition that depends on a value in the data. This can be done using a Control Script; see Control Scripts. Printing on both sidesTo print a Print section on both sides of the paper, that Print section needs to have the Duplex printing option to be enabled; see Enabling double-sided printing. This setting can not be changed in a Job Creation Preset or an Output Creation Preset. Your printer must support duplex for this option to work. Setting the binding style for the Print contextThe Print context , as well as each of the Print sections, can have its own Finishing settings. In printing, Finishing is the way pages are bound together after they have been printed. Which binding styles can be applied depends on the type of printer that you are using. To set the binding style of the Print context:
To set the binding style of a Print section, see Setting the binding style for a Print section. Overriding binding styles in a job creation presetA Job Creation Preset can override the binding styles set for the Print sections and for the Print context as a whole. To bind output in another way than defined in the template’s settings:
Setting the bleedThe bleed is the printable space around a page. It can be used on some printers to ensure that no unprinted edges occur in the final trimmed document. The bleed is one of the settings for a section. See Page settings: size, margins and bleed. |
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