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Groups > comp.sys.mac.system > #23585 > unrolled thread

Printing wide reports within OS X

Started byGary <gary_w1@hotline.com>
First post2012-04-10 08:43 -0400
Last post2012-04-10 18:14 -0400
Articles 4 — 4 participants

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  Printing wide reports within OS X Gary <gary_w1@hotline.com> - 2012-04-10 08:43 -0400
    Re: Printing wide reports within OS X J.J. O'Shea <try.not.to@but.see.sig> - 2012-04-10 11:52 -0400
    Re: Printing wide reports within OS X dorayme <dorayme@optusnet.com.au> - 2012-04-11 07:08 +1000
    Re: Printing wide reports within OS X JF Mezei <jfmezei.spamnot@vaxination.ca> - 2012-04-10 18:14 -0400

#23585 — Printing wide reports within OS X

FromGary <gary_w1@hotline.com>
Date2012-04-10 08:43 -0400
SubjectPrinting wide reports within OS X
Message-ID<4f842ae4$0$23347$c37e2936@unlimited.newshosting.com>
I have a few tax reports generated from Quicken that I’d like to be 
able to print. The difficulty is that the reports are fairly wide (one 
is 101 cols, the other is 114 cols) and wouldn’t make much sense if the 
lines broke.  So I want to be able to decrease the font size until the 
report fit within the appropriate margins.  

Do you know of anything within OS X that can help me do this efficiently?

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#23587

FromJ.J. O'Shea <try.not.to@but.see.sig>
Date2012-04-10 11:52 -0400
Message-ID<jm1l0k02j0c@news3.newsguy.com>
In reply to#23585
On Tue, 10 Apr 2012 08:43:16 -0400, Gary wrote
(in article <4f842ae4$0$23347$c37e2936@unlimited.newshosting.com>):

> I have a few tax reports generated from Quicken that I’d like to be 
> able to print. The difficulty is that the reports are fairly wide (one 
> is 101 cols, the other is 114 cols) and wouldn’t make much sense if the 
> lines broke.  So I want to be able to decrease the font size until the 
> report fit within the appropriate margins.  
> 
> Do you know of anything within OS X that can help me do this efficiently?
> 

Export 'em to Excel. Alternatively, print to PDF and adjust the size in 
Acrobat or Reader.

-- 
email to oshea dot j dot j at gmail dot com.

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#23595

Fromdorayme <dorayme@optusnet.com.au>
Date2012-04-11 07:08 +1000
Message-ID<dorayme-408F67.07080611042012@news.albasani.net>
In reply to#23585
In article <4f842ae4$0$23347$c37e2936@unlimited.newshosting.com>,
 Gary <gary_w1@hotline.com> wrote:

> I have a few tax reports generated from Quicken that I’d like to be 
> able to print. The difficulty is that the reports are fairly wide (one 
> is 101 cols, the other is 114 cols) and wouldn’t make much sense if the 
> lines broke.  So I want to be able to decrease the font size until the 
> report fit within the appropriate margins.  
> 
> Do you know of anything within OS X that can help me do this efficiently?

Have you tried printing landscape? If printing on more than one sheet 
and sticking or reading them side by side will not do, you can often 
print with a scale to fit page setting in your printer software 
dialogs. 

If all else fails, there is the simple enough way of screenshoting the 
wide reports (if they fit on your screen) and reducing the size of the 
resulting pic (any img software will do this easily) and printing 
this.

-- 
dorayme

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#23603

FromJF Mezei <jfmezei.spamnot@vaxination.ca>
Date2012-04-10 18:14 -0400
Message-ID<4f84b0ce$0$20228$c3e8da3$9deca2c3@news.astraweb.com>
In reply to#23585
Gary wrote:

> is 101 cols, the other is 114 cols) and wouldn’t make much sense if the 
> lines broke.  


Open every possible option in the print dialog box from the application
and look for "scale" or "shrink to fit" options. This would get the
application to generate the report properly.

For a landscape letter, assuming you have 10.5" of printable space,
fitting 105 characters requires you use 10 caracters per inch. This was
standard printing pitch on dot matrix and other type of impact printers.

10cpi translates to 10 characters per 72 points, which would mean 7.2
points per character. (width).

If your application allows you to select the font and font size for the
output, then try an 8 point font or if that is still too big, 7 points.



Failing this,  select legal paper in ladscape mode, and then save the
output to PDF from the application.   And ether the Adobe PDF reader of
the Preview applications print the .pdf on landscape letter, and select
the "shrink to fit" or appropriate scaling factor to fit within the
landscape letter format.

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