1.4
Table Of Contents
- Table of Contents
- Welcome to PlanetPress Connect 1.4.2
- Setup And Configuration
- DataMapper Module
- The Designer
- Mark Position Options
- Additional Text Settings
- Additional Image Settings
- Barcode Options
- Codabar Settings
- Code 128 Settings
- Code 39 Settings
- Additional Datamatrix Settings
- Additional EAN 128 Settings
- Additional EAN 13 Settings
- Additional EAN 8 Settings
- Additional Interleave 2 of 5 Settings
- Additional PDF417 Settings
- Additional QR Code Settings
- Additional UPC A Settings
- Additional UPC E Settings
- Additional OMR Mark Settings
- Keystore
- PDF Signature
- Copyright Information
- Legal Notices and Acknowledgements
Enabling double-sided printing
To print a Print section on both sides of the paper, that Print section needs to have the Duplex
printing option to be enabled.
Note
Your printer must support duplex for this option to work.
To enable duplex printing:
1. On the Resources pane, expand the Print context, right-click the print section and click
Sheet configuration.
2. Check Duplex to enable content to be printed on the back of each sheet.
3. When duplex printing is enabled, further options become available.
l Check Tumble to duplex pages as in a calendar.
l Check Facing pages to have the side margins switched alternately, so that after
printing and binding the pages, they look like in a magazine or book. See "Pages"
below to find out how to set a left and right margin on a page.
l If an odd page count is generated, the last page (which is a duplex backside) has
only the master page. To suppress the master page on this last page and exclude
this page from page counting, check the option Omit Master Page Back in case of
an empty back page.
Pages
Unlike emails and web pages, Print sections can contain multiple pages. Pages are naturally
limited by their size and margins. If the content of a section doesn't fit on one page, the overflow
goes to the next page. This happens automatically, based on the section's page size and
margins; see "Page settings: size, margins and bleed" on the next page.
Although generally the same content elements can be used in all three contexts (see "Content
elements" on page 223), the specific characteristics of pages make it possible to use special
elements, such as page numbers; see "Page numbers" on page 365.
The widow/orphan setting lets you control how many lines of a paragraph stick together, when
content has to move to another page; see "Preventing widows and orphans" on page 365.
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