1.4
Table Of Contents
- Table of Contents
- Welcome to PrintShop Mail Connect 1.4.2
- Setup And Configuration
- 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
- Print Manager
- Copyright Information
- Legal Notices and Acknowledgements
l images/ contains the files in the Images folder.
l fonts/ contains the files in the Fonts folder.
l css/ contains the files in the StyleSheets folder.
l js/ contains the files in the JavaScripts folder.
l snippets/ contains the files in the Snippets folder.
When refering to them, normally you would simply use the path directly with the file name. The
structure within those folders is maintained, so if you create a "signatures" folder within the
"Images" folder, you need to use that structure, for example in HTML: <img
src="images/signatures/johnsmith.gif">. In scripts, you can refer to them in the same way, for
example:
results.loadhtml("snippets/en/navbar.html");
See also: "Loading a snippet via a script" on page 205 and "Write your own scripts" on page
195.
Note
When referring to images or fonts from a CSS file, you need to remember that the current path is
css/, meaning you can't just call images/image.jpg. Use a relative path, for example: #header {ī
background-image: url('../images/image.jpg'); }
External resources
External resources are not stored in the template, but on the local hard drive or on a network
drive. They are accessed using a path. The path must have forward slashes, for example <img
src="file:///c:/resources/images/signatures/johnsmith.gif"> or var json_variables = loadjson
("file:///d:/jsondata/variables.json");. The complete syntax is:īfile://<host>/<path>. If the
host isī"localhost", it can be omitted, as it is in the example, resulting inīfile:///<path>. The
empty string is interpreted as `the machine from which the URL is being interpreted'.
Network paths are similar: results.loadhtml
("file://servername/sharename/folder/snippet.html"); (note that in this case file is
followed by 2 slashes only).
Some limitations
l Style sheets cannot refer to external resources.
l The Connect Server user needs access to whichever network path is used. If the network
path is on a domain, the Connect Server must be identified with domain credentials that
have access to the domain resources.
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