1.6
Table Of Contents
- Table of Contents
- Welcome to PrintShop Mail Connect 1.6.1
- Setup And Configuration
- System and Hardware Considerations
- Installation and Activation
- Installation Pre-Requisites
- User accounts and security
- The Importance of User Credentials on Installing and Running PrintShop Mail C...
- Installing PrintShop Mail Connect on Machines without Internet Access
- Installation Wizard
- Running Connect Installer in Silent Mode
- Activating a License
- Migrating to a new computer
- Uninstalling
- The Designer
- Generating output
- Optimizing a template
- Generating Print output
- Saving Printing options in Printing Presets.
- Connect Printing options that cannot be changed from within the Printer Wizard.
- Print Using Standard Print Output Settings
- Print Using Advanced Printer Wizard
- Adding print output models to the Print Wizard
- Splitting printing into more than one file
- Variables available in the Output
- Generating Tags for Image Output
- Generating Email output
- Print Manager
- Release Notes
- Copyright Information
- Legal Notices and Acknowledgments
Example
The following example loads a snippet into a variable and uses the find() and text() commands
of the Designer scripting API.
var labelElm = loadhtml('snippets/label.html');
for(var i = 0; i < record.tables.products.length; i++) {
var label = labelElm.clone();
label.find('@ProductLabel@').text(record.tables.products
[i].ProductDescription);
results.after(label);
}
What's wrong with this code is that it inserts the personalized information within the loop. The
after() command runs as many times as there are records in the detail table 'products'.
The script below is much more efficient: it adds the personalized content to a string called
labelStr and only calls after() after the for loop.
var labelElm = loadhtml('snippets/label.html');
var labelStr = "";
for( var i = 0; i < record.tables.products.length); i++) {
var label = labelElm.clone();
label.find('@ProductLabel@').text(record.tables.products
[i].ProductDescription);
labelStr += label;
}
results.after(labelStr);
Use replace()
When personalizing HTML fragments retrieved from a snippet or from the template itself,
JavaScript's replace() method shows the best performance.
Replace() can only be used on Strings, while the commands loadhtml() and query() return or a
QueryResult, which is a set of strings, like the results object.
A QueryResult allows you to perform DOM manipulations like adding and removing elements,
adding and removing CSS classes etc. When the required manipulations are limited to
find/replace actions, you could change the QueryResult into a string. This allows you to replace
text using the replace() method.
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