2018.2

Table Of Contents
documents and splitting the print jobs into smaller print jobs, as well as the more standard
selection of printing options, such as binding, OMR markings and the like.
See "Job Creation Presets" on page583 and "Output Creation Settings" on page594 for more
details.
Print settings in a template
There are a number of settings for the Print context and Print sections that have an impact on
how Print sections are printed, which cannot be made in the Print Wizard or influenced through
either a Job Creation Preset or an Output Creation Preset. They are made in and saved with
the template.
These settings are:
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Duplex printing. Duplex printing has to be enabled for a Print section, in order to print
that section on both sides of the paper. The same applies to Mixplex printing.
See "Enabling double-sided printing (Duplex, Mixplex)" on page127.
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Finishing. The 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
are printed.
See "Setting the binding style for the Print context" on page117 and "Setting the binding
style for a Print section" on page126.
Also see "Finishing Options" on page592 for an explanation of the Finishing options.
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Bleed. The margins around a page are called the Bleed. It can be used on some printers
to ensure that no unprinted edges occur in the final trimmed document.
See "Page settings: size, margins and bleed" on page129.
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Black overprint. The option to print small black text over other colors is referred to as
black overprint. See "Overprint and black overprint" on page118.
If you want to generate Print output via an automated process, this means that you have to
design a process in the Workflow configuration tool.
Aborting content creation
You may want the content creation process to be aborted in certain situations; for example,
when a template script fails to load remote content. To abort the content creation process, you
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