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Old November 29th 08, 08:30 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6_outlookexpress
Armando Quintana
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Posts: 2
Default OE6 - - problem ( screenshot photo)

quien eres

"MAP" escribió en el mensaje
...
Hopefully, there is an attached photo, IE6_Print_Preview2.jpg (at 640 x
480 resolution) that show precisely Internet Explorer's Print Preview with
the following options (most as radio buttons) displayed across the top of
the screen . . .

Print
Page Setup ( icon )
First page ( )
Previous ( )
Page number ( a box with 1 shown )
Next ( )
Last ( )
Zoom out ( - icon )
Zoom in (+ icon )
Zoom list ( a pull down box with 75% shown )
Frame print options ( a pull down box with 'As laid out on screen shown -
and this box has two other options that include: 'Only the selected frame'
and 'All frames individually' )
Help
Close

Then, the KEY illustration of my printing problem ALL of the text,
graphics, etc, on the web page are skewed fully to the LEFT 25% of the
screen. In other words, it looks like a column that is 25% of the width
of the browser window, with all information stacked vertically. - just
like it prints.

I now know that this LEFT SHIFTING occurs with the "2 pages per sheet"
setting (or more), or for a single page copy. Regardless of the number of
"Multiple Pages per Sheet" option number and even if this option is NOT
selected (meaning I just print normally, single page), the printing
process generates 3 pages (minimum) for as little as two lines of text,
and for less than a single page of text (in IE6 or OE6) it generates 21+
pages. It generates so my FRICKEN pages because, as I said above and as
this attached photo illustrates, ALL of the text, graphics, etc, on the
web page are skewed fully to the LEFT 25% of the screen. In other words,
it looks like a column that is 25% of the width of the browser window,
with all information stacked vertically. - just like it prints.

And as I replied to Steve Cochran's response . . .

Steve Cochran" wrote in message
...

I don't know how HP modifies things to work with IE, so I can't be of much
help. I would check with HP and see if they can help or if they have an
FAQ
on their website, because its clearly not an OE issue, but rather one
with
how HP and IE interact.

steve


. . . I no longer agree. Why? Because the Print Preview window in
Internet Explorer looks just like the print outs. This FACT proves that
the image is NOT developed by the HP printer, it is generated by some
setting within IE6 or modified in the Registry by some FEEBLE MS Update or
Hotfix.

Marida




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