C
Chris Strug
Hi,
A quick question if I may.
I was wondering if it possible to print from an Access report to a dot
matrix printer "natively" in that text is printed out as "text" (like when
you're prinint from a DOS text editor) rather than as a graphic.
I.e. I have seen Access printing to a dot matrix printer in the past and it
appeared to print the report as a graphic rather than the native text that a
dot matrix prints in - for example when referring to the CPI speed of a
printer. Naturally this was *slow* rather than the furious speeds at which I
have seen dot matrix printers print at when printing text.
I hope I've explained what I mean well enough.
My question is, given a common dot matrix (an Epson for example), is it
posible / trivial to configure a report to print like this. Assuming
pre-printed stationary can I use access to print "text" rather than as a
graphic - is it simply a function of the printer driver or do I have to
configure Access
Any advice and assistance is gratefully received.
Kind thanks
Chris.
A quick question if I may.
I was wondering if it possible to print from an Access report to a dot
matrix printer "natively" in that text is printed out as "text" (like when
you're prinint from a DOS text editor) rather than as a graphic.
I.e. I have seen Access printing to a dot matrix printer in the past and it
appeared to print the report as a graphic rather than the native text that a
dot matrix prints in - for example when referring to the CPI speed of a
printer. Naturally this was *slow* rather than the furious speeds at which I
have seen dot matrix printers print at when printing text.
I hope I've explained what I mean well enough.
My question is, given a common dot matrix (an Epson for example), is it
posible / trivial to configure a report to print like this. Assuming
pre-printed stationary can I use access to print "text" rather than as a
graphic - is it simply a function of the printer driver or do I have to
configure Access
Any advice and assistance is gratefully received.
Kind thanks
Chris.