On Sat, 5 Jul 2014, Johan Vermeulen wrote:
when going to file-print, options tab, there's a section footers and headers. Put it all to blanco. Maybe that's what you're looking for.
Alas not: the blanks still take up room. What I want should not be hard.
I suppose that if I went to the effort, I could have done a print to file with custom 8.5" x 12.0" imaginary paper. Cutting off the top and bottom 0.5 inch would likely have given me what I wanted. How easily I could automate the process, I do not know.
On Sat, 5 Jul 2014, Always Learning wrote:
On Fri, 2014-07-04 at 17:11 -0500, Michael Hennebry wrote:
I need images. They are done in a way that I cannot copy easily.
Right click, select 'save image as ....'
Then double-click the saved image and print.
Works on some images, but not others.
On Fri, 4 Jul 2014, Frank Cox wrote:
On Fri, 4 Jul 2014 17:11:43 -0500 (CDT) Michael Hennebry wrote:
On Fri, 4 Jul 2014, Frank Cox wrote:
On Fri, 4 Jul 2014 16:58:24 -0500 (CDT) Michael Hennebry wrote:
Is there a way to get firefox to not print all that useful data at the top and bottom of a web page.
I usually highlight what I want, paste it into libreoffice text file, then print that.
I need images. They are done in a way that I cannot copy easily.
Highlight what you want (including the images) and paste it into a libreoffice text document.
Have you tried it? I get the images too when I do that.
No images at all for me. Got some html references.
On Fri, 4 Jul 2014, Devin Reade wrote:
--On Friday, July 04, 2014 05:11:43 PM -0500 Michael Hennebry hennebry@web.cs.ndsu.nodak.edu wrote:
I need images. They are done in a way that I cannot copy easily.
If getting a png of your page or a portion of your page is sufficient, using the ScreenGrab Firefox plugin might be an option. I use that tool to grab screen shots when documenting web applications. It means an extra step of first saving the image via ScreenGrab and then printing it via eog (or whatever), but it's an option.
Don't know about ScreenGrab, but screenshot did the trick.
ScreenGrab allows you to either grab the visible area in the browser, the entire page, or a selected region.
As an afterthought, you might also want to check to see what your page settings are. In particular, make sure you're not trying to print A4 if you need Letter or vice versa. They're sufficiently close to make the difference not obvious on screen, but quite obvious when printing.
That is something I got right. 'Tis a rodeo I've ridden in before.