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Peter Holsberg

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Apr 8, 2012, 2:02:44 PM4/8/12
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My wife complained that when she tried to print a one-page recipe, she
got three pages.

Specifically, it's the recipe at
<http://www.food.com/recipe/grilled-cabbage-41419> but I suspect that
this happens in general.

Is there a simple way to select only what you want to print and then
print it (like the way you can quote only a part of a message you are
replying to in Thunderbird)?

Thanks.

rebro

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Apr 8, 2012, 2:22:02 PM4/8/12
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Try to print it with PDFCreator/PDFArchitect which lets you select the page.
-rebro

Greywolf

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Apr 8, 2012, 2:24:24 PM4/8/12
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No, because of the way web pages are coded to display their contents.
There are many ways to do this. What you see as one page may in fact be
assembled from two or more pages. (That's the simple explanation: the
technical details can be quite complicated). So the Print function spits
out two or more pages.

Relatively simple workaround which I use:

a) Print Preview > check which page(s) you want to print, then Print >
control pane opens > "Print pages x to y" > print it.

This usually works, but sometimes you need to change the print zoom
and/or page orientation to make things fit. You may have to print
different pages at different zoom/orientation for the same reason.

More complicated workaround:

b) Highlight and Copy what you want to print, then Paste into your
favourite word processor. You can do this with the images, too. Then
print from the word processor. Bonus: you can save the recipe for future
reprinting, or attaching to an e-mail, etc.

HTH,
Wolf K.

Peter Holsberg

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Apr 8, 2012, 2:53:04 PM4/8/12
to support...@lists.mozilla.org
Greywolf has written on 4/8/2012 2:24 PM:
> On 08/04/2012 2:02 PM, Peter Holsberg wrote:
>> My wife complained that when she tried to print a one-page recipe, she
>> got three pages.
>>
>> Specifically, it's the recipe at
>> <http://www.food.com/recipe/grilled-cabbage-41419> but I suspect that
>> this happens in general.
>>
>> Is there a simple way to select only what you want to print and then
>> print it (like the way you can quote only a part of a message you are
>> replying to in Thunderbird)?
>>
>> Thanks.
>
> No, because of the way web pages are coded to display their contents.
> There are many ways to do this. What you see as one page may in fact be
> assembled from two or more pages. (That's the simple explanation: the
> technical details can be quite complicated). So the Print function spits
> out two or more pages.
>
> Relatively simple workaround which I use:
>
> a) Print Preview > check which page(s) you want to print

I'm not offered a choice of pages.

> then Print > control pane opens > "Print pages x to y" > print it.

That seems to work.

> This usually works, but sometimes you need to change the print zoom
> and/or page orientation to make things fit. You may have to print
> different pages at different zoom/orientation for the same reason.
>
> More complicated workaround:
>
> b) Highlight and Copy what you want to print, then Paste into your
> favourite word processor. You can do this with the images, too. Then
> print from the word processor. Bonus: you can save the recipe for future
> reprinting, or attaching to an e-mail, etc.

Good idea.

rebro

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Apr 8, 2012, 3:30:47 PM4/8/12
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Am 08.04.2012 20:02, schrieb Peter Holsberg:
BTW in the case of <http://www.food.com/recipe/grilled-cabbage-41419>
there is an embedded *Print Recipe* tool which extracts the recipe from
the surrounding cotext.

Good Guy

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Apr 8, 2012, 4:19:08 PM4/8/12
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Peter Holsberg wrote:
ou want to print
>
> I'm not offered a choice of pages.
>
>
> That seems to work.
>

>> More complicated workaround:
>>
>> b) Highlight and Copy what you want to print, then Paste into your
>> favourite word processor. You can do this with the images, too. Then
>> print from the word processor. Bonus: you can save the recipe for future
>> reprinting, or attaching to an e-mail, etc.
>
> Good idea.

How about doing Print Selection? In (b) above, you have high-lighted
the section to print and so all it remains is go:

File >> Print >> Selection

The "Selection" is the radio button on Print Dialog window.

Good luck.

--
Good Guy
Website: http://mytaxsite.co.uk
Website: http://html-css.co.uk
Forums: http://mytaxsite.boardhost.com
Email: http://mytaxsite.co.uk/contact-us

Tom J

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Apr 8, 2012, 4:25:59 PM4/8/12
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Highlight and copy to word processor is the method I have used for years
when printing parts of web pages and parts of emails. It has become 1st
nature!!

Tom J


Peter Holsberg

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Apr 8, 2012, 4:54:22 PM4/8/12
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rebro has written on 4/8/2012 3:30 PM:
One would think. However, the result is 4 pages -- the actual recipe
plus all the comments.

Peter Holsberg

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Apr 8, 2012, 4:57:21 PM4/8/12
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Good Guy has written on 4/8/2012 4:19 PM:
>
> How about doing Print Selection? In (b) above, you have high-lighted
> the section to print and so all it remains is go:
>
> File >> Print >> Selection
>
> The "Selection" is the radio button on Print Dialog window.

Not bad! The resulting typeface is a little small.

I guess I had never seen "Selection" before!

Gnus2Me

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Apr 8, 2012, 7:18:42 PM4/8/12
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Check out "Printliminator" here:
http://css-tricks.com/examples/ThePrintliminator/

You can easily eliminate anything you don't want to print, print, then
restore the page to it's original state. Very handy, and FREE! Works
with Firefox 11.

Gualtier Malde

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Apr 8, 2012, 8:11:59 PM4/8/12
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On 4/8/2012 11:02 AM, Peter Holsberg wrote:
On my ftp site: ftp://ftp.eskimo.com/u/c/chuckb/download/ find "Cute PDF"
which, when installed, is a virtual printer. I use it to get crap that comes
with receipts and such. It trims it down to the actual page(s) you want with
information.

Alternatively, get Irfanview. Open it and press "C" and you can select anything
on any screen and print it to a .jpg, .png, or .pdf file. I use that a whole lot.

gm

Beauregard T. Shagnasty

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Apr 8, 2012, 8:14:05 PM4/8/12
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Peter Holsberg wrote:

> My wife complained that when she tried to print a one-page recipe, she
> got three pages.

The reason for that is, while the web page is "one page long", it takes
(in your case) three pieces of paper to show it.

Web pages do not have page breaks. They may go on for dozens of pieces of
paper.

--
-bts
-This space for rent, but the price is high

Peter Holsberg

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Apr 8, 2012, 8:23:21 PM4/8/12
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Beauregard T. Shagnasty has written on 4/8/2012 8:14 PM:
> Peter Holsberg wrote:
>
>> My wife complained that when she tried to print a one-page recipe, she
>> got three pages.
>
> The reason for that is, while the web page is "one page long", it takes
> (in your case) three pieces of paper to show it.
>
> Web pages do not have page breaks. They may go on for dozens of pieces of
> paper.

But the printer does, and labels "pages" 1, 2, 3, etc.

Beauregard T. Shagnasty

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Apr 8, 2012, 10:19:10 PM4/8/12
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Of course. But the printer is merely measuring out some 11 inches of
vertical content from that, say, 33 inch long web page. This relationship
between web page length and the printed rendition of it has been this way
since the WWW began. A web page is "one page long."

For a recipe such as these cabbages, your best bet is to select/copy only
the actual recipe parts from the web page, and paste it into a text
editor (Notepad or similar) and print from there. You can even arrange
the formatting to a better view. In fact, I do this for my wife on a
somewhat regular basis. The last one was Mexican lasagna.

And it always looks better when printed out in plain text.

rebro

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Apr 9, 2012, 6:06:07 AM4/9/12
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Strange. In my case (FF 11) it's just two pages: page 1 = "About This
Recipe" and "Directions"; page 2 = "Nutrition Facts" and no further
additions.
-rebro

Bill Braun

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Apr 9, 2012, 9:48:51 AM4/9/12
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Use Print Preview, see what page the actual recipe is on, print only
that page.

Bill

Axel Grude

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Apr 9, 2012, 10:16:41 AM4/9/12
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Hi Peter,
I quite like using the extension Nuke Anything Enhanced for this:

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/nuke-anything-enhanced/?src=ss

right-click the offending parts of the page and choose either "remove selection" or
"remove this object". Or highlight what you want to print, and choose "remove
everything else". Then click on Print preview to make sure of the result. The
advantage of this method is that you can keep formatting / pictures etc. much easier
and it is faster than pasting to a word processor (which will usually have to download
web content / images freshly).

Once you get used to the concept of being able to modify web pages like this you will
quite start to miss it on other browsers.

PS: There is also a version that makes these sort of changes permanently, it is called
R.I.P. (Remove It Permanently).

hth
Axel


Axel Grude

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Apr 9, 2012, 10:19:21 AM4/9/12
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Also, do not forget that most modern web pages have a special style sheet (or a set of
style rules) for printing, with which they can hide or reformat their content. You can
try that out on Wikipedia.

So the only way to get a true picture of what your printout might look like is via
print preview.

Axel

Luke

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Apr 9, 2012, 10:30:52 AM4/9/12
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On Sun, 08 Apr 2012 16:54:22 -0400, Peter Holsberg <pj...@pobox.com>
wrote:
After clicking "Print Recipe" uncheck everything under "Include These"
on the right side (optionally also set print and/or text size and
check "Remember Settings"), click "Print" and - ta da! - you get one
page.

--
Luke

Beauregard T. Shagnasty

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Apr 9, 2012, 10:38:28 AM4/9/12
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Axel Grude wrote:

> Also, do not forget that most modern web pages have a special style
> sheet (or a set of style rules) for printing, with which they can hide
> or reformat their content.

In my experience, most web authors do not know of stylesheets
specifically for printing. It's a rare case where one is found. I just
looked at nearly a dozen news sites, and only the Wall Street Journal has
one. The bbc.co.uk and wired.com sites have 'media="screen,print"'
stylesheets, which defeats the purpose, of course. I wish more webmasters
knew how to use CSS properly.

Personally, I have been using 'media="print"' stylesheets for a decade or
more.

Arne Hamre

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Apr 9, 2012, 11:37:12 AM4/9/12
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On 09.04.2012 16:16, Axel Grude wrote:
> On 08/04/12 19:02, Peter Holsberg wrote:
>> My wife complained that when she tried to print a one-page recipe, she
>> got three pages.
>>
>> Specifically, it's the recipe at
>> <http://www.food.com/recipe/grilled-cabbage-41419> but I suspect that
>> this happens in general.
>>
>> Is there a simple way to select only what you want to print and then
>> print it (like the way you can quote only a part of a message you are
>> replying to in Thunderbird)?
>>
>> Thanks.

There is an extension called aardvark, found at
http://karmatics.com/aardvark/
I use it frequently, e.g. for picking out and printing the revelant
parts of a TV programme listing.

Firefox claims that it is not compatible with FF 11.x, but it works
nontheless.

--
Arne Hamre

Mozilla Thunderbird 11.0
Mozilla Firefox 11.0

cwdjrxyz

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Apr 9, 2012, 4:06:17 PM4/9/12
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I have been using the free Gadwin Systems PrintScreen for many years.
Once installed, a single key click activates it. You then select the
rectangle that just includes what you wish to save. Then you capture
the selected area to the printer, a file, or both to save. That is
all. You capture both the text and any images. For printing out, I use
a black-and-white laser printer which now can be had for a very low
cost and can use very cheap paper with good results. If you demand
color prints you can use an ink jet or color laser printer at more
cost.

Peter Holsberg

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Apr 10, 2012, 5:06:36 PM4/10/12
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cwdjrxyz has written on 4/9/2012 4:06 PM:
> On Apr 8, 1:02 pm, Peter Holsberg <pj...@pobox.com> wrote:
>> My wife complained that when she tried to print a one-page recipe, she
>> got three pages.
>>
>> Specifically, it's the recipe at
>> <http://www.food.com/recipe/grilled-cabbage-41419> but I suspect that
>> this happens in general.
>>
>> Is there a simple way to select only what you want to print and then
>> print it (like the way you can quote only a part of a message you are
>> replying to in Thunderbird)?
>
> I have been using the free Gadwin Systems PrintScreen for many years.
> Once installed, a single key click activates it. You then select the
> rectangle that just includes what you wish to save.

Can you extend the rectangle beyond what is currently on the screen?

Peter Holsberg

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Apr 10, 2012, 9:14:28 PM4/10/12
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Arne Hamre has written on 4/9/2012 11:37 AM:
> On 09.04.2012 16:16, Axel Grude wrote:
>> On 08/04/12 19:02, Peter Holsberg wrote:
>>> My wife complained that when she tried to print a one-page recipe, she
>>> got three pages.
>>>
>>> Specifically, it's the recipe at
>>> <http://www.food.com/recipe/grilled-cabbage-41419> but I suspect that
>>> this happens in general.
>>>
>>> Is there a simple way to select only what you want to print and then
>>> print it (like the way you can quote only a part of a message you are
>>> replying to in Thunderbird)?
>>>
>>> Thanks.
>
> There is an extension called aardvark, found at
> http://karmatics.com/aardvark/

I clicked on "Install Now" and a new tab opened.

Shouldn't there be more?

cwdjrxyz

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Apr 11, 2012, 1:19:33 AM4/11/12
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No. But you can scroll the page and select another area of it to copy.
Also if you are set up to capture in pdf format, you can capture many
areas in pdf and then print out the complete pdf document. Also some
cheap newer laser printers now allow you to print on both sides of the
paper, which is very handy in some cases.

Arne Hamre

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Apr 11, 2012, 4:24:33 AM4/11/12
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I was too quick there. Nowasdays it seems AARDVARK is a bookmarklet
(which I have not used). It was (and is still if you can find it) an
extension AARDVARK.xpi which still works, even if Firefox says it doesn't.

You could try
<http://www.findthatfile.com/search-380972-hEXE/software-tools-download-aardvark-xpi.htm>

Dr J R Stockton

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Apr 11, 2012, 3:40:17 PM4/11/12
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In mozilla.support.firefox message <mailman.19992.1333908230.31724.suppo
rt-fi...@lists.mozilla.org>, Sun, 8 Apr 2012 14:02:44, Peter Holsberg
<pj...@pobox.com> posted:

>My wife complained that when she tried to print a one-page recipe, she
>got three pages.
>
>Specifically, it's the recipe at
><http://www.food.com/recipe/grilled-cabbage-41419> but I suspect that
>this happens in general.
>
>Is there a simple way to select only what you want to print and then
>print it (like the way you can quote only a part of a message you are
>replying to in Thunderbird)?


For Windows : Scroll and zoom or unzoom to make what you want to print
appear in the one window. Do Alt-PrtScn, open Paint, edit out what is
not required, edit in reference information such as URL and datestamp.
When OK in File, Print Preview ... print.

Not necessarily so convenient; but reliable if the printer resolution is
good enough.

--
(c) John Stockton, nr London, UK. ?@merlyn.demon.co.uk Turnpike v6.05.
Website <http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/> - w. FAQish topics, links, acronyms
PAS EXE etc. : <http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/programs/> - see in 00index.htm
Dates - miscdate.htm estrdate.htm js-dates.htm pas-time.htm critdate.htm etc.

Axel Grude

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Apr 11, 2012, 6:55:05 PM4/11/12
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Aardvark uses keyboard shortcuts and requires a minimum of some html knowledge.

Nuke Anything enhanced only needs a right mouse button:

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/nuke-anything-enhanced/?src=ss

you go figure which one is easier to use.

Peter Holsberg

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Apr 11, 2012, 7:30:44 PM4/11/12
to Firefox help community
Axel Grude has written on 4/11/2012 6:55 PM:
Sarcasm aside, it looks like one selects what one wants to print,
right-clicks the page, selects Remove everything else and then prints.
Is that what you mean?

Dave Symes

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Apr 12, 2012, 1:08:32 AM4/12/12
to
In article
<mailman.20380.133410688...@lists.mozilla.org>,
Peter Holsberg <pj...@pobox.com> wrote:
> Arne Hamre has written on 4/9/2012 11:37 AM:

[Snippy]

> > There is an extension called aardvark, found at
> > http://karmatics.com/aardvark/

> I clicked on "Install Now" and a new tab opened.

> Shouldn't there be more?

I was wondering about that myself, as you've noted, Clicking "Install Now"
does nothing except opening a new blank Tab.

Thereafter, there is nothing Aardvark installed anywhere, and no the
supposed keys for the actions also does nothing.

So something is not right.

And we are now a bit past April the 1st, so I wonder what is the answer?

Dave

--

Dave Triffid

md5

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Apr 12, 2012, 1:15:00 AM4/12/12
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"Peter Holsberg" <pj...@pobox.com> wrote in message
news:mailman.19992.133390823...@lists.mozilla.org...
> My wife complained that when she tried to print a one-page recipe, she
> got three pages.
>
> Specifically, it's the recipe at
> <http://www.food.com/recipe/grilled-cabbage-41419> but I suspect that
> this happens in general.
>
> Is there a simple way to select only what you want to print and then
> print it (like the way you can quote only a part of a message you are
> replying to in Thunderbird)?
>

Hello, Peter. Maybe I am misunderstanding the problem. When I simply select
only a part of a page and use File > Print, my print dialogue shows me
plainly three options of what Print range to make:
All, Pages x to y, or Selection. So, using the third option does just
exactly what you asked for. Does your FF not show the same choices too?


Peter Holsberg

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Apr 12, 2012, 3:43:05 AM4/12/12
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md5 has written on 4/12/2012 1:15 AM:
See previous explanation of "pages".

md5

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Apr 12, 2012, 2:12:32 PM4/12/12
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"Peter Holsberg" <pj...@pobox.com> wrote in message
news:mailman.20707.133421660...@lists.mozilla.org...
> md5 has written on 4/12/2012 1:15 AM:
>>
>> Hello, Peter. Maybe I am misunderstanding the problem. When I simply
>> select
>> only a part of a page and use File > Print, my print dialogue shows me
>> plainly three options of what Print range to make:
>> All, Pages x to y, or Selection. So, using the third option does just
>> exactly what you asked for. Does your FF not show the same choices too?
>
> See previous explanation of "pages".

Peter, the previous dialogue is desultory. If you are still having an issue,
please describe it precisely. Thanks.


Peter Holsberg

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Apr 12, 2012, 3:07:04 PM4/12/12
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md5 has written on 4/12/2012 2:12 PM:
Taken care of.

Bob Bainbridge

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Apr 12, 2012, 8:06:59 PM4/12/12
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There is a free download called PRINTLIMINATTOR that will reside in your
browser bookmarks. It can be used to delete everything on the page
that you don't want to print.

Bob B.

Peter Holsberg

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Apr 12, 2012, 8:21:19 PM4/12/12
to Firefox help community
Bob Bainbridge has written on 4/12/2012 8:06 PM:
The Nuke Anything Enhanced extension does it better, IMO.

Jay Garcia

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Apr 12, 2012, 8:31:46 PM4/12/12
to
On 12.04.2012 19:21, Peter Holsberg wrote:
But the best of all:

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/pixlr-grabber/

Been using it since it's beginning and after trying a handful of addons
I found this one is the very best.


--
Jay Garcia - www.ufaq.org - Netscape - Firefox - SeaMonkey - Thunderbird
Mozilla Contribute Coordinator Team - www.mozilla.org/contribute/
Mozilla Mozillian Member - www.mozillians.org
Mozilla Contributor Member - www.mozilla.org/credits/

Peter Holsberg

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Apr 13, 2012, 4:27:37 AM4/13/12
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Jay Garcia has written on 4/12/2012 8:31 PM:
It's only shortcoming is that it cannot scroll to capture what is not
immediately visible (unless one wants the entire page which is not the
case here).


Dave Symes

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Apr 15, 2012, 3:18:49 PM4/15/12
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So...
I still have no idea why clicking the "Install Now" on the Aardvark page
does nothing except open a new blank Tab.

It sure as hell doesn't install or do anything else.

So how exactly is this Bookmarklet thing supposed to get installed and
thereafter function?

Thanks
Dave

Yes I know about the key actions as I've reverted to the Addon version.
D.

--

Dave Triffid

clarjon1

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Apr 15, 2012, 4:16:04 PM4/15/12
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If it's a bookmarklet, i think you have to drag and drop it to your
bookmarks toolbar.

nobody

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Apr 15, 2012, 6:02:27 PM4/15/12
to
Out of all the people responding, this poster (Luke) is the only one who
got it right. For many websites, this one included, the site author
provides a way (and often the best way) to print just the operative info
from the page. It is often worth looking around the page for printing
instructions...

Peter Holsberg

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Apr 15, 2012, 7:58:53 PM4/15/12
to Firefox help community
clarjon1 has written on 4/15/2012 4:16 PM:
> On Sun, Apr 15, 2012 at 3:18 PM, Dave Symes <da...@triffid.co.uk> wrote:
> If it's a bookmarklet, i think you have to drag and drop it to your
> bookmarks toolbar.

If you drag Install Now to your bookmarks bar and click it, it pops a window that tells you drag Aardvark to your
bookmarks bar. However, clicking Aardvark does nothing. <sigh>

Peter Holsberg

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Apr 15, 2012, 8:03:58 PM4/15/12
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nobody has written on 4/15/2012 6:02 PM:
Yes, it is. I wonder how many site managers are so thoughtful! I tried a few recipe sites and am happy to say that they
all are!! :-)


Dave Symes

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Apr 16, 2012, 2:01:37 AM4/16/12
to
In article
<mailman.21387.133453436...@lists.mozilla.org>,
Peter Holsberg <pj...@pobox.com> wrote:
Davee Wrote:
> >
> >> So... I still have no idea why clicking the "Install Now" on the
> >> Aardvark page does nothing except open a new blank Tab.
> >>
> >> It sure as hell doesn't install or do anything else.
> >>
> >> So how exactly is this Bookmarklet thing supposed to get installed
> >> and thereafter function?
> >>
> >> Thanks Dave
> >>
> >> Yes I know about the key actions as I've reverted to the Addon
> >> version. D.
> >>
> > If it's a bookmarklet, i think you have to drag and drop it to your
> > bookmarks toolbar.

> If you drag Install Now to your bookmarks bar and click it, it pops a
> window that tells you drag Aardvark to your bookmarks bar. However,
> clicking Aardvark does nothing. <sigh>

Okay I'll try it all again.
Indeedy, no problem getting the book mark "Aardvark" showing, but as you
say it does nothing.

Pah!
Back to the Addon version.

Thanks
Dave

--

Dave Triffid

Swifty

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Apr 16, 2012, 2:19:11 AM4/16/12
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On Sun, 15 Apr 2012 20:03:58 -0400, Peter Holsberg <pj...@pobox.com>
wrote:

>Yes, it is. I wonder how many site managers are so thoughtful!

I'm thoughtful enough that, if I include a link which says something
like "click here", I arrange for the relevant section to be excluded
from printout (however achieved). So perhaps that's one.

--
Steve Swift
http://www.swiftys.org.uk/swifty.html
http://www.ringers.org.uk

Peter Holsberg

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Apr 16, 2012, 5:25:25 AM4/16/12
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Swifty has written on 4/16/2012 2:19 AM:
> On Sun, 15 Apr 2012 20:03:58 -0400, Peter Holsberg <pj...@pobox.com>
> wrote:
>
>>Yes, it is. I wonder how many site managers are so thoughtful!
>
> I'm thoughtful enough that, if I include a link which says something
> like "click here", I arrange for the relevant section to be excluded
> from printout (however achieved). So perhaps that's one.

One would prefer that the IRrelevant section be excluded! :-)

Arne Hamre

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Apr 16, 2012, 5:41:44 AM4/16/12
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Repeating myself - from 11th April:

Axel Grude

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Apr 16, 2012, 1:13:10 PM4/16/12
to
Yes, except you right-click the selection, and select "Remove everything else". And it
wasn't meant sarcastic, a lot of people prefer keyboard commands, so Aardvaark is
better for them. The main problem with key commands is that they are hard to remember
for the casual user (plus potential conflicts with other Add-Ons).

Aardvark is slightly more intuitive on highlighting what is removed, but usually Nuke
Anything is pretty quick when used with "Undo last remove", in case wanted stuff gets
deleted accidentally.



Peter Holsberg

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Apr 16, 2012, 7:15:56 PM4/16/12
to Firefox help community
Axel Grude has written on 4/16/2012 1:13 PM:
"You go figure out which one is easier to use" sounded sarcastic me.


Anthony Buckland

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Apr 17, 2012, 3:06:11 PM4/17/12
to
On 08/04/2012 11:02 AM, Peter Holsberg wrote:
> My wife complained that when she tried to print a one-page recipe, she
> got three pages.
>
> Specifically, it's the recipe at
> <http://www.food.com/recipe/grilled-cabbage-41419> but I suspect that
> this happens in general.
>
> Is there a simple way to select only what you want to print and then
> print it (like the way you can quote only a part of a message you are
> replying to in Thunderbird)?
>
> Thanks.

I see this thread has been going for a while, and the OP
may have solved the problem, but nobody specifically
mentioned the solution I use. Display what you want to print,
PrtSc, open a graphics program (I use Corel PhotoPaint, but
there are plenty of others), select the portion of the image
that you want to see, copy, make a new image from the copied
portion, print it. Using a graphics program lets you perform
other useful manipulations such as resizing or zapping unwanted
sections of the image.

Dave Symes

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Apr 17, 2012, 4:16:19 PM4/17/12
to
In article
<mailman.21944.133469111...@lists.mozilla.org>,
Peter Holsberg <pj...@pobox.com> wrote:
[Snippy]
> Ashampoo Snap 4 (and probably although I have not upgraded) will scroll
> and capture. I do not know of any others.

Snagit (Recent versions) can auto scroll and capture a whole page.

Dave

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Dave Triffid
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