Thanks for all help!
If the image does not appear correctly in the print preview dialog, that
tells us something very important: there is something wrong with the
document.
Regardless of how it appears in Print Layout View, Print Preview shows you
what is actually about to happen. Print Layout represents Microsoft Word's
"estimate" of what the document will look like, and it's about 98 per cent
accurate.
Print Preview actually sends the document to the printer driver, then
displays what is coming out of the driver instead of sending it to the
printer.
1) Make sure you do not have a white box or square sitting over the bottom
of the page. Maybe a wandering text box or a table or a graphic square,
that the picture has slid behind.
2) Make sure that your footer margin is not set so large that it is
occupying half the page.
Hope this helps
On 3/09/08 5:09 PM, in article
0FEA6BAE-AC1C-482E...@microsoft.com, "David"
<Da...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
--
Don't wait for your answer, click here: http://www.word.mvps.org/
Please reply in the group. Please do NOT email me unless I ask you to.
John McGhie, Microsoft MVP, Word and Word:Mac
Nhulunbuy, NT, Australia. mailto:jo...@mcghie.name
If the problem objects are set to In Line with Text make sure the line
spacing isn't set to Exactly something -- or at leas make sure that the
Exactly value is sufficient to accommodate the size of the objects.
This is something which can occur if the objects are near the top of a page.
HTH |:>)
Bob Jones
[MVP] Office:Mac
On 9/3/08 3:39 AM, in article
0FEA6BAE-AC1C-482E...@microsoft.com, "David"
You have checked your Page Margins? That sounds like you might have the
bottom margin set a bit too high.
Most printers will get within about a centimetre of the edge of the paper
without a problem.
Also: Check that the printer selected in Word is the actual type of printer
being used to print. Word gets its measurements from the printer driver.
And: Check that the paper size selected for the document is the same as the
paper physically loaded in the printer.
And: Go into the footer of the document and make sure there really is
nothing in there. Turn on all your non-printing characters so that you can
see what you are doing: white squares are hard to see against white paper
:-)
Hope this helps
On 4/09/08 12:05 AM, in article
1D9351A9-D9B6-4AFA...@microsoft.com, "David"
<Da...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
--
Thanks anyway, you guys rock :D
Word will always whinge about margins that are set to a figure less than the
printer in use reports that it can print.
If you are printing to PDF, then you need to select a physical printer in
the Print Dialog, to tell Word what internal measurements to set on the job.
You don't have to have the printer even connected (or even own it... But you
do have to have the driver for it installed, to tell Word which one to
imagine...)
Then OS X saves the output that was heading to the physical printer as a
file instead.
So yes, you need to choose a physical printer, and ideally, you need to find
a printer that supports full-bleed printing (and tells Word about it!)
Hope this helps
On 5/09/08 6:24 AM, in article
2740DCAE-663E-463A...@microsoft.com, "David"