You’ll also choose Printer under the Halftones popup menu, unless you want to see how your images will look if printed with different halftone frequencies-in that case, you’ll choose Conventional and the Frequency you want. If you’re using a laser printer, you’ll most often use the Composite mode, and then under Setup choose either Grayscale or Composite RGB. The Colors pane lets you control how colors are printed. If your document page is larger than the paper in your printer, you can use the Page Tiling option to split it into pieces that print on multiple sheets that you can tape together. The Pages pane lets you rotate or flip the page on the paper, print multiple pages as small thumbnails on one sheet, and force QuarkXPress to Include blank pages-otherwise, blank pages are ignored when printing. Notice that the preview helpfully warns me that my paper is turned sideways. The Pages pane provides additional page-related options. It tells QuarkXPress that if there is a PostScript error when printing this Layout, then stop printing after the last successful page item, then print the page position and attributes of the page item that caused the error. If you ever have a document that won’t print, the PostScript Error Handler option is incredibly handy. Negative Print reverses blacks and whites, for printing on film. My printer lets me choose a paper size and the position I’d like the page to appear on it, along with the resolution (dpi) I’d like my printer to use. The PPD tells QuarkXPress details about your printer, and what it’s capable of doing. If you’re printing to a PostScript printer, the Device pane lets you choose the appropriate PPD (PostScript Printer Description) file for that printer. When you choose the Fit Print Area option, QuarkXPress calculates the necessary scaling and helpfully displays it the Scale field. Then click any checkboxes that you need: if you’re printing multiple copies, the Collate option lets you print them in collated sets rather than as multiple copies of each page if your Layout has facing pages (as in a magazine), the Spreads option will print those pages side-by-side on your paper if your printer delivers pages to you with the image facing up, use the Back to Front option so the finished job will have your pages in their correct order to shrink or enlarge your page to fit the printable area of the paper in your printer, use the Fit Print Area option. (sorry for the griping, I'm clearly upset at all of this).Making your way down the options list, indicate how many copies you want, which pages to print, and at what scaling percentage. What a way to start off with a brand new computer. (side note of frustration: I searched here on the apple help for various help like "font errors" and all the results are coming up from like 2013, and I can't seem to filter the results to only Catalina, of even results from the last year.)įrustrated and not sure I have any other option but to ignore the warnings and install the fonts and just hope for the best. I can't seem to find any way to "extract" those 6 good ones. I'm also seeing that like in a "suitcase" of perhaps 8 fonts, 6 of them are ok, but two are not. This doesn't seem to be an issue with being corrupt either, I've tried multiple saved copies (backups, etc). and again, they work fine on High Sierra. Repurchasing newer fonts would cost a fortune ($400 for Helvetica!) The fonts I'm using are old, but they were paid for. I'm just sort of at a loss on how to proceed. But when I try to load them, I am getting "font errors" that basically is the red flag warning with the instruction of "do not load them". I'm transitioning from and older computer (El Capitan) where I have old fonts - but they still work for my buddy who is using High Sierra. Just bought a shiny new iMac (with Catalina obviously). Fonts - serious errors - Catalina REALLY frustrated at the moment and posting to see if anyone else has similar issues.
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