Perhaps someone here can help me with a printing problem. I have a 27 inch screen and have chosen a scalingfactor to make things bigger. Everything seems to work well with Papyrus, but when I try to print in booklet format, the ok button is hidden below the lower edge of the screen, and I don’t know how to make it visible. I cannot print, as I cannot press the OK button (see picture). The print meny doesn’t adapt to the scaling factor.
Sorry, I couldn’t attach the picture, but you probably understand.
Hi, great to hear from you!
I’m not a 100% sure which menu you’ve got hidden, but here’s an option you can try:
Drag the menu upwards on your screen.
If you grab the top of the menu, you should be able to drag it upwards. If there’s enough space, you can drag the hidden part to be visible.
Here’s a quick video of what I mean:
Let me know if that works out!
Thanks, Sam, for the good tip, but in this case, it was about the ”Special Print Options” dialog box, which is much taller. As you can see in image A, it reaches from edge to edge (top to bottom), and the OK button disappears below the bottom edge, making it impossible to print the document.
Image A
This is because I’m using a display scaling factor of 250% because of my poor eyesight. However, I found a solution, if I reduce the display’s scaling factor by 25% to 225 %, the entire dialog box becomes visible again, and it is still big enough for my eyes.
Image B
One more thing to say, the way Papyrus render fonts is the best I have ever seen anywhere around. It is relaxing for my eyes. I can read text in Papyrus all day long without my eyes getting tired. That’s great.
Glad it got solved!
That’s awesome to hear. Maybe it’s also because your book’s layout is so good!
The picture wrapping is terrific, and it looks like a super cool project!
There are writing programs that automatically wrap text around images, but I want full control myself. And Papyrus not only makes it possible, but also easy. Still, of course, it takes some learning, but after some practice it goes pretty smoothly. Here are some more examples. However, it shouldn’t be overdone.