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#1
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![]() Howdy, I use Word 2000 to print labels to an OKI pin printer. I am getting the error: "The margins of section 1 are set outside the printable area of the page..." I understand what that error means, but am baffled still: I have the driver for the printer set so that there is NO non-printable area. That is, it is set to allow every part of the label to receive text. Given that, where is Word getting the information about non-printable area, and how can I tell it to use the proper data so that the errors will be suppressed? Very sincere thanks, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#2
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Ken: Word uses tables to set up labels (all that I've ever seen, at least).
The tables borders are likely outside the printable area. Tables, by default, have almost a tenth-inch top and left margin on the cells, so while the table cells might be outside that printable area, your data may not be, and probably isn't. Except for the annoyance of it, I would ignore it. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com "Kenneth" wrote in message ... Howdy, I use Word 2000 to print labels to an OKI pin printer. I am getting the error: "The margins of section 1 are set outside the printable area of the page..." I understand what that error means, but am baffled still: I have the driver for the printer set so that there is NO non-printable area. That is, it is set to allow every part of the label to receive text. Given that, where is Word getting the information about non-printable area, and how can I tell it to use the proper data so that the errors will be suppressed? Very sincere thanks, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#3
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On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 18:08:52 -0400, "Anne Troy"
wrote: "Kenneth" wrote in message .. . Howdy, I use Word 2000 to print labels to an OKI pin printer. I am getting the error: "The margins of section 1 are set outside the printable area of the page..." I understand what that error means, but am baffled still: I have the driver for the printer set so that there is NO non-printable area. That is, it is set to allow every part of the label to receive text. Given that, where is Word getting the information about non-printable area, and how can I tell it to use the proper data so that the errors will be suppressed? Very sincere thanks, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." Ken: Word uses tables to set up labels (all that I've ever seen, at least). The tables borders are likely outside the printable area. Tables, by default, have almost a tenth-inch top and left margin on the cells, so while the table cells might be outside that printable area, your data may not be, and probably isn't. Except for the annoyance of it, I would ignore it. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com Hi Anne, I appreciate your comments, but they do not apply to my situation: I do not use Word tables for my labels. Instead, I have a Word Template that reflects the label size that I need. Occasionally, I open a DOC based on that template, manually type in the necessary text, and print a single label. More typically, I print labels from my database. I click on an address for which I need a label, and it dumps the data to a file, launches Word, does a merge, and prints the label(s) I need. This all worked like a charm until I had to revert to an earlier Registry hive (don't ask...G) and now, for some reason, I have the margin-printable area problem I described. Thanks again, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#4
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Ken: If you used a template that CAME with Word, then I assure you that the
odds are 99% that it was created using tables. Go to Table--Show gridlines. Having the driver for the printer doesn't guarantee "non-printable areas". Virtually all printers have non-printable areas. See: http://www.officearticles.com/word/t...osoft_word.htm Perhaps that will shed some light. I don't know. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com "Kenneth" wrote in message ... On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 18:08:52 -0400, "Anne Troy" wrote: "Kenneth" wrote in message . .. Howdy, I use Word 2000 to print labels to an OKI pin printer. I am getting the error: "The margins of section 1 are set outside the printable area of the page..." I understand what that error means, but am baffled still: I have the driver for the printer set so that there is NO non-printable area. That is, it is set to allow every part of the label to receive text. Given that, where is Word getting the information about non-printable area, and how can I tell it to use the proper data so that the errors will be suppressed? Very sincere thanks, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." Ken: Word uses tables to set up labels (all that I've ever seen, at least). The tables borders are likely outside the printable area. Tables, by default, have almost a tenth-inch top and left margin on the cells, so while the table cells might be outside that printable area, your data may not be, and probably isn't. Except for the annoyance of it, I would ignore it. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com Hi Anne, I appreciate your comments, but they do not apply to my situation: I do not use Word tables for my labels. Instead, I have a Word Template that reflects the label size that I need. Occasionally, I open a DOC based on that template, manually type in the necessary text, and print a single label. More typically, I print labels from my database. I click on an address for which I need a label, and it dumps the data to a file, launches Word, does a merge, and prints the label(s) I need. This all worked like a charm until I had to revert to an earlier Registry hive (don't ask...G) and now, for some reason, I have the margin-printable area problem I described. Thanks again, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#5
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On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 19:33:33 -0400, "Anne Troy"
wrote: "Kenneth" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 18:08:52 -0400, "Anne Troy" wrote: "Kenneth" wrote in message ... Howdy, I use Word 2000 to print labels to an OKI pin printer. I am getting the error: "The margins of section 1 are set outside the printable area of the page..." I understand what that error means, but am baffled still: I have the driver for the printer set so that there is NO non-printable area. That is, it is set to allow every part of the label to receive text. Given that, where is Word getting the information about non-printable area, and how can I tell it to use the proper data so that the errors will be suppressed? Very sincere thanks, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." Ken: Word uses tables to set up labels (all that I've ever seen, at least). The tables borders are likely outside the printable area. Tables, by default, have almost a tenth-inch top and left margin on the cells, so while the table cells might be outside that printable area, your data may not be, and probably isn't. Except for the annoyance of it, I would ignore it. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com Hi Anne, I appreciate your comments, but they do not apply to my situation: I do not use Word tables for my labels. Instead, I have a Word Template that reflects the label size that I need. Occasionally, I open a DOC based on that template, manually type in the necessary text, and print a single label. More typically, I print labels from my database. I click on an address for which I need a label, and it dumps the data to a file, launches Word, does a merge, and prints the label(s) I need. This all worked like a charm until I had to revert to an earlier Registry hive (don't ask...G) and now, for some reason, I have the margin-printable area problem I described. Thanks again, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." Ken: If you used a template that CAME with Word, then I assure you that the odds are 99% that it was created using tables. Go to Table--Show gridlines. Having the driver for the printer doesn't guarantee "non-printable areas". Virtually all printers have non-printable areas. See: http://www.officearticles.com/word/t...osoft_word.htm Perhaps that will shed some light. I don't know. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com Hi Anne, I did not start with an existing Word Template. I created the one I use, from scratch. There are no tables involved in this issue. Really...g I am confused by your comment that "Having the driver for the printer doesn't guarantee "non-printable areas". Virtually all printers have non-printable areas." because I am not suggesting that there is no non-printable area because I "have" the driver for the printer. Of course I have the driver for the printer. Without that, I could not use the printer. The driver I have allows me to set the label to have no non-printable area. It would not allow me to use that setting were I attempting to apply it to letter size paper.. So, (and of course I may be wrong) I understand that (except at the maximum size allowed by the printer) the issue of non-printable area depends not on the characteristics of the printer (hardware) but rather on the characteristics of the driver (software.) So, suppose for example, that we are talking about a printer that can handle at maximum a standard letter size sheet. It is most unlikely (as you have correctly described) that one could print right up to the edges of the paper. But, suppose using that printer's driver, we were to create a new form that was just 4" by 4" centered on the letter sized sheet. We most certainly could set that form to zero non-printable area because by doing so, we are not bumping up against the inability of the printer to print to the edges of the larger sheet we started with. That is the situation I am in: My printer can handle (at the maximum) sheets that are letter size, but the labels I use with the printer are 4" wide and 2" high. I can definitely print to the edges of the labels (and far beyond if I cared to.) My problem is that I cannot get Word to believe that. I do thank you for the link you provided, and will certainly read it. All the best, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#6
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On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 20:04:05 -0400, Kenneth
wrote: On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 19:33:33 -0400, "Anne Troy" wrote: SNIP Hi again Anne, I just read the piece you suggested, but, for the reasons I have described, it does not apply to my situation. Thanks again, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#7
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I'll be happy to have a look at your file, Kenneth...perhaps I can find some
reason for it. Who knows? ![]() ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com "Kenneth" wrote in message ... On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 20:04:05 -0400, Kenneth wrote: On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 19:33:33 -0400, "Anne Troy" wrote: SNIP Hi again Anne, I just read the piece you suggested, but, for the reasons I have described, it does not apply to my situation. Thanks again, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#8
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On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 21:10:07 -0400, "Anne Troy"
wrote: "Kenneth" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 20:04:05 -0400, Kenneth wrote: On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 19:33:33 -0400, "Anne Troy" wrote: SNIP Hi again Anne, I just read the piece you suggested, but, for the reasons I have described, it does not apply to my situation. Thanks again, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." I'll be happy to have a look at your file, Kenneth...perhaps I can find some reason for it. Who knows? ![]() ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com Hi Anne, What file...? Thanks, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#9
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The template?
************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com "Kenneth" wrote in message ... On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 21:10:07 -0400, "Anne Troy" wrote: "Kenneth" wrote in message . .. On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 20:04:05 -0400, Kenneth wrote: On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 19:33:33 -0400, "Anne Troy" wrote: SNIP Hi again Anne, I just read the piece you suggested, but, for the reasons I have described, it does not apply to my situation. Thanks again, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." I'll be happy to have a look at your file, Kenneth...perhaps I can find some reason for it. Who knows? ![]() ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com Hi Anne, What file...? Thanks, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#10
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The unprintable area is determined at least in part by paper-handling
issues, not just the range of the print head. So even though the printer can demonstrably print in the area occupied by your label, Word still assumes that the printer requires some area at the top, sides, and bottom, to grip the paper as it goes through the printer. Unless your label is actually centered in a larger sheet of paper, then this may be the issue involved. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Kenneth" wrote in message ... On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 19:33:33 -0400, "Anne Troy" wrote: "Kenneth" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 18:08:52 -0400, "Anne Troy" wrote: "Kenneth" wrote in message ... Howdy, I use Word 2000 to print labels to an OKI pin printer. I am getting the error: "The margins of section 1 are set outside the printable area of the page..." I understand what that error means, but am baffled still: I have the driver for the printer set so that there is NO non-printable area. That is, it is set to allow every part of the label to receive text. Given that, where is Word getting the information about non-printable area, and how can I tell it to use the proper data so that the errors will be suppressed? Very sincere thanks, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." Ken: Word uses tables to set up labels (all that I've ever seen, at least). The tables borders are likely outside the printable area. Tables, by default, have almost a tenth-inch top and left margin on the cells, so while the table cells might be outside that printable area, your data may not be, and probably isn't. Except for the annoyance of it, I would ignore it. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com Hi Anne, I appreciate your comments, but they do not apply to my situation: I do not use Word tables for my labels. Instead, I have a Word Template that reflects the label size that I need. Occasionally, I open a DOC based on that template, manually type in the necessary text, and print a single label. More typically, I print labels from my database. I click on an address for which I need a label, and it dumps the data to a file, launches Word, does a merge, and prints the label(s) I need. This all worked like a charm until I had to revert to an earlier Registry hive (don't ask...G) and now, for some reason, I have the margin-printable area problem I described. Thanks again, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." Ken: If you used a template that CAME with Word, then I assure you that the odds are 99% that it was created using tables. Go to Table--Show gridlines. Having the driver for the printer doesn't guarantee "non-printable areas". Virtually all printers have non-printable areas. See: http://www.officearticles.com/word/t...es_in_microsof t_word.htm Perhaps that will shed some light. I don't know. ************ Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com Hi Anne, I did not start with an existing Word Template. I created the one I use, from scratch. There are no tables involved in this issue. Really...g I am confused by your comment that "Having the driver for the printer doesn't guarantee "non-printable areas". Virtually all printers have non-printable areas." because I am not suggesting that there is no non-printable area because I "have" the driver for the printer. Of course I have the driver for the printer. Without that, I could not use the printer. The driver I have allows me to set the label to have no non-printable area. It would not allow me to use that setting were I attempting to apply it to letter size paper.. So, (and of course I may be wrong) I understand that (except at the maximum size allowed by the printer) the issue of non-printable area depends not on the characteristics of the printer (hardware) but rather on the characteristics of the driver (software.) So, suppose for example, that we are talking about a printer that can handle at maximum a standard letter size sheet. It is most unlikely (as you have correctly described) that one could print right up to the edges of the paper. But, suppose using that printer's driver, we were to create a new form that was just 4" by 4" centered on the letter sized sheet. We most certainly could set that form to zero non-printable area because by doing so, we are not bumping up against the inability of the printer to print to the edges of the larger sheet we started with. That is the situation I am in: My printer can handle (at the maximum) sheets that are letter size, but the labels I use with the printer are 4" wide and 2" high. I can definitely print to the edges of the labels (and far beyond if I cared to.) My problem is that I cannot get Word to believe that. I do thank you for the link you provided, and will certainly read it. All the best, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#11
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Word gets the information about printable area from the printer driver.
There are very few printers that allow printing to the edge of the paper so if that is what you have set the margins to achieve that is the cause of the error. Word will only use what the current printer driver will allow. -- Graham Mayor - Word MVP My web site www.gmayor.com Word MVP web site http://word.mvps.org Kenneth wrote: Howdy, I use Word 2000 to print labels to an OKI pin printer. I am getting the error: "The margins of section 1 are set outside the printable area of the page..." I understand what that error means, but am baffled still: I have the driver for the printer set so that there is NO non-printable area. That is, it is set to allow every part of the label to receive text. Given that, where is Word getting the information about non-printable area, and how can I tell it to use the proper data so that the errors will be suppressed? Very sincere thanks, |
#12
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On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 23:34:25 -0500, "Suzanne S. Barnhill"
wrote: The unprintable area is determined at least in part by paper-handling issues, not just the range of the print head. So even though the printer can demonstrably print in the area occupied by your label, Word still assumes that the printer requires some area at the top, sides, and bottom, to grip the paper as it goes through the printer. Unless your label is actually centered in a larger sheet of paper, then this may be the issue involved. Hi Suzanne, I am pleased that you responded... (and realized a moment ago as I offered my comments below, that I believe you have provided the answer I needed.) Here's the situation: These are one-up tractor fed labels, that is a continuous strip. The labels are on a backing material. If I define the dimensions of the template to be the dimensions of the backing material (rather than the label proper) I can certainly print to the edges of the label (and beyond) should I make the template even larger than that. I am not at the system right now, but it surely seems to me that you have offered the solution: My labels are 4" x 2". I will just stretch the template to be, say, 6" x 4" and place my text "in the middle." That will "fool" Word into avoiding the margin issue altogether. More later, and thanks again, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#13
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On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 07:43:44 +0300, "Graham Mayor"
wrote: Word gets the information about printable area from the printer driver. There are very few printers that allow printing to the edge of the paper so if that is what you have set the margins to achieve that is the cause of the error. Word will only use what the current printer driver will allow. Hi Graham, As I mentioned earlier in the thread, the printer will allow me to print 11" wide, and any length I wish. So, for my 4' x 2" custom label form, it will, indeed, allow me to print to the edges. All the best, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#14
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Priinter drivers don't normally allow you to make settings about their
capacity to print - they have the details built in and that is where Word gets its information. If you printer is really full-bleed capable and you have the correct driver you shouldn't see the warning. That said, it _is_ only a warning and if you override it you should get the printing you desire - if you don't, I think it is a printer or printer driver issue, not a Word one. -- Enjoy, Tony "Kenneth" wrote in message ... Howdy, I use Word 2000 to print labels to an OKI pin printer. I am getting the error: "The margins of section 1 are set outside the printable area of the page..." I understand what that error means, but am baffled still: I have the driver for the printer set so that there is NO non-printable area. That is, it is set to allow every part of the label to receive text. Given that, where is Word getting the information about non-printable area, and how can I tell it to use the proper data so that the errors will be suppressed? Very sincere thanks, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#15
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On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 13:48:46 +0100, "Tony Jollans" No Mail
wrote: Priinter drivers don't normally allow you to make settings about their capacity to print - they have the details built in and that is where Word gets its information. If you printer is really full-bleed capable and you have the correct driver you shouldn't see the warning. That said, it _is_ only a warning and if you override it you should get the printing you desire - if you don't, I think it is a printer or printer driver issue, not a Word one. Ho Tony, I am very appreciative of the comments you and others have offered, and think that I have this working properly again. All the best, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
#16
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This approach is often necessary, not just to deal with nonprintable area
but also to handle situations where the printer doesn't recognize a custom paper size and wants to feed it in a different location from where Word thinks it's printing. As Tony says, you can ignore the "error" message, but this is not practical in a mail merge (where you would have to click OK for every single label) or when you are automating printing through VBA. I have a printer that feeds small paper sizes in the middle of the MP tray (there are two paper guides that converge, as opposed to the similar printer model I had previously that had just one paper guide that closed in to the left side), but it prints in the middle only on paper sizes that are defined in the driver, not for small custom sizes defined in Word. For those paper sizes, I have a choice of either feeding from the left, without benefit of the paper guides, or setting up the document centered on Letter-size paper. I generally choose the former, or occasionally a paper size is close enough to a defined one that I can get away with just jiggering the margins, but it's always a hassle, which is why I have so many templates for specific small sizes of paper and envelopes (and even then I usually have to do a test print to remind me whether to feed from the left or the center). -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Kenneth" wrote in message ... On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 23:34:25 -0500, "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: The unprintable area is determined at least in part by paper-handling issues, not just the range of the print head. So even though the printer can demonstrably print in the area occupied by your label, Word still assumes that the printer requires some area at the top, sides, and bottom, to grip the paper as it goes through the printer. Unless your label is actually centered in a larger sheet of paper, then this may be the issue involved. Hi Suzanne, I am pleased that you responded... (and realized a moment ago as I offered my comments below, that I believe you have provided the answer I needed.) Here's the situation: These are one-up tractor fed labels, that is a continuous strip. The labels are on a backing material. If I define the dimensions of the template to be the dimensions of the backing material (rather than the label proper) I can certainly print to the edges of the label (and beyond) should I make the template even larger than that. I am not at the system right now, but it surely seems to me that you have offered the solution: My labels are 4" x 2". I will just stretch the template to be, say, 6" x 4" and place my text "in the middle." That will "fool" Word into avoiding the margin issue altogether. More later, and thanks again, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
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