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I guess you can change fonts using control characters but I don't know if you can embad tham in a word doc. No way to test it because I don't have this printer.I remember having done it in early days of DOS word processing with Wordstar.
Hold ALT and type the command character - the numbers 27. In notebook will look like an arrow to the left, followed by writing a command character, examples: ? P Selects 10 cpi ? M Selecting the 12 CPI ? ? Select dense Print - 15 CPI (this character is typed by holding the ALT key figures 15)
It is card printer. It prints what is sent to it. If your OS has support for the Arabic Language (fonts and right to left) and Microsoft Word is writing in Arabic, you should be able to print the cards in Arabic.
I do not believe any font declaration in the pdf file is interpreted by the printer. PDF files are really nothing more than graphic files and are therefore printed in graphics mode not character mode.
This most likely requires that you get the Hebrew Font set from the Manufacturer and install it in the Printer Firm ware or update the Hebrew Font Set in your computer software. Either should resolve your problem. The printing that you currently see is, without actually seeing it, the result of the printer trying to print character codes that it does not recognize. I would try updating the Firmware in your printer first then if that failed update the Hebrew Font codes and character set and install that. Epson should have the download on their website. The information you need for the software Font download will depend on what software you are using.
Do you want the font as the default font on the printer or do you want the application to call the font?
Application wise, to get a 20 cpi character font, you need to place the font change into the document.
Remember, even if you set the default font as a 20 cpi, if the application calls for a 10 cpi font like Courier, the printer will change the default font to the 10 cpi font for the life of the current print job unless there are additional font calls within the print job.
The software (Application always overcomes default settings)
1 - (and most likely) you are using a bit-mapped font instead of a true-type font and at a fairly large font size. Bit-map fonts are composed of dots, much like an icon, and cannot be scaled beyond a certain value or you see the jagged edges.
2 - you are using a true-type font at a fairly large size and your printer does not have a post-script driver installed on your computer, so it takes the font and converts it to its closest bitmap representation and prints it out...rendering the font in all of its jagged glory!
use courier font. it works just as draft font. no problem in VB-6 i hope it will also work with .Net as well.
tell if dont work.
asad khan [email protected]
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