MORE INFORMATION
General Troubleshooting
NOTE: To print correctly from Publisher, you must also be able to print
correctly from other Windows programs. This article does not contain steps
to fix problems printing from Windows in general.
No Text Prints or Text Prints Garbled:
If none of the text in your publication prints, try the following steps:
- Copy some or all of the text and paste it into Notepad. If the text
will not print from Notepad either, you may be using a Windows printer
driver that is corrupt or not correct for the type of printer you
have. You may also have a problem with your printer cable, network
connection, or with the printer itself.
- If the text prints from Notepad, copy some or all of the text in
your publication and paste it into WordPad or Write. WordPad and
Write retain the font and size information of your text. If the text
Will not print from WordPad or Write (but does from Notepad), you may
have one or more corrupted fonts on your computer. Try changing the
text to a different font and see if it prints. If it does print,
remove and reinstall the original font. If it still does not print,
you may be using a printer driver that does not match your actual
printer. You could also have a problem with your network
connection, printer cable, or printer.
- If your text prints from WordPad or Write, your publication may
contain a corrupt graphic or OLE object. In Publisher, try printing
your publication without pictures.
- In Publisher, click Print on the File menu. Click on the Advanced
Print Settings, then click on the Publication Options tab. Click the
Do Not Print Any Graphics check box, and then click OK.
If the text prints correctly with the pictures hidden, try removing
picture frames and OLE frames until the entire file prints
correctly.
- If you have access to a different type of printer, try printing to
that printer instead.
Text Prints in Incorrect Font:
If the text in your publication prints, but in an incorrect font, try using
the same font in another publication or in another program. If the font
does not work there either, you may have to reinstall that particular font.
What You See Is What You Get (WYSIWYG) Problems:
If all your text prints, but the text does not look the way it does on
screen, see the following article here in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
104921 PUB: Explanation of WYSIWYG Issues
Troubleshooting Specific Problems
Text in Columns Does Not Line Up Correctly:
If you use spaces to separate columns of text, they may appear to be
lined up correctly on screen, but print out of alignment.
You can see if you used spaces to separate columns by clicking Show Special
Characters on the View menu. Spaces show up as dots. You should use tabs
instead of spaces to line up columns in a single text frame.
For information explaining and resolving this issue, please see the
following article here in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
112537 Text Formatting Questions & Answers
Problems Printing Text on Banners:
If your banner contains letters that split across tile boundaries (half the
letter prints on one sheet of paper, the other half prints on another), the
second half of the letter does not print. This is because the printer
control language used by HP LaserJet and compatible printers does not have
a command to start a letter midway through it.
You can resolve this issue by using WordArt frames instead of text frames
on banners. You may also be able to resolve this issue by using the Print
TrueType as Graphics option in the printer driver.
- On the File menu, click Print Setup.
- Click the printer in the Printers list, and then click Properties.
- Click the Fonts tab.
- Click Print TrueType as Graphics, and then click OK.
For more information about this issue, please see the following
article here in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
137470PUB3: Print TrueType as Graphics Always On Printing
Banners
Problems Printing Gray or Colored Text:
If your publication contains text that is some color besides black, it may
print as black on many HP LaserJet and compatible printers. The printer
control language used by many of these printers does not contain commands
to print text in any color besides black or white.
If you need text to print in a shade of gray, you may want to create that
text using a WordArt frame instead of a text frame.
For more information about this issue, please see the following
articles here in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
130508Non-White Text or Graphics Printed in Black
139689PUB: Gray Text Prints as Black to LaserJet 4 with Windows 95
Problems Printing White Text:
If your publication contains white text and you print it to an HP LaserJet
II or compatible, the white text prints in black. The printer control
language used by these printers does not support printing text in any color
besides black.
You can get white text to print correctly by using the Print TrueType as
Graphics option in the printer driver.
- On the File menu, click Print Setup.
- Click the printer in the Printers list, and then click Properties.
- Click the Fonts tab.
- Click Print TrueType As Graphics, and then click OK.
Problems Printing Rotated Text:
In some cases text that is rotated (on a different baseline from the
rest of your page) may print incorrectly. It may print in a different
font or it may print unrotated.
For more information about printing rotated text, please see the
following articles here in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
132689PUB: Rotated Non-TrueType Text May Print Incorrectly
136495PUB: Rotated Text Does Not Print Correctly to LaserJet at
150 DPI
Additional (Unwanted) Text Prints:
Occasionally, text that does not appear on screen does appear on your
printout. If you have a text frame that contains overflow text (too much
text to fit in the frame), the top line of the overflow text may print at
the bottom of your text frame. You can resolve this by using the Design
Checker to search for overflow text. If you find overflow text, you can
either enlarge your text frame so you can see all the text, or you can
delete the overflow text.
If you cover up some of the text in a text frame with a graphic or another
frame, the covered-up text prints anyway. This behavior is caused by the
printer control language used by HP LaserJet and compatible printers. You
can use the Print TrueType as Graphics option in the printer driver to
prevent the text from printing. For more information on this issue, please
see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
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products' performance or reliability.