Print style: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Database entry print preview 75.png]] | [[Image:Database entry print preview 75.png]] | ||
== Further resources == | |||
You will find more detailed instructions in the following articles by CSS guru Eric Meyer: | |||
* [http://meyerweb.com/eric/articles/webrev/200001.html "Print Different"] | |||
* [http://www.alistapart.com/articles/goingtoprint/ "CSS Design: Going to Print"] | |||
* His book also contains a whole chapter on [http://www.ericmeyeroncss.com/projects/06/ "Styling for Print"]. | |||
== See also: == | == See also: == |
Revision as of 17:28, 10 November 2009
Why print styles?
Sometimes you might want to print a page but without some of its elements, e.g. the navigation bar or the footer. Here's an example of a Database Activity entry.
Screen display
That's how the entry looks in the browser:
Creating a print CSS
The trick for creating print styles is using CSS's @media rule. That way the CSS will only be applied to the specified medium, "print" in our case.
Put the following CSS in a file called printstyles.css in your theme folder and add the style to your theme by modifying the theme's config.php:
$THEME->sheets = array('styles_layout', 'styles_fonts', 'styles_color', 'printstyles');
/* Print styles for Moodle database activity */
@media print {
html, body {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
width: 100%;
}
body {
background-color: White;
color: Black;
font-size: 75%;
}
div.tabtree, div#header, div.navbar,
div.headermenu, div.paging, div#footer,
div.datapreferences {
display: none;
}
table {
text-align: left;
}
}
You can use any CSS you like. These are only some examples:
- We unset the page margins and padding to use as much space on the printed page as possible.
- We hide those parts of the page we don't want get printed by using "display: none;".
- We set the color scheme to black & white.
- We decrease the font-size.
- We change the text-alignment for easier reading.
The result
And here's the print preview of the same database entry:
Further resources
You will find more detailed instructions in the following articles by CSS guru Eric Meyer:
- "Print Different"
- "CSS Design: Going to Print"
- His book also contains a whole chapter on "Styling for Print".