/********************************************************************** ** ** Implementation of TQPrinter class ** ** Created : 941003 ** ** Copyright (C) 1992-2008 Trolltech ASA. All rights reserved. ** ** This file is part of the kernel module of the TQt GUI Toolkit. ** ** This file may be used under the terms of the GNU General ** Public License versions 2.0 or 3.0 as published by the Free ** Software Foundation and appearing in the files LICENSE.GPL2 ** and LICENSE.GPL3 included in the packaging of this file. ** Alternatively you may (at your option) use any later version ** of the GNU General Public License if such license has been ** publicly approved by Trolltech ASA (or its successors, if any) ** and the KDE Free TQt Foundation. ** ** Please review the following information to ensure GNU General ** Public Licensing retquirements will be met: ** http://trolltech.com/products/qt/licenses/licensing/opensource/. ** If you are unsure which license is appropriate for your use, please ** review the following information: ** http://trolltech.com/products/qt/licenses/licensing/licensingoverview ** or contact the sales department at sales@trolltech.com. ** ** This file may be used under the terms of the Q Public License as ** defined by Trolltech ASA and appearing in the file LICENSE.TQPL ** included in the packaging of this file. Licensees holding valid TQt ** Commercial licenses may use this file in accordance with the TQt ** Commercial License Agreement provided with the Software. ** ** This file is provided "AS IS" with NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, ** INCLUDING THE WARRANTIES OF DESIGN, MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR ** A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Trolltech reserves all rights not granted ** herein. ** **********************************************************************/ #include "qprinter.h" #include "qprinter_p.h" #ifndef QT_NO_PRINTER /*! \class TQPrinter qprinter.h \brief The TQPrinter class is a paint device that paints on a printer. \ingroup images \ingroup graphics \mainclass On Windows it uses the built-in printer drivers. On X11 it generates postscript and sends that to lpr, lp, or another print command. TQPrinter is used in much the same way as TQWidget and TQPixmap are used. The big difference is that you must keep track of the pages. TQPrinter supports a number of settable parameters, most of which can be changed by the end user when the application calls TQPrinter::setup(). The most important parameters are: \list \i setOrientation() tells TQPrinter which page orientation to use (virtual). \i setPageSize() tells TQPrinter what page size to expect from the printer. \i setResolution() tells TQPrinter what resolution you wish the printer to provide (in dpi). \i setFullPage() tells TQPrinter whether you want to deal with the full page or just with the part the printer can draw on. The default is FALSE, so that by default you should be able to paint on (0,0). If TRUE the origin of the coordinate system will be in the top left corner of the paper and most probably the printer will not be able to paint something there due to it's physical margins. \i setNumCopies() tells TQPrinter how many copies of the document it should print. \i setMinMax() tells TQPrinter and TQPrintDialog what the allowed range for fromPage() and toPage() are. \endlist Except where noted, you can only call the set functions before setup(), or between TQPainter::end() and setup(). (Some may take effect between setup() and begin(), or between begin() and end(), but that's strictly undocumented and such behaviour may differ depending on platform.) There are also some settings that the user sets (through the printer dialog) and that applications are expected to obey: \list \i pageOrder() tells the application program whether to print first-page-first or last-page-first. \i colorMode() tells the application program whether to print in color or grayscale. (If you print in color and the printer does not support color, TQt will try to approximate. The document may take longer to print, but the quality should not be made visibly poorer.) \i fromPage() and toPage() indicate what pages the application program should print. \i paperSource() tells the application progam which paper source to print from. \endlist You can of course call these functions to establish defaults before you ask the user through TQPrinter::setup(). Once you start printing, calling newPage() is essential. You will probably also need to look at the TQPaintDeviceMetrics for the printer (see the \link simple-application.html#printersimple print function\endlink in the Application walk-through). In previous versions, paint device metrics were valid only after the TQPrinter has been set up, i.e. after setup() has returned successfully. This is no longer the case and paint device metrics can be requested safely before set up. If you want to abort the print job, abort() will try its best to stop printing. It may cancel the entire job or just some of it. \omit Need a function to setup() without a dialog (i.e. use defaults). \endomit The TrueType font embedding for TQt's postscript driver uses code by David Chappell of Trinity College Computing Center. \legalese Copyright 1995, Trinity College Computing Center. Written by David Chappell. Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation. This software is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty. TrueType font support. These functions allow PPR to generate PostScript fonts from Microsoft compatible TrueType font files. The functions in this file do most of the work to convert a TrueType font to a type 3 PostScript font. Most of the material in this file is derived from a program called "ttf2ps" which L. S. Ng posted to the usenet news group "comp.sources.postscript". The author did not provide a copyright notice or indicate any restrictions on use. Last revised 11 July 1995. */ /*! \enum TQPrinter::PrinterMode This enum describes the mode the printer should work in. It basically presets a certain resolution and working mode. \value ScreenResolution Sets the resolution of the print device to the screen resolution. This has the big advantage that the results obtained when painting on the printer will match more or less exactly the visible output on the screen. It is the easiest to use, as font metrics on the screen and on the printer are the same. This is the default value. ScreenResolution will produce a lower quality output than HighResolution and should only be used for drafts. \value PrinterResolution Use the physical resolution of the printer on Windows. On Unix, set the postscript resolution to 72 dpi. \value HighResolution Use printer resolution on windows, set the resolution of the postscript driver to 600dpi. \value Compatible Almost the same as PrinterResolution, but keeps some peculiarities of the TQt 2.x printer driver. This is useful for applications ported from TQt 2.x to TQt 3.x. */ /*! \enum TQPrinter::Orientation This enum type (not to be confused with TQt::Orientation) is used to specify each page's orientation. \value Portrait the page's height is greater than its width (the default). \value Landscape the page's width is greater than its height. This type interacts with \l TQPrinter::PageSize and TQPrinter::setFullPage() to determine the final size of the page available to the application. */ /*! \enum TQPrinter::PageSize This enum type specifies what paper size TQPrinter should use. TQPrinter does not check that the paper size is available; it just uses this information, together with TQPrinter::Orientation and TQPrinter::setFullPage(), to determine the printable area (see TQPaintDeviceMetrics). The defined sizes (with setFullPage(TRUE)) are: \value A0 841 x 1189 mm This value is not supported on windows. \value A1 594 x 841 mm This value is not supported on windows. \value A2 420 x 594 mm \value A3 297 x 420 mm \value A4 210 x 297 mm, 8.26 x 11.7 inches \value A5 148 x 210 mm \value A6 105 x 148 mm \value A7 74 x 105 mm \value A8 52 x 74 mm \value A9 37 x 52 mm \value B0 1030 x 1456 mm \value B1 728 x 1030 mm \value B10 32 x 45 mm \value B2 515 x 728 mm \value B3 364 x 515 mm \value B4 257 x 364 mm \value B5 182 x 257 mm, 7.17 x 10.13 inches \value B6 128 x 182 mm \value B7 91 x 128 mm \value B8 64 x 91 mm \value B9 45 x 64 mm \value C5E 163 x 229 mm \value Comm10E 105 x 241 mm, US Common #10 Envelope \value DLE 110 x 220 mm \value Executive 7.5 x 10 inches, 191 x 254 mm \value Folio 210 x 330 mm \value Ledger 432 x 279 mm \value Legal 8.5 x 14 inches, 216 x 356 mm \value Letter 8.5 x 11 inches, 216 x 279 mm \value Tabloid 279 x 432 mm \value Custom \value NPageSize (internal) With setFullPage(FALSE) (the default), the metrics will be a bit smaller; how much depends on the printer in use. */ /*! \enum TQPrinter::PageOrder This enum type is used by TQPrinter to tell the application program how to print. \value FirstPageFirst the lowest-numbered page should be printed first. \value LastPageFirst the highest-numbered page should be printed first. */ /*! \enum TQPrinter::ColorMode This enum type is used to indicate whether TQPrinter should print in color or not. \value Color print in color if available, otherwise in grayscale. \value GrayScale print in grayscale, even on color printers. Might be a little faster than \c Color. This is the default. */ /*! \enum TQPrinter::PaperSource This enum type specifies what paper source TQPrinter is to use. TQPrinter does not check that the paper source is available; it just uses this information to try and set the paper source. Whether it will set the paper source depends on whether the printer has that particular source. Note: this is currently only implemented for Windows. \value OnlyOne \value Lower \value Middle \value Manual \value Envelope \value EnvelopeManual \value Auto \value Tractor \value SmallFormat \value LargeFormat \value LargeCapacity \value Cassette \value FormSource */ /*! \enum TQPrinter::PrintRange This enum is used to specify which print range the application should use to print. \value AllPages All pages should be printed \value Selection Only the selection should be printed. \value PageRange From page, to page option. \sa setPrintRange(), printRange() */ /*! \enum TQPrinter::PrinterOption This enum describes various printer options that appear in the printer setup dialog. It is used to enable and disable these options in the setup dialog. \value PrintToFile Describes if print to file should be enabled. \value PrintSelection Describes if printing selections should be enabled. \value PrintPageRange Describes if printing page ranges (from, to) should be enabled \sa setOptionEnabled(), isOptionEnabled() */ /*! \fn TQString TQPrinter::printerName() const Returns the printer name. This value is initially set to the name of the default printer. \sa setPrinterName() */ /*! \fn bool TQPrinter::outputToFile() const Returns TRUE if the output should be written to a file, or FALSE if the output should be sent directly to the printer. The default setting is FALSE. This function is currently only supported under X11 and Mac OS X. \sa setOutputToFile(), setOutputFileName() */ /*! Specifies whether the output should be written to a file or sent directly to the printer. Will output to a file if \a enable is TRUE, or will output directly to the printer if \a enable is FALSE. This function is currently only supported under X11 and Mac OS X. \sa outputToFile(), setOutputFileName() */ void TQPrinter::setOutputToFile( bool enable ) { if ( state != 0 ) { #if defined(QT_CHECK_STATE) qWarning( "TQPrinter::setOutputToFile: Cannot do this during printing" ); #endif return; } output_file = enable; } /*! \fn TQString TQPrinter::outputFileName() const Returns the name of the output file. There is no default file name. \sa setOutputFileName(), setOutputToFile() */ /*! Sets the name of the output file to \a fileName. Setting a null or empty name (0 or "") disables output to a file, i.e. calls setOutputToFile(FALSE). Setting a non-empty name enables output to a file, i.e. calls setOutputToFile(TRUE). This function is currently only supported under X11. \sa outputFileName(), setOutputToFile() */ void TQPrinter::setOutputFileName( const TQString &fileName ) { if ( state != 0 ) { #if defined(QT_CHECK_STATE) qWarning("TQPrinter::setOutputFileName: Cannot do this during printing"); #endif return; } output_filename = fileName; output_file = !output_filename.isEmpty(); } /*! \fn TQString TQPrinter::printProgram() const Returns the name of the program that sends the print output to the printer. The default is to return a null string; meaning that TQPrinter will try to be smart in a system-dependent way. On X11 only, you can set it to something different to use a specific print program. On Windows, this function returns the name of the printer device driver. \sa setPrintProgram() setPrinterSelectionOption() */ /*! Sets the name of the program that should do the print job to \a printProg. On X11, this function sets the program to call with the PostScript output. On other platforms, it has no effect. \sa printProgram() */ void TQPrinter::setPrintProgram( const TQString &printProg ) { print_prog = printProg; } /*! \fn TQString TQPrinter::docName() const Returns the document name. \sa setDocName() */ /*! Sets the document name to \a name. */ void TQPrinter::setDocName( const TQString &name ) { if ( state != 0 ) { #if defined(QT_CHECK_STATE) qWarning( "TQPrinter::setDocName: Cannot do this during printing" ); #endif return; } doc_name = name; } /*! \fn TQString TQPrinter::creator() const Returns the name of the application that created the document. \sa setCreator() */ /*! Sets the name of the application that created the document to \a creator. This function is only applicable to the X11 version of TQt. If no creator name is specified, the creator will be set to "TQt" followed by some version number. \sa creator() */ void TQPrinter::setCreator( const TQString &creator ) { creator_name = creator; } /*! \fn Orientation TQPrinter::orientation() const Returns the orientation setting. The default value is \c TQPrinter::Portrait. \sa setOrientation() */ /*! Sets the print orientation to \a orientation. The orientation can be either \c TQPrinter::Portrait or \c TQPrinter::Landscape. The printer driver reads this setting and prints using the specified orientation. On Windows this setting won't take effect until the printer dialog is shown (using TQPrinter::setup()). Windows only! This option can be changed while printing and will take effect from the next call to newPage() \sa orientation() */ void TQPrinter::setOrientation( Orientation orientation ) { orient = orientation; #if defined(Q_WS_WIN) reinit(); #endif } /*! \fn PageSize TQPrinter::pageSize() const Returns the printer page size. The default value is system-dependent. \sa setPageSize() */ /*! Sets the printer page size to \a newPageSize if that size is supported. The result if undefined if \a newPageSize is not supported. The default page size is system-dependent. This function is useful mostly for setting a default value that the user can override in the print dialog when you call setup(). \sa pageSize() PageSize setFullPage() setResolution() */ void TQPrinter::setPageSize( PageSize newPageSize ) { if ( newPageSize > NPageSize ) { #if defined(QT_CHECK_STATE) qWarning("TQPrinter::SetPageSize: illegal page size %d", newPageSize ); #endif return; } page_size = newPageSize; #if defined(Q_WS_WIN) reinit(); #endif } /*! Sets the page order to \a newPageOrder. The page order can be \c TQPrinter::FirstPageFirst or \c TQPrinter::LastPageFirst. The application programmer is responsible for reading the page order and printing accordingly. This function is useful mostly for setting a default value that the user can override in the print dialog when you call setup(). \bug This value is not kept in sync with the Windows or Mac OS X printer dialogs. */ void TQPrinter::setPageOrder( PageOrder newPageOrder ) { page_order = newPageOrder; #if defined(Q_WS_WIN) reinit(); #endif } /*! Returns the current page order. The default page order is \c FirstPageFirst. \bug This value is not kept in sync with the Windows or Mac OS X printer dialogs. */ TQPrinter::PageOrder TQPrinter::pageOrder() const { return page_order; } /*! Sets the printer's color mode to \a newColorMode, which can be either \c Color or \c GrayScale (the default). \sa colorMode() */ void TQPrinter::setColorMode( ColorMode newColorMode ) { color_mode = newColorMode; #if defined(Q_WS_WIN) reinit(); #endif } /*! Returns the current color mode. The default color mode is \c Color. \sa setColorMode() */ TQPrinter::ColorMode TQPrinter::colorMode() const { return color_mode; } /*! \fn int TQPrinter::fromPage() const Returns the from-page setting. The default value is 0. If fromPage() and toPage() both return 0 this signifies 'print the whole document'. The programmer is responsible for reading this setting and printing accordingly. \sa setFromTo(), toPage() */ /*! \fn int TQPrinter::toPage() const Returns the to-page setting. The default value is 0. If fromPage() and toPage() both return 0 this signifies 'print the whole document'. The programmer is responsible for reading this setting and printing accordingly. \sa setFromTo(), fromPage() */ /*! Sets the from-page and to-page settings to \a fromPage and \a toPage respectively. The from-page and to-page settings specify what pages to print. If fromPage() and toPage() both return 0 this signifies 'print the whole document'. This function is useful mostly to set a default value that the user can override in the print dialog when you call setup(). \sa fromPage(), toPage(), setMinMax(), setup() */ void TQPrinter::setFromTo( int fromPage, int toPage ) { if ( state != 0 ) { #if defined(QT_CHECK_STATE) qWarning( "TQPrinter::setFromTo: Cannot do this during printing" ); #endif return; } from_pg = fromPage; to_pg = toPage; } /*! \fn int TQPrinter::minPage() const Returns the min-page setting, i.e. the lowest page number a user is allowed to choose. The default value is 0. \sa maxPage(), setMinMax() setFromTo() */ /*! \fn int TQPrinter::maxPage() const Returns the max-page setting. A user can't choose a higher page number than maxPage() when they select a print range. The default value is 0. \sa minPage(), setMinMax() setFromTo() */ /*! Sets the min-page and max-page settings to \a minPage and \a maxPage respectively. The min-page and max-page restrict the from-page and to-page settings. When the printer setup dialog appears, the user cannot select a from page or a to page that are outside the range specified by min and max pages. \sa minPage(), maxPage(), setFromTo(), setup() */ void TQPrinter::setMinMax( int minPage, int maxPage ) { min_pg = minPage; max_pg = maxPage; if ( from_pg == 0 || from_pg < minPage ) from_pg = minPage; if ( to_pg == 0 || to_pg > maxPage ) to_pg = maxPage; } /*! \fn int TQPrinter::numCopies() const Returns the number of copies to be printed. The default value is 1. This value will return the number of times the application is retquired to print in order to match the number specified in the printer setup dialog. This has been done since some printer drivers are not capable of buffering up the copies and the application in those cases have to make an explicit call to the print code for each copy. \sa setNumCopies() */ /*! \fn bool TQPrinter::collateCopiesEnabled() const \internal Returns TRUE if the application should provide the user with the option of choosing a collated printout; otherwise returns FALSE. Collation means that each page is printed in order, i.e. print the first page, then the second page, then the third page and so on, and then repeat this sequence for as many copies as have been requested. If you don't collate you get several copies of the first page, then several copies of the second page, then several copies of the third page, and so on. \sa setCollateCopiesEnabled() setCollateCopies() collateCopies() */ /*! \fn void TQPrinter::setCollateCopiesEnabled(bool enable) \internal If \a enable is TRUE (the default) the user is given the choice of whether to print out multiple copies collated in the print dialog. If \a enable is FALSE, then collateCopies() will be ignored. Collation means that each page is printed in order, i.e. print the first page, then the second page, then the third page and so on, and then repeat this sequence for as many copies as have been requested. If you don't collate you get several copies of the first page, then several copies of the second page, then several copies of the third page, and so on. \sa collateCopiesEnabled() setCollateCopies() collateCopies() */ /*! \fn bool TQPrinter::collateCopies() const \internal Returns TRUE if collation is turned on when multiple copies is selected. Returns FALSE if it is turned off when multiple copies is selected. \sa collateCopiesEnabled() setCollateCopiesEnabled() setCollateCopies() */ /*! \internal Sets the default value for collation checkbox when the print dialog appears. If \a on is TRUE, it will enable setCollateCopiesEnabled(). The default value is FALSE. This value will be changed by what the user presses in the print dialog. \sa collateCopiesEnabled() setCollateCopiesEnabled() collateCopies() */ void TQPrinter::setCollateCopies(bool on) { if (!collateCopiesEnabled() && on) setCollateCopiesEnabled(on); usercolcopies = on; } /*! Sets the number of copies to be printed to \a numCopies. The printer driver reads this setting and prints the specified number of copies. \sa numCopies(), setup() */ void TQPrinter::setNumCopies( int numCopies ) { ncopies = numCopies; #if defined(Q_WS_WIN) reinit(); #endif } /*! Returns the printer options selection string. This is useful only if the print command has been explicitly set. The default value (a null string) implies that the printer should be selected in a system-dependent manner. Any other value implies that the given value should be used. \sa setPrinterSelectionOption() */ TQString TQPrinter::printerSelectionOption() const { return option_string; } /*! Sets the printer to use \a option to select the printer. \a option is null by default (which implies that TQt should be smart enough to guess correctly), but it can be set to other values to use a specific printer selection option. If the printer selection option is changed while the printer is active, the current print job may or may not be affected. \sa printerSelectionOption() */ void TQPrinter::setPrinterSelectionOption( const TQString & option ) { option_string = option; } /*! Sets TQPrinter to have the origin of the coordinate system at the top-left corner of the paper if \a fp is TRUE, or where it thinks the top-left corner of the printable area is if \a fp is FALSE. The default is FALSE. You can (probably) print on (0,0), and TQPaintDeviceMetrics will report something smaller than the size indicated by PageSize. (Note that TQPrinter may be wrong on Unix systems - it does not have perfect knowledge of the physical printer.) If you set \a fp to TRUE, TQPaintDeviceMetrics will report the exact same size as indicated by \c PageSize, but you cannot print on all of that - you must take care of the output margins yourself. \sa PageSize setPageSize() TQPaintDeviceMetrics fullPage() */ void TQPrinter::setFullPage( bool fp ) { to_edge = fp; } /*! Returns TRUE if the origin of the printer's coordinate system is at the corner of the sheet and FALSE if it is at the edge of the printable area. See setFullPage() for details and caveats. \sa setFullPage() PageSize TQPaintDeviceMetrics */ bool TQPrinter::fullPage() const { return to_edge; } /*! Requests that the printer prints at \a dpi or as near to \a dpi as possible. This setting affects the coordinate system as returned by, for example, TQPaintDeviceMetrics and TQPainter::viewport(). The value depends on the \c PrintingMode used in the TQPrinter constructor. By default, the dpi value of the screen is used. This function must be called before setup() to have an effect on all platforms. \sa resolution() setPageSize() */ void TQPrinter::setResolution( int dpi ) { res = dpi; res_set = TRUE; } /*! Returns the current assumed resolution of the printer, as set by setResolution() or by the printer subsystem. \sa setResolution() */ int TQPrinter::resolution() const { return res; } /*! Sets the paper source setting to \a source. Windows only! This option can be changed while printing and will take effect from the next call to newPage() \sa paperSource() */ void TQPrinter::setPaperSource( PaperSource source ) { paper_source = source; #if defined(Q_WS_WIN) reinit(); #endif } /*! Returns the currently set paper source of the printer. \sa setPaperSource() */ TQPrinter::PaperSource TQPrinter::paperSource() const { return paper_source; } /*! Sets the default selected page range to be used when the print setup dialog is opened to \a range. If the PageRange specified by \a range is currently disabled the function does nothing. \sa printRange() */ void TQPrinter::setPrintRange( PrintRange range ) { if( range != AllPages ) if( range == Selection && !isOptionEnabled( PrintSelection ) ) setOptionEnabled( PrintSelection, TRUE ); else if( range == PageRange && !isOptionEnabled( PrintPageRange ) ) setOptionEnabled( PrintPageRange, TRUE ); d->printRange = range; } /*! Returns the PageRange of the TQPrinter. After the print setup dialog has been opened, this function returns the value selected by the user. \sa setPrintRange() */ TQPrinter::PrintRange TQPrinter::printRange() const { return d->printRange; } /*! Enables the printer option with the identifier \a option if \a enable is TRUE, and disables option \a option if \a enable is FALSE. \sa isOptionEnabled() */ void TQPrinter::setOptionEnabled( PrinterOption option, bool enable ) { if( enable ) { d->printerOptions |= ( 1 << option ); if( ( option == PrintPageRange ) && min_pg==0 && max_pg==0 ) max_pg = 9999; } else { d->printerOptions &= ( ~( 1 << option ) ); } } /*! Returns TRUE if the printer option with identifier \a option is enabled; otherwise returns FALSE. \sa setOptionEnabled() */ bool TQPrinter::isOptionEnabled( PrinterOption option ) { return d->printerOptions & ( 1 << option ); } #endif // QT_NO_PRINTER