Hi

I don't know much about PCL, but I know this: PCL laser printers usually
build a whole page in memory and then print it to paper. They normally
have a decent amount of memory. Especially older ink jet printers like
yours only have a small buffer, so the page has to be delivered in bands
(I think). That's probably what causes your problems. Maybe the PCL
renderer would have to be changed so it can output a page as a sequence
of bands. To visualize, see here:

+---------+
| Band 1  |
+---------+
| Band 2  |
+---------+
| Band 4  |
+---------+
| etc.    |
+---------+
|         |
+---------+

I think this is really what messes up your headers and footers.

On Wed, 12 Sep 2001 17:32:48 -0400 avespa wrote:
> 
> Question - I am testing a PCL generated file on an HP DeskJet 400 Printer,
> circa 1995 with Windows 95.  I am seeing rather funky behavior, with the
> headers and footers being messed up (it looks like a few of the lines were
> written and then written over - perhaps a page break issue in our XSL)- our
> XSL is quite heavy and complex, so I am not sure where to start.  I am
> wondering if I need to take the approach of looking at our XSL and seeing
> where it can be tuned or tweaked to change this behavior, or do I need to go
> to the PCL itself?  I'm wondering if someone could nudge me in a certain
> direction? 
> 
> The output looks fairly decent on an HP8000 or HP820.  I called HP and they
> weren't much help.
> 
> Thanks for any help or input,
> 
> Tony
> 
> 
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