Karen, I print large reports, over 100 pages, across a Novell Network or locally (LPT1) without a problem. I'm running RBW6.5++ and Win2k. Below is an address from a Microsoft support site regarding print spoolers. It might be worth while to see if you can tweak Windows.
Myron Finegold http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;Q260142 -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:owner-rbase-l@;sonetmail.com] On Behalf Of Javier Valencia Sent: Friday, October 11, 2002 4:11 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Printing to high speed laser, revisited Karen: A couple of thoughts. You can define the page header to be a variable that resets the page number with each customer and prints the tear-off coupon on the first page and then switches to the customer name and address on subsequent pages. Also, you can set up the application so it can run in the background, so the computer can be used to do other things; don't forget that you can run multiple sessions of Rbase in the same computer at the same time, as the license is per seat rather than per session (as it used to be). Adding a short delay between (50-100) jobs would not add much time to the overall process but may prevent the print spooler from overflowing. One last thing, printer memory will make a huge difference, the more memory the printer has, the faster it will receive data from the spooler and thus free it up, this is particularly helpful when you have large print jobs (particularly graphics); many newer printer even have provisions to add a hard disk to pre-download fonts as well as receive print jobs faster and free up the computer sooner. Javier Valencia, PE President Valencia Technology Group, L.L.C. 14315 S. Twilight Ln., Suite #14 Olathe, KS 66062-4571 (913)829-0888 (913)649-2904 FAX -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:owner-rbase-l@;sonetmail.com]On Behalf Of tellef Sent: Friday, October 11, 2002 2:19 PM To: INTERNET:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Printing to high speed laser, revisited Ben: >I don't recall if I suggested this before, but if you're printing in a >loop, try placing a pause just after the print statement... for a >12ppm printer I'd start with pause 5 and maybe shorten from there. I had suggested this to her but she didn't want to do it. I assume that it wouldn't slow the actual printing down because even with a couple second pause between jobs the program would still probably be faster than the output from the printer. The problem she had was that adding even a 3 second pause between 2000 print jobs would mean an extra 1 hr 40 min before the computer would free up to do other jobs. As it is now, the RBase program zips through all the print jobs and then is immediately freed up. I also suggested a longer pause between say every 50 jobs. We haven't tried this and maybe that's a better option. Again she wouldn't go for it if the computer doesn't free up. Javier: >Is there a particular reason why you are printing >individual reports and not one big report with page breaks between >users/account/etc.? There is sort of a reason. I loop through by customer, look at a bunch of conditions, write data to separate summary output files and to separate tables based on the conditions, and (the big kicker) is that she wants a .pdf version for each customer saved separately. If I have one big report then there won't be separate files for her 'client history' folder. There was also a funky report design. The top of the report needed to be a tear-off coupon that fits in the envelope window. If the report goes onto multiple pages, she wanted the coupon to only be at the top of the first page, so it needed to be in a Report Header. At the same time there needed to be the company's and the customer's address information at the top of every page, so that was the Page Header stuff. If I defined a break header on the clientID, then the Page Header would be at the TOP of the report, not the coupon. >which would indicate that is not the size of the files but the sheer >number, I agree. Troy: >How is that printer attached to the network? Maybe you should try >getting an Intel Netport and attaching that to the network, It already is attached with a printer card (don't know if it's Intel Netport or another brand, maybe a JetDirect). 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