David E. Ross composed on 2017-03-04 23:08 (UTC-0800):

Screen prints can accomplish what you want, but it involves a cludge of
a process.  The problem is that you only get what is visible within the
browser window.  Thus, you must print, scroll, print some more, scroll
some more, print some more, and so on.  In this process, you must save
each screen print into an image-processing application and then print it
before scrolling to the next section of the Web page.  If you have a
truly advanced image-processing application, you might be able to stitch
together the saved images and then print them all at once as a single
large image.

Need to stitch together can be reduced by reconfiguring a Linux desktop to use a virtual space much taller than the physical screen (called "panning" using the xrandr utility to make a temporarily taller desktop space), and making the browser window the lesser full screen height or as tall as the page content can consume. How tall is possible depends on hardware, OS version and driver, but could be up to 32k logical px tall, but no less than 2048px tall with any non-ancient gfxchip.
--
"The wise are known for their understanding, and pleasant
words are persuasive." Proverbs 16:21 (New Living Translation)

 Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 ** a11y rocks!

Felix Miata  ***  http://fm.no-ip.com/
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