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Creating Printer Friendly Web Pagesby Mario
Sanchez Reading from a computer screen is uncomfortable, so users may often want to print the page they’re viewing. The problem is that web pages don’t usually lend themselves to print. Unless your web page width is 600 pixels or less, chances are that your page copy will not fit in the printed page, and important information will be cropped-out. However, as we’ve pointed out before, limiting your web pages to a width of 600 pixels translates into sub-optimal use of your visitor’s screen real estate, since the majority of web users nowadays employ screen resolutions of 800x600 or higher. A better option is to specify your page width in percentage terms, for example: 100%. This way your web page will adapt to whatever width your printer is set up to, and your copy will not be cropped-out. But this solution presents two problems:
All of which takes us to our preferred solution: if your web page presents important content that your visitors will most likely want to print, create a link to a printer-friendly version of your page. A printer-friendly page should follow these simple guidelines:
Your original page should contain a link pointing to your printer-friendly page at a visible location. The standard practice is to include a text link next to a simple icon of a printer. Although creating printer-friendly versions of your pages will lead to the duplication of some of your content, your visitors’ user experience will be significantly enhanced. Furthermore, you don’t have to worry about taking up significant web server space and bandwidth, since your printer-friendly pages will be text-only. Finally, you don’t need to create printer-friendly versions of all your
web pages, only of those which your visitors will most likely want to
print, for example: articles, how-to tips, confirmation pages,
instructions pages, and product specification sheets. |
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