On Sat, 5 Jul 2014, Johan Vermeulen wrote: > when going to file-print, options tab, there's a section footers and > headers. > Put it all to blanco. Maybe that's what you're looking for. Alas not: the blanks still take up room. What I want should not be hard. I suppose that if I went to the effort, I could have done a print to file with custom 8.5" x 12.0" imaginary paper. Cutting off the top and bottom 0.5 inch would likely have given me what I wanted. How easily I could automate the process, I do not know. On Sat, 5 Jul 2014, Always Learning wrote: > On Fri, 2014-07-04 at 17:11 -0500, Michael Hennebry wrote: > >> I need images. They are done in a way that I cannot copy easily. > > Right click, select 'save image as ....' > > Then double-click the saved image and print. Works on some images, but not others. On Fri, 4 Jul 2014, Frank Cox wrote: > On Fri, 4 Jul 2014 17:11:43 -0500 (CDT) > Michael Hennebry wrote: > >> On Fri, 4 Jul 2014, Frank Cox wrote: >> >>> On Fri, 4 Jul 2014 16:58:24 -0500 (CDT) >>> Michael Hennebry wrote: >>> >>>> Is there a way to get firefox to not print all that >>>> useful data at the top and bottom of a web page. >>> >>> I usually highlight what I want, paste it into libreoffice text file, then >>> print that. >> >> I need images. They are done in a way that I cannot copy easily. > > Highlight what you want (including the images) and paste it into a libreoffice text document. > > Have you tried it? I get the images too when I do that. No images at all for me. Got some html references. On Fri, 4 Jul 2014, Devin Reade wrote: > --On Friday, July 04, 2014 05:11:43 PM -0500 Michael Hennebry > <hennebry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> I need images. They are done in a way that I cannot copy easily. > > If getting a png of your page or a portion of your page is sufficient, > using the ScreenGrab Firefox plugin might be an option. I use that > tool to grab screen shots when documenting web applications. It means > an extra step of first saving the image via ScreenGrab and then printing > it via eog (or whatever), but it's an option. Don't know about ScreenGrab, but screenshot did the trick. > ScreenGrab allows you to either grab the visible area in the browser, > the entire page, or a selected region. > > As an afterthought, you might also want to check to see what your page > settings are. In particular, make sure you're not trying to print A4 > if you need Letter or vice versa. They're sufficiently close to make > the difference not obvious on screen, but quite obvious when printing. That is something I got right. 'Tis a rodeo I've ridden in before. -- Michael hennebry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx "SCSI is NOT magic. There are *fundamental technical reasons* why it is necessary to sacrifice a young goat to your SCSI chain now and then." -- John Woods _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos