Landscape printing from HTML

HtmlCssPrinting

Html Problem Overview


I have a HTML report, which needs to be printed landscape because of the many columns. It there a way to do this, without the user having to change the document settings?

And what are the options amongst browsers.

Html Solutions


Solution 1 - Html

In your CSS you can set the @page property as shown below.

@media print{@page {size: landscape}}

The @page is part of CSS 2.1 specification however this size is not as highlighted by the answer to the question Is @Page { size:landscape} obsolete?:

> CSS 2.1 no longer specifies the size attribute. The current working > draft for CSS3 Paged Media module does specify it (but this is not > standard or accepted).

As stated the size option comes from the CSS 3 Draft Specification. In theory it can be set to both a page size and orientation although in my sample the size is omitted.

The support is very mixed with a bug report begin filed in firefox, most browsers do not support it.

It may seem to work in IE7 but this is because IE7 will remember the users last selection of landscape or portrait in print preview (only the browser is re-started).

This article does have some suggested work arounds using JavaScript or ActiveX that send keys to the users browser although it they are not ideal and rely on changing the browsers security settings.

Alternately you could rotate the content rather than the page orientation. This can be done by creating a style and applying it to the body that includes these two lines but this also has draw backs creating many alignment and layout issues.

<style type="text/css" media="print">
    .page
    {
     -webkit-transform: rotate(-90deg); 
     -moz-transform:rotate(-90deg);
     filter:progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(rotation=3);
    }
</style>

The final alternative I have found is to create a landscape version in a PDF. You can point to so when the user selects print it prints the PDF. However I could not get this to auto print work in IE7.

<link media="print" rel="Alternate" href="print.pdf">

In conclusion in some browsers it is relativity easy using the @page size option however in many browsers there is no sure way and it would depend on your content and environment. This maybe why Google Documents creates a PDF when print is selected and then allows the user to open and print that.

Solution 2 - Html

My solution:

<style type="text/css" media="print">
    @page { 
        size: landscape;
    }
    body { 
        writing-mode: tb-rl;
    }
</style>
  • With media="print" will apply only on Print.
  • This works in IE, Firefox and Chrome

Solution 3 - Html

The size property is what you're after as mentioned. To set both the the orientation and size of your page when printing, you could use the following:

/* ISO Paper Size */
@page {
  size: A4 landscape;
}

/* Size in mm */    
@page {
  size: 100mm 200mm landscape;
}

/* Size in inches */    
@page {
  size: 4in 6in landscape;
}

Here's a link to the @page documentation.

Solution 4 - Html

It's not enough just to rotate the page content. Here is a right CSS which work in the most browsers (Chrome, Firefox, IE9+).

First set body margin to 0, because otherwise page margins will be larger than those you set in the print dialog. Also set background color to visualize pages.

body {
  margin: 0;
  background: #CCCCCC;
}

margin, border and background are required to visualize pages.

padding must be set to the required print margin. In the print dialog you must set the same margins (10mm in this example).

div.portrait, div.landscape {
  margin: 10px auto;
  padding: 10mm;
  border: solid 1px black;
  overflow: hidden;
  page-break-after: always;
  background: white;
}

The size of A4 page is 210mm x 297mm. You need to subtract print margins from the size. And set the size of page's content:

div.portrait {
  width: 190mm;
  height: 276mm;
}
div.landscape {
  width: 276mm;
  height: 190mm;
}

I use 276mm instead of 277mm, because different browsers scale pages a little bit differently. So some of them will print 277mm-height content on two pages. The second page will be empty. It's more safe to use 276mm.

We don't need any margin, border, padding, background on the printed page, so remove them:

@media print {
  body {
    background: none;
    -ms-zoom: 1.665;
  }
  div.portrait, div.landscape {
    margin: 0;
    padding: 0;
    border: none;
    background: none;
  }
  div.landscape {
    transform: rotate(270deg) translate(-276mm, 0);
    transform-origin: 0 0;
  }
}

Note that the origin of transformation is 0 0! Also the content of landscape pages must be moved 276mm down!

Also if you have a mix of portrait and lanscape pages IE will zoom out the pages. We fix it by setting -ms-zoom to 1.665. If you'll set it to 1.6666 or something like this the right border of the page content may be cropped sometimes.

If you need IE8- or other old browsers support you can use -webkit-transform, -moz-transform, filter:progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(rotation=3). But for modern enough browsers it's not required.

Here is a test page:

<!DOCTYPE HTML>
<html>
  <head>
    <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
    <style>
      ...Copy all styles here...
    </style>
  </head>
  <body>
    <div class="portrait">A portrait page</div>
    <div class="landscape">A landscape page</div>
  </body>
</html>

Solution 5 - Html

Quoted from CSS-Discuss Wiki

> The @page rule has been cut down in > scope from CSS2 to CSS2.1. The full > CSS2 @page rule was reportedly > implemented only in Opera (and buggily > even then). My own testing shows that > IE and Firefox don't support @page at > all. According to the now-obsolescent > CSS2 spec section 13.2.2 it is > possible to override the user's > setting of orientation and (for > example) force printing in Landscape > but the relevant "size" property has > been dropped from CSS2.1, consistent > with the fact that no current browser > supports it. It has been reinstated in > the CSS3 Paged Media module but note > that this is only a Working Draft (as > at July 2009). > > Conclusion: forget > about @page for the present. If you > feel your document needs to be printed > in Landscape orientation, ask yourself > if you can instead make your design > more fluid. If you really can't > (perhaps because the document contains > data tables with many columns, for > example), you will need to advise the > user to set the orientation to > Landscape and perhaps outline how to > do it in the most common browsers. Of > course, some browsers have a print > fit-to-width (shrink-to-fit) feature > (e.g. Opera, Firefox, IE7) but it's > inadvisable to rely on users having > this facility or having it switched > on.

Solution 6 - Html

Try to add this your CSS:

@page {
  size: landscape;
}

Solution 7 - Html

You might be able to use the CSS 2 @page rule which allows you to set the 'size' property to landscape.

Solution 8 - Html

You can also use the non-standard IE-only css attribute writing-mode

div.page	{ 
   writing-mode: tb-rl;
}

Solution 9 - Html

I created a blank MS Document with Landscape setting and then opened it in notepad. Copied and pasted the following to my html page

<style type="text/css" media="print">
   @page Section1
	{size:11 8.5in;
	margin:.5in 13.6pt 0in 13.6pt;
	mso-header-margin:.5in;
	mso-footer-margin:.5in;
	mso-paper-source:4;}
div.Section1
	{page:Section1;}
</style>



<div class="Section1"> put  text / images / other stuff  </div>

The print preview shows the pages in a landscape size. This seems to be working fine on IE and Chrome, not tested on FF.

Solution 10 - Html

I tried Denis's answer and hit some problems (portrait pages didn't print properly after going after landscape pages), so here is my solution:

body {
  margin: 0;
  background: #CCCCCC;
}

div.page {
  margin: 10px auto;
  border: solid 1px black;
  display: block;
  page-break-after: always;
  width: 209mm;
  height: 296mm;
  overflow: hidden;
  background: white;
}

div.landscape-parent {
  width: 296mm;
  height: 209mm;
}

div.landscape {
  width: 296mm;
  height: 209mm;
}

div.content {
  padding: 10mm;
}

body,
div,
td {
  font-size: 13px;
  font-family: Verdana;
}

@media print {
  body {
    background: none;
  }
  div.page {
    width: 209mm;
    height: 296mm;
  }
  div.landscape {
    transform: rotate(270deg) translate(-296mm, 0);
    transform-origin: 0 0;
  }
  div.portrait,
  div.landscape,
  div.page {
    margin: 0;
    padding: 0;
    border: none;
    background: none;
  }
}

<div class="page">
  <div class="content">
    First page in Portrait mode
  </div>
</div>
<div class="page landscape-parent">
  <div class="landscape">
    <div class="content">
      Second page in Landscape mode (correctly shows horizontally in browser and prints rotated in printer)
    </div>
  </div>
</div>
<div class="page">
  <div class="content">
    Third page in Portrait mode
  </div>
</div>

Solution 11 - Html

Here's what I came up with - add a negative rotation to the <html> element and a positive rotation of equal abs value to the <body>. That saved having to add a ton of CSS to style the body, and it worked like a charm:

html { 
  transform: rotate(-90deg);
}

body { 
  transform: rotate(90deg);
}

Solution 12 - Html

I tried to solve this problem once, but all my research led me towards ActiveX controls/plug-ins. There is no trick that the browsers (3 years ago anyway) permitted to change any print settings (number of copies, paper size).

I put my efforts into warning the user carefully that they needed to select "landscape" when the browsers print dialog appeared. I also created a "print preview" page, which worked much better than IE6's did! Our application had very wide tables of data in some reports, and the print preview made it clear to the users when the table would spill off the right-edge of the paper (since IE6 couldnt cope with printing on 2 sheets either).

And yes, people are still using IE6 even now.

Solution 13 - Html

<style type="text/css" media="print">
.landscape { 
    width: 100%; 
    height: 100%; 
    margin: 0% 0% 0% 0%; filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(Rotation=1); 
} 
</style>

If you want this style to be applied to a table then create one div tag with this style class and add the table tag within this div tag and close the div tag at the end.

This table will only print in landscape and all other pages will print in portrait mode only. But the problem is if the table size is more than the page width then we may loose some of the rows and sometimes headers also are missed. Be careful.

Have a good day.

Thank you, Naveen Mettapally.

Solution 14 - Html

-webkit-transform: rotate(-90deg); -moz-transform:rotate(-90deg);
     filter:progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(rotation=3);

not working in Firefox 16.0.2 but it is working in Chrome

Solution 15 - Html

This also worked for me:

@media print and (orientation:landscape) { … }

Solution 16 - Html

The problem I faced is probably the same you have. Everyone here is using CSS to provide it statically, but I had to look for a dynamic solution so that it would change based on the active element without reloading the page..

I created 2 files, portrait.css and landscape.css.

portrait.css is blank, but landscape.css has one line.

@media print{@page {size: landscape}}

in my primary file, I added this line of html to specify portrait.css as default.

 <link rel="stylesheet" id="PRINTLAYOUT" href="portrait.css" type="text/css" /></link>

Now, to switch you only have to change href in the element to switch printing modes.

$("#PRINTLAYOUT").attr("href","landscape.css")
  // OR 
document.getElementById("PRINTLAYOUT").href = "landscape.css" // I think...

This worked great for me, and I hope it helps someone else doing things the hard way like me.. As a note, $ represents JQuery.. If you are not using this yet, I highly recommend you start now.

Solution 17 - Html

You can try the following:

@page {
    size: auto
}

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