What is margin shift and how does t effect a mixed doc/pic?

just trying to figure out how margin shift being on or off while copying will effect my mixed doc/pic?

Hi kateabear10,
Welcome to the HP Forums.
I see that you have some questions about using Margin Shift.
Please click on the following link that will better assist you when PRINTING WITH MARGIN SHIFT SETTING.
Thanks for your time.
Cheers,  
Click the “Kudos Thumbs Up" at the bottom of this post to say “Thanks” for helping!
Please click “Accept as Solution ” if you feel my post solved your issue, it will help others find the solution.
W a t e r b o y 71
I work on behalf of HP

Similar Messages

  • Firefox update installs, but does not apprearon screen, or task manger yet is running what is going on and how does one fix it?

    I installed the update Mozilla Firefox 28. It was suppose to launch upon completion. it did not appear on the monitor screen, nor the task manager, but was running; for when I attempted to install the older version again it, it said that Firefox was running and needed to be turned off.
    I restarted the computer and tried opening Firefox, with the same results.
    After restarting again, I attempted to reinstall the update, with the same results taking place.
    I attempted to uninstall Firefox and install the new version. The same results took place.
    In the past, I could install Firefox 27 update, only now I can't for the same thing takes place. Past a certain version (19), this event takes place, but 19 and older can install it with no problems.
    I checked Firefox troubleshooting information. All was normal. I checked my firewall. Again, all was normal. Tried Firefox reset. Did not help. Tried with my firewall disabled. Did not solve the problem.
    Ran a virus check (deep) no viruses. Checked my computer system. No errors.
    I can install updates for my other programs, even install new programs; just not Firefox.
    What is going on and how does one fix it.

    Hi Amseeking,
    Thank you for your question. From your description, you tried to install the 28 update from a version 19 installation. Did you install a fresh install of 28 successfully? Where the name of the file is"Firefox Setup Stub 28.exe"? This is what is sound like happened. When going to about Firefox and searching for updates it installs over the current installation. However if Firefox was already running, there are more than one installation.
    Updating from version 19 to 28 would not be a problem. However the user data from your previous version would have to be imported to the new installation if you have more than one install on that computer.
    An easy way to tell is to search for Firefox in the Start menu to see if more than one icon shows up in the search results.
    I hope this helps.

  • What is iTunes Match and how does it work?

    What is iTunes Match and how does it work? I have several tunes on my computer that do not show complete. The source of these tunes are from my own CDs.

    iTunes match - http://www.apple.com/itunes/itunes-match/ - see FAQ at end too
    Basically it looks at the music you have in iTunes.  If it sees the equivalent on the iTunes Store site it does nothing, but it makes that copy accessible to you to download.  If you have music  it doesn't it will upload a version from your computer to the site that only you can access from anywhere online.
    In your case if you have incomplete tracks it will not fix them.  It does some kind of audio fingerprinting to make sure you aren't just feeding it a bunch of 60s demonstration cuts and trying to get whole tracks back.

  • HT201270 In layman terms, what the heck does updating your carrier settings mean and how does it effect me in the real world?

    In Layman terms, what the heck does updating your carrier settings mean, and how does it effect me in the real world?

    No offense, but what carrier?  what data and what service? 
    I get a bogus window hovering in my itunes page, telling me I have to update information, that I don't want to manage. 
    I am not upset or unappreciative of your feedback, quite the opposite, I can't believe anyone actually monitors peoples frustrations. 
    I just want to make sure I don't allow information about me that is not necessary.  I just want to listen to music and have a phone and have an ipad. 
    Everything else about apple is way to propriatory. I don't want to do anything that isn't very simple. 
    Most importantly, there never seems to be any (human being) that can answer a telephone call anymore. 
    Contact us, means...send us an email about something you don't know anything about, and I don't even know that questions to ask.
    I am not allowed to be ignorant.  If I am I wait days for answers.....

  • Media Encoder -- Audio -- Advanced Settings -- Precedence -- What is the difference between the two options presented here and how does it effect the final file?

    I see no literature in any of the manuals that explains this option -- what is it exactly and how does it work?

    endasil wrote:
    Um...have you compared when specifying v = 0x0FFFF, as an arbitrary example?
    Edit All right I'll be a little more specific. How the heck would your Test1 method know if it's only being passed int values <= 255?
    Edited by: endasil on Nov 6, 2007 8:48 PMI see, well, why would it care? all it does is take int and store it into a byte. what else could it do with an int and byte array? Also, if you wanted to check for values <= 255 one could simply add asm code to do that, after all, Test2.test2() has a signature of ([BI) that is (byte[] ba, int v). So, if the method wants to fool around with v* it can iload_1* and do any comparison tests, ifeq* etc..., and latter stuff it into byte array using bastore* without the unnecessary i2b* call.
    I just don't see the use of the i2b* instruction if bastore* could careless. Will this cause the stack to become unlined and cause trouble program down-the-line in execution? I am thinking that I loaded an int*, +4bytes+, but only consumed 1byte. But now that I think about it, iload_1 loads an int* onto local heap so it should get cleaned up when the program exits. So, as long as I made bastore* the last instruction in the program I shouldn't have a problem. Or maybe this doesn't matter either?
    *Also, since ba is an byte[] why would I want to check it for anything other than a byte value? if I wanted to get an int I would have created an int[]*
    My point is that as long as one wants to stuff an int into a byte array the i2b instruction is overkill, albeit not much, and I just do see the usefulness of it.
    This is for when I do something like, byte_array[i] = '-', and the compilers say loss of information and I cast '-' to (byte)'-', meaning I don't care if I loss any information. but it called i2b anyways byte_array[i] = '-' yields the same result.
    I just didn't understand what was behind this.
    Does that answer that question or am I missing anything?
    Edited by: earamsey on Nov 6, 2007 8:04 PM

  • What is 'mobile account' and how does it work?

    This is a hidden feature in Mac OS Leopard, that I believe require an Leopard Server on the network.
    I have not found it in the regular user interface, but it can be revealed by following the below process:
    1. Go to System Preferences > Accounts
    2. Unlock
    3. Search for mobile account, and press Enter
    4. Wait for the Mobile account options to show up
    What is this feature? How does it work?
    I have found no references to it in the normal documentation.

    Google is your friend:
    "A mobile account is a Mac OS X Server user account that has been copied to a local computer and remains synchronized with the server account so that both locations contain a matching set of data."(Mac OS X Server User Management, p. 46).
    And it has been around since 10.3, so it is not something new to Leopard.
    see: http://www.afp548.com/articles/Panther/mcx2.html

  • T3i sensor size vs. full frame and how does that effect lens measurements?

    I am new to both photography and the T3i camera. I have been reading Jeff Revell's book "Canon EOS Rebel T3i / 600D: From Snapshots to Great Shots". In chapter two he talks about "Lenses and Focal Lengths". In discussing wide-angle lenses he says
    "As for which lenses would be considered wide angle, anything 35mm or smaller could be considered as wide."
    Latter he discusses normal lenses and says
    "The normal lens for full-frame and 35mm cameras is the 50mm lens, but for the T3i it is more in the neighborhood of a 35mm lens."
    I understand that there is a 1 / 1.6 ratio between the T3i and a Full Frame camera. In the first quote does the 35mm refer to the T3i measurement or a full frame measurement?
    Is there a standard nomenclature to indicate if you are specifying a "full frame" value verses the T3i value? If so, what is it?
    When I look at one of my lenses, say the 18-55mm lens, is this the T3i measurement or the standard full frame?
    Thanks in advance for your assistance.
    --Jesse
    P.S.  I could not find a publisher’s forum for this book or I would have asked the question there.

    Jesse-T3i wrote:
    "As for which lenses would be considered wide angle, anything 35mm or smaller could be considered as wide."
    In the first quote does the 35mm refer to the T3i measurement or a full frame measurement?
    Is there a standard nomenclature to indicate if you are specifying a "full frame" value verses the T3i value? If so, what is it?
    When I look at one of my lenses, say the 18-55mm lens, is this the T3i measurement or the standard full frame?
    The fast answers are:
    When he mentions the 35mm as the basis for determining what's "wide" he is referring to the APS-C crop-frame size sensor.
    There is no nomenclature to indicate if you are "full frame" vs. "crop frame" on a lens because all lenses are reported in true focal lengths.  There is a nomenclature to indicate if the lens was designed to only project an image circle onto the sensor which is large enough for "crop frame" ... which is what the "EF-S" lens is.  If the lens is for "full frame" (which also works on all crop-frame) then it will have the designation "EF" for most lenses, but Canon also has a few specialty lenses such as the "TS-E" (tilt shift) and "MP-E" (macro photo) lenses which also provide full-frame sensor coverage.  Incidentally... this is just Canon's way of tagging a lens... Nikon uses the terms "FX" and "DX" (for full frame and crop frame respectively).  Everyone has their own tag.  Just remember that focal lengths reported are true (well... there's a TINY bit of round-off allowed) and ignore the sensor size.
    Here's the background which may help you understand why this is.
    The "normal" focal length is based on the human eye, and to understand it, it's easier to think in terms of "angle of view" rather than "focal length."
    If you sit and stare straight ahead without moving your eyes or head to "look around", there is an area of vision that the average person can see (and it does vary), but the "angle of view" for that area is about 40 degrees (horizontally). Of course our vision doesn't present our brain with a nice little rectangular image... it fades and is irregular, but it's generally accepted that the angle of view covers about 40 degrees.
    The LENS that provides 40 degree angle of view coverage on a "full frame" camera turns out to be a 50mm lens.  Images taken with such a lens will seem neither stretched out nor compressed... they'll seem "normal" to your brain.  Also, if you can see an object without having to look around to take in the view, then your camera can "see" it with that lens.  
    A "full frame" camera is one which has a sensor size which is approximately the same as a single frame of 35mm film.  The dimensions are roughly 36mm x 24mm.  
    There are many different crop frame sizes, but for DSLR cameras, the most popular (by far) is the APS-C size.  This means the sensor is roughly the same size as a single frame for the "Advanced Photo System - Classic" film.   You can think of this as being roughly 21mm x 14mm (although it varies by a just a few millimeters -- on your camera it's really 22.3 x 14.9mm).
    If you were to use a movie projector and movie screen and you projected an image so that it fit perfectly on a 12' x 8' screen and called that "full frame", then a "crop frame" would be derived by shriking the movie screen down to about 8' wide by about 5-1/3' tall but (and here's the key) without doing ANYTHING to the movie projector.  Essentially that means you're projecting an image intended to fit ona 12x8' screen... but the real screen is smaller.  What happens to the part of the image that doesn't fit on the screen?    It just spills off the sides and is lost.  That is EXACTLY what happens inside a crop-frame camera.
    Canon EOS "EF" lenses are designed to project an image large enough to fill a full-frame sensor ... so when used on a crop-frame camera some of that image just spills off the sides.   This means that if your lens was providing a 40 degree angle of view (measured horizontally) then the crop-frame is only capturing the 26 degrees in the middle of it.  If you want a 40 degree angle of view again... you'll need to change lenses.
    And this is where your author suggests a 35mm lens is "normal" for a camera with an APS-C body.  The math actually works out in the neighborhood of a 31mm lens, but nobody actually makes a 31mm lens... and a 35mm focal length (commonly available) is pretty close.  Also 28mm lenses are commonly available and are ALSO pretty close.  It's my personal opinion that 28mm is probably a bit more normal than 35mm, but that's because as an avid amateur astronomer, I am fairly used to looking through Plossl design eyepieces which provide a 50 degree apparent angle of view and my eye actually can see the edges of the frame, but if I go a bit wider... I can no longer see the edges of the field without "looking around" (regardless... 40 degrees seems to be the established norm and THAT is the value that everything is based on.)
    For purposes of buying lenses, the focal lengths are NOT converted or adjusted in any way.  For example, Canon makes "EF-S" lenses designed specifically to work with their crop-frame bodies.  So when the kit lens that comes with the camera says it is a zoom with an 18-55mm focal length range... it really is 18-55mm regardless of sensor size.   (Canon isn't multiplying or dividing focal lengths and putting a different value on the box just because it's intended for a crop-sensor camera.)
    Hope this helps.
    Regards,
    Tim
    Tim Campbell
    5D II, 5D III, 60Da

  • What is a codepage and how does it work?

    Like any application, DI needs to know which "codepage" to use when processing data. Codepages are character encoding tables. Codepages are necessary because ultimately, all software operates with sequences of bytes, not the actual letters or numbers that you see on a computer screen. Operating systems and other software applications use codepages to map sequences of bytes to specific characters. Those characters can be single-byte characters such as English or French or multi-byte characters such as Korean or Chinese. Do not assume each language has it&#39;s own codepage. Codepages provide a mapping for a specific set of characters, and in the case of codepage MS1252, many languages such as English, French, German, and Swahili all use the same codepage. This is possible because they share many characters such as "a", "b", "c", etc... MS949, on the other hand, only maps to Korean. Some codepages, such as UTF-8, UTF-16 and UTF-32, map to a standard generally known as Unicode. This is very useful because Unicode is the character set which includes almost all known characters in the world today. When processing both multi-byte and single-byte data, a Unicode codepage is recommended, which in the case of DI is equivalent to UTF-8 .

    How to identify which codepage is installed  on our OS?
    I have windows XP on my machine.

  • HT1414 The latest update 6.1.2 is not verifying on both iPad or iPhone, saying it is no longer connected to Internet. What's going on and how does this fix?

    Went to download latest update on both iPad and iPhone and upon the verification process both "failed to verify" saying they were no longer connected to the Internet.

    yah mine is 3rd generation and it says the same thing. tried testing my Internet connection on my AirPort Extreme it shows no problems. everything else seems to work but I still having delays on my me emails. though my other email sites seem to work ok. looks like the trouble is at apples end.

  • What is JAZN? And how does it relate to JAAS

    I was searching previous postings for any info on JAAS. When I
    found in a reply to a question about JAAS support in OC4J from
    someone called andy.
    JAAs/JAZN will be supported in version 2.0 of iAS.I had never heard of JAZN before so with my curiosity tweaked I
    started to search the web. An hour later all I had to show for
    my efforts was one cryptic message on an Orion list server.
    So could anyone tell me if JAZN is a really Java API or did
    andy's cat jump on his keyboard?
    Daniel

    Hi,
    The JavaTM Authentication and Authorization Service (JAAS) is a
    Java package that enables services to authenticate and enforce
    access controls upon users.
    JAZN is a JAAS provider, which provides both Authentication and
    Authorization Services.
    Oracle9iAS JAAS (a.k.a. "JAZN"), is Oracle's implementation of
    the Java Authentication and Authorization Service (JAAS)
    standard, which adds PAM-based pluggable authentication and
    Subject-based, fine-grained authorization to the Java2 platform.
    Andy

  • What is Card Manager and how does it work ?

    Hi everyone,
    I would like to know how can I find complete description about "card manager"?
    If there is any document or link that have explained it ,please inform me.
    yours sincerely,
    Orchid

    Since it is part of the GP API, the only way to handle the CVM PIN is through an Applet. So you need one "Global PIN" Applet, with which you can set/block/submit/verify a the CVM PIN. All other Applets will implement a verification of the CVM PINin the select() method:
         public boolean select () {
              CVM cvm = GPSystem.getCVM(GPSystem.CVM_GLOBAL_PIN);
              if(!cvm.isVerified())
                   return false;
              else
                   return true;
         }

  • I have a MacAir, mid 2011 model, and want to view video on my TV.  I see that I need a mini display port to Hdmi but there are many of these.  What exatly do I need and how does one view a movie downloaded to the MacAir on a TV screen?

    I have a MacAir, mid 2011 model, and want to view video on my TV.  I see that I need a mini display port to Hdmi but there are many of these.  What exatly do I need and how does one go about viewing a movie downloaded to the MacAir on a TV screen?

    Welcome to Apple Support Communities
    That's exactly what you need. A Mini DisplayPort to HDMI adapter and a HDMI cable. See > http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4241?viewlocale=en_US
    This is the only way to view a video on the TV. After connecting your MacBook Air to the TV, image on your TV should show immediately. Then, press Command and F1 keys to mirror your MacBook Air display, and open the video

  • My Mac has suddenly stopped playing my DVDs including a DVD it played fine only 3 days ago. Does anyone have any idea what could be wrong and how I could fix it? Thank you.

    My Mac has suddenly stopped playing my DVDs including a DVD it played fine only 3 days ago. I insert the DVD and wait for the player to start automatically but after 10 minutes, nothing is happening and it sounds like the disk has stopped spinning. I've now tried with four different DVDs (all store bought and so perfectly normal disks). The Mac doesn't eject the disk or anything it just doesn't seem to respond to it being there at all.
    My main confusion is why this suddenly happened today when it was perfectly fine last week.
    Does anyone have any idea what could be wrong and how I could fix it? Thank you.
    Jinxe

    Welcome to the Apple Support Communities
    See "The drive accepts discs but they do not mount or are automatically ejected" > http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2801

  • I have an IMAc 5 with OS 10.6.8.  I am having trouble doing a iDVD.  Can I remove photos from iphoto to an external device to free up space on my computer?  what do I need and how do I do it?

    I have an IMAc 5 with OS 10.6.8.  I am having trouble doing a iDVD.  Can I move photos in iphoto to an external device to free up space on the computer?  What do I need and how do I do it?

    Hey William Dofflemyer,
    Thanks for the question. I understand you would like to move some photos in your iPhoto library to free up space. The following article may help you with that:
    iPhoto '11: Move your iPhoto library to a new location
    http://support.apple.com/kb/PH2506
    Also, I understand you have some questions about iDVD. The following video may provide more information:
    Apple - Find Out How - Movies - iDVD ’08
    http://www.apple.com/findouthow/movies/idvd.html
    Thanks,
    Matt M.

  • When ever I reboot my device, I get an error message that says, "runtime error info.plist not found". What is this, how does it effect my ipod and how do I correct this error?

    I have an ipod touch 64gb. Lately, I discovered an error message on the lockscreen that says "Runtime Error Info.plist not found". What is this, will it effect my ipod, how does it effect my ipod and how do I correct the error? (I see the error message when I power up my ipod and when I reboot).

    Follow  this article:
    How to restart the Apple Mobile Device Service (AMDS) on Windows

Maybe you are looking for