Printing Korean Characters in List

Hi Guys,
                    I have a created a normal report. In that report there are Korean characters. When I generate the report output, all the korean characters will be displayed perfectly. But when I take the print of that list, the Korean characters will not appear. Instead, a hash symbol will be comming for all the Korean characters.
Can you please tell how to fix this issue.
Regards.
Harish.

How about checking printer configuration in SAP using transaction SPAD? Is correct format, characters, codepages are defined?

Similar Messages

  • ZHANWIN device type does not print Korean characters

    Hi All,
    We are trying to print smart forms containing Chinese,Taiwanese and Korean characters from our ECC 6.0
    As per SAP Note 1038413 - Unicode SAPWIN device type for CJK fon, we used the device type ZHANWIN to print smart forms for these characters. 
    But with this device type we are unable to print smart forms with Korean characters. But as per the note, it has to support Korean characters too.
    Please help with this issue.
    Thanks and Regards,
    Subashree

    Hi Subashree,
    it is likely that the problem with ZHANWIN is related to the font used in the form. if you want to print Korean characters via ZHANWIN, you need to specify a Korean font like KPBATANG for the Korean characters in the form. Then this will be mapped to a suitable windows font in windows. If you chosse e.g font COURIER , it is mapped to windosw font Courier New which does nto contain the Korean characters.
    For SWINCF or SWINCFCK the font in SAP is not so impertant. The mapping of the characters in windows is based on the Unicode character range. So as Nils said, SWINCFCK should work regardless of the font in the SAP form.
    Regards,
    Aidan

  • Printing Japanese characters: ABAP List

    Dear all,
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    How about checking printer configuration in SAP using transaction SPAD? Is correct format, characters, codepages are defined?

  • Printing Turkish Characters in SAP Script Form

    Hi I want to print a Form where I need to Print Turkish characters from Database. Its Print Preview is coming absolutely right but there is some problem while printing. I shows # symbol in places of Turkish Characters. I have checked the printer and drivers and they are absolutely fine. Printer is printing other documents in Turkish Language but not the form. System has Turkish fonts installed. Kindly help. Thanks in advance.

    Hi
    See this OSS note for your problem
    OSS Note: 776507
    Symptom
    Documents printed via SAPscript or SmartForms do not print with correct special characters, e.g. ### prints instead of Japanese or Russian characters. What to do?
    Other terms
    SAPscript, SmartForms, printing, device types, OTF
    Reason and Prerequisites
    Help required to choose proper fonts in a SAPscript or SmartForm
    Solution
    When using SAPscript or SmartForms to print (or email or fax) a form from a business application, many factors influence the outcome of the actual text within the form. All these factors must be checked in order to ensure a correct printout:
    1) The language version of the form used to produce the printout.
    Example: If you want to print a French invoice, you need to have a FR version of your SAPscript or SmartForms invoice form RVINVOICE01. And the application program must specify the corresponding language key (FR) when calling the SAPscript or SmartForms API.
    2) The font selections specified in the form (possibly also in a SAPscript style or SmartStyle used in a form).
    Example: In a SAPscript form or a SmartStyle you need to specify HELVE if you want to print German text in Helvetica (or similar) font. If you want to print Japanese text, HELVE is not a valid choice but you need to specify a Japanese font like JPMINCHO in your Japanese form.
    3) The output character set of the device type
    Every printer in transaction SPAD has a "device type" assigned. Device types used by the spooler for printing support only one single specific output character set. All text from the form has to be converted (using SAP's built-in character conversion mechanism) to this output character set.
    A character set can typically support either a single language (e.g. Shift-JIS which supports only Japanese) or a set of languages (e.g. ISO 8859-1, which supports Western-European languages). It is possible that a given language (such as German) can be supported by several output character sets, e.g. you may use either ISO 8895-1 (Latin-1) or ISO 8859-2 (Latin-2) to represent German text. This is so because both character sets contain the special characters used in German.
    Example: HPLJ4000 is a HP LaserJet device type supporting the ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1) character set. ISO 8859-1 can be used to represent e.g. Dutch, English, French, German, Spanish, Swedish but NOT Russian or Japanese.
    As a consequence, it is ok to use HPLJ4000 to print English, German French etc. but not for Japanese or Russian.
    4) The set of available printer fonts for a given device type
    When formatting a document, SAPscript and SmartForms perform an automatic mapping of the font definitions in the form (e.g. "HELVE 14 point bold") and the available printer fonts of the device type. A replacement printer font is chosen, should the specified font selection not be available in the device type. Now this replacement can be problematic if a language-specific font, such as Chinese CNSONG, is specified in a form and it gets replaced by a font which does not support this language, e.g. COURIER.
    To solve this problem, font families in SE73 have language attribute assigned, e.g. some fonts are characterized as being suitable only for certain languages. And when a replacement has to be chosen because the original font from the form is not available in the device type, a replacement font is chosen which has the same language attributes.
    If no fonts for the language in question exist in the device type, the resulting font will not be able to print the special characters and you will see "wrong" output characters in the printout.
    Note on SAPscript/SmartForms Print Preview:
    The OTF Print Preview available in Windows GUI (e.g. from transaction SP01) will sometimes not show the "wrong" characters which appear on the final printout. Here is the reason: since the Print Preview runs in Windows environment, it will use Windows fonts to represent the actual printer fonts. A Windows font typically has more available characters (i.e. covers more character sets) than are actually available in a printer's resident font.
    A typical example where the Print Preview will differ from the printout is here: if you have a Chinese PCL5 printer such as CNHPLJ4 and use the Western Latin font COURIER in your document, the print preview will show you Chinese characters if you (by accident) tried to format Chinese characters in COURIER font. This is because Windows will automatically choose a font that can output Chinese characters (which is actually not Courier). But when you print the job on an actual PCL5 printer with resident Western and Chinese fonts, the Courier font will not print any Chinese characters but Western special characters instead, because the printer's resident Courier font does not include Chinese characters.
    Rule of thumb: all Asian device types (e.g. CNHPLJ4, JPHPLJ4, JPPOST, KPHPLJ4) support not only Asian fonts but also COURIER, HELVE and TIMES fonts. But these Latin fonts can only be used to print English text, not Chinese/Japanese/Korean characters.
    Which fonts are suitable for a given language?
    Language(s):            Font family to use in a form:
    Latin-1 (Western Europe/Americas) *******
    DE,EN,FR,ES,NL,SV       COURIER, HELVE, TIMES
                            (LETGOTH, LNPRINT)
    Latin-2 (Central Europe) ****************
    PL, CZ                  COURIER, HELVE, TIMES
    ISO 8859-4 (Baltic) *********************
    ET, LT, LV              COURIER, HELVE, TIMES
    ISO 8859-5 (Cyrillic) *******************
    BG, RU, SR, UK          COURCYR, HELVCYR, TIMECYR
    ISO 8859-7 (Greek) **********************
    EL                      COUR_I7, HELV_I7, TIME_I7
    ISO 8859-8 (Hebrew) *********************
    HE                      COURIER, HELVE, TIMES
    ISO 8859-9 (Turkish) ********************
    TR                      COURIER, HELVE, TIMES
    Simplified Chinese **********************
    ZH                      CNHEI, CNKAI, CNSONG
    Japanese ********************************
    JA                      JPMINCHO, DBMINCHO, DBGOTHIC
    Korean **********************************
    KP                      KPBATANG, KPDODUM, KPGULIM
                            KPGUNGSE, KPSAMMUL
    Traditional Chinese *********************
    ZF                      TWDPHEI, TWMING, TWSONG
    Thai ************************************
    TH                      THANGSAN, THDRAFT, THVIJIT
    Arabic (Unicode systems only) ***********
    AR                      ANDALE_J
    Verify your output by examining the OTF data
    When analysing printing problems of this type, be sure to check the OTF data which gets produced by SAPscript or SmartForms. OTF or "Output Text Format" is the intermediate page-description format generated from SAPscript or SmartForms. OTF will contain the final printer font names and character set/language identifiers which help to solve the problem. OTF will even name the form and the language of the form used to create the output.
    The easiest way to do this is to create a spool request from your application, run transaction SP01, use menu
    Goto->Display Requests->Settings
    and choose
    Display Mode: Raw
    Now display your spool request. If this is a SAPscript or SmartForms spool request, you will see OTF data. Each line represents one OTF command, every command starts with a 2-character cmd identifier and possibly some cmd parameters follow.
    Here is an excerpt from a sample OTF file where we highlight the most interesting commands:
    //XHPLJ8000    0700 00000000001
    IN04EALEXTEST_ZEBRA
    IN05%PAGE1
    OPDINA4  P 144  240 1683811906000010000100001
    IN06%WINDOW2
    MT0024401289
    CP11000000E
    FCHELVE  120  00109XSF100SF101110000067E X
    UL +0000000000000
    SW00067
    CT00000000
    ST0453037Dieses SF hat Stil ALEXTEST_ZEBRA mit
    The 1st line with the // (Control) command reveals the device type usedto print: HPLJ8000
    //XHPLJ8000    0700 00000000001
    The 2nd line (IN = Info command) shows the name and (internal 1-char)language key of the form:
    IN04EALEXTEST_ZEBRA
    In this case it is the English (E = EN) SmartForm ALEXTEST_ZEBRA
    The OP-line (OP = Open Page) gives the page format used in the form, it is DINA4 Portrait orientation:
    OPDINA4  P 144  240 1683811906000010000100001
    The CP (CodePage) cmd shows the SAP system codepage used to code the text and the active language. In our case it is codepage 1100 and language E = EN = English.
    CP11000000E
    Finally, the FC-cmd (Font Call) lists a printer font selected within SmartForms. Please note that every SmartForm has a designated default SmartStyle under "Form Attributes->Output Options". In addition, every text node can have a SmartStyle attached (which will override the definitions from the default style for the text). In our case the resulting printer font that was selected is HELVE 12.0 pt bold-off, italic-off.
    FCHELVE   120  00109XSF100SF101110000067E X
    Header Data
    Release Status: Released for Customer
    Released on: 22.08.2005  09:57:20
    Priority: Recommendations/additional info
    Category: Customizing
    Primary Component: BC-CCM-PRN Print and Output Management
    Secondary Components: BC-SRV-SCR SAPscript
    BC-SRV-SSF Smart Forms
    <b>
    Reward points for useful Answers</b>
    Regards
    Anji

  • Printing foreign characters

    Hi!
    We have a slovenian (SI) customer. He's living in a street, which contains a "š" character.
    During the printing in the print preview it seems correct.
    But on the printed paper, it is not correct.
    What can I do (please don't answer, ask basis guys).
    Thank you
    Tamá

    Hi
    check this OSS note May be useful
    OSS Note: 776507
    Symptom
    Documents printed via SAPscript or SmartForms do not print with correct special characters, e.g. ### prints instead of Japanese or Russian characters. What to do?
    Other terms
    SAPscript, SmartForms, printing, device types, OTF
    Reason and Prerequisites
    Help required to choose proper fonts in a SAPscript or SmartForm
    Solution
    When using SAPscript or SmartForms to print (or email or fax) a form from a business application, many factors influence the outcome of the actual text within the form. All these factors must be checked in order to ensure a correct printout:
    1) The language version of the form used to produce the printout.
    Example: If you want to print a French invoice, you need to have a FR version of your SAPscript or SmartForms invoice form RVINVOICE01. And the application program must specify the corresponding language key (FR) when calling the SAPscript or SmartForms API.
    2) The font selections specified in the form (possibly also in a SAPscript style or SmartStyle used in a form).
    Example: In a SAPscript form or a SmartStyle you need to specify HELVE if you want to print German text in Helvetica (or similar) font. If you want to print Japanese text, HELVE is not a valid choice but you need to specify a Japanese font like JPMINCHO in your Japanese form.
    3) The output character set of the device type
    Every printer in transaction SPAD has a "device type" assigned. Device types used by the spooler for printing support only one single specific output character set. All text from the form has to be converted (using SAP's built-in character conversion mechanism) to this output character set.
    A character set can typically support either a single language (e.g. Shift-JIS which supports only Japanese) or a set of languages (e.g. ISO 8859-1, which supports Western-European languages). It is possible that a given language (such as German) can be supported by several output character sets, e.g. you may use either ISO 8895-1 (Latin-1) or ISO 8859-2 (Latin-2) to represent German text. This is so because both character sets contain the special characters used in German.
    Example: HPLJ4000 is a HP LaserJet device type supporting the ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1) character set. ISO 8859-1 can be used to represent e.g. Dutch, English, French, German, Spanish, Swedish but NOT Russian or Japanese.
    As a consequence, it is ok to use HPLJ4000 to print English, German French etc. but not for Japanese or Russian.
    4) The set of available printer fonts for a given device type
    When formatting a document, SAPscript and SmartForms perform an automatic mapping of the font definitions in the form (e.g. "HELVE 14 point bold") and the available printer fonts of the device type. A replacement printer font is chosen, should the specified font selection not be available in the device type. Now this replacement can be problematic if a language-specific font, such as Chinese CNSONG, is specified in a form and it gets replaced by a font which does not support this language, e.g. COURIER.
    To solve this problem, font families in SE73 have language attribute assigned, e.g. some fonts are characterized as being suitable only for certain languages. And when a replacement has to be chosen because the original font from the form is not available in the device type, a replacement font is chosen which has the same language attributes.
    If no fonts for the language in question exist in the device type, the resulting font will not be able to print the special characters and you will see "wrong" output characters in the printout.
    Note on SAPscript/SmartForms Print Preview:
    The OTF Print Preview available in Windows GUI (e.g. from transaction SP01) will sometimes not show the "wrong" characters which appear on the final printout. Here is the reason: since the Print Preview runs in Windows environment, it will use Windows fonts to represent the actual printer fonts. A Windows font typically has more available characters (i.e. covers more character sets) than are actually available in a printer's resident font.
    A typical example where the Print Preview will differ from the printout is here: if you have a Chinese PCL5 printer such as CNHPLJ4 and use the Western Latin font COURIER in your document, the print preview will show you Chinese characters if you (by accident) tried to format Chinese characters in COURIER font. This is because Windows will automatically choose a font that can output Chinese characters (which is actually not Courier). But when you print the job on an actual PCL5 printer with resident Western and Chinese fonts, the Courier font will not print any Chinese characters but Western special characters instead, because the printer's resident Courier font does not include Chinese characters.
    Rule of thumb: all Asian device types (e.g. CNHPLJ4, JPHPLJ4, JPPOST, KPHPLJ4) support not only Asian fonts but also COURIER, HELVE and TIMES fonts. But these Latin fonts can only be used to print English text, not Chinese/Japanese/Korean characters.
    Which fonts are suitable for a given language?
    Language(s):            Font family to use in a form:
    Latin-1 (Western Europe/Americas) *******
    DE,EN,FR,ES,NL,SV       COURIER, HELVE, TIMES
                            (LETGOTH, LNPRINT)
    Latin-2 (Central Europe) ****************
    PL, CZ                  COURIER, HELVE, TIMES
    ISO 8859-4 (Baltic) *********************
    ET, LT, LV              COURIER, HELVE, TIMES
    ISO 8859-5 (Cyrillic) *******************
    BG, RU, SR, UK          COURCYR, HELVCYR, TIMECYR
    ISO 8859-7 (Greek) **********************
    EL                      COUR_I7, HELV_I7, TIME_I7
    ISO 8859-8 (Hebrew) *********************
    HE                      COURIER, HELVE, TIMES
    ISO 8859-9 (Turkish) ********************
    TR                      COURIER, HELVE, TIMES
    Simplified Chinese **********************
    ZH                      CNHEI, CNKAI, CNSONG
    Japanese ********************************
    JA                      JPMINCHO, DBMINCHO, DBGOTHIC
    Korean **********************************
    KP                      KPBATANG, KPDODUM, KPGULIM
                            KPGUNGSE, KPSAMMUL
    Traditional Chinese *********************
    ZF                      TWDPHEI, TWMING, TWSONG
    Thai ************************************
    TH                      THANGSAN, THDRAFT, THVIJIT
    Arabic (Unicode systems only) ***********
    AR                      ANDALE_J
    Verify your output by examining the OTF data
    When analysing printing problems of this type, be sure to check the OTF data which gets produced by SAPscript or SmartForms. OTF or "Output Text Format" is the intermediate page-description format generated from SAPscript or SmartForms. OTF will contain the final printer font names and character set/language identifiers which help to solve the problem. OTF will even name the form and the language of the form used to create the output.
    The easiest way to do this is to create a spool request from your application, run transaction SP01, use menu
    Goto->Display Requests->Settings
    and choose
    Display Mode: Raw
    Now display your spool request. If this is a SAPscript or SmartForms spool request, you will see OTF data. Each line represents one OTF command, every command starts with a 2-character cmd identifier and possibly some cmd parameters follow.
    Here is an excerpt from a sample OTF file where we highlight the most interesting commands:
    //XHPLJ8000    0700 00000000001
    IN04EALEXTEST_ZEBRA
    IN05%PAGE1
    OPDINA4  P 144  240 1683811906000010000100001
    IN06%WINDOW2
    MT0024401289
    CP11000000E
    FCHELVE  120  00109XSF100SF101110000067E X
    UL +0000000000000
    SW00067
    CT00000000
    ST0453037Dieses SF hat Stil ALEXTEST_ZEBRA mit
    The 1st line with the // (Control) command reveals the device type usedto print: HPLJ8000
    //XHPLJ8000    0700 00000000001
    The 2nd line (IN = Info command) shows the name and (internal 1-char)language key of the form:
    IN04EALEXTEST_ZEBRA
    In this case it is the English (E = EN) SmartForm ALEXTEST_ZEBRA
    The OP-line (OP = Open Page) gives the page format used in the form, it is DINA4 Portrait orientation:
    OPDINA4  P 144  240 1683811906000010000100001
    The CP (CodePage) cmd shows the SAP system codepage used to code the text and the active language. In our case it is codepage 1100 and language E = EN = English.
    CP11000000E
    Finally, the FC-cmd (Font Call) lists a printer font selected within SmartForms. Please note that every SmartForm has a designated default SmartStyle under "Form Attributes->Output Options". In addition, every text node can have a SmartStyle attached (which will override the definitions from the default style for the text). In our case the resulting printer font that was selected is HELVE 12.0 pt bold-off, italic-off.
    FCHELVE   120  00109XSF100SF101110000067E X
    Header Data
    Release Status: Released for Customer
    Released on: 22.08.2005  09:57:20
    Priority: Recommendations/additional info
    Category: Customizing
    Primary Component: BC-CCM-PRN Print and Output Management
    Secondary Components: BC-SRV-SCR SAPscript
    BC-SRV-SSF Smart Forms
    Regards
    Anji

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    Edited by: Nils Buerckel on Mar 19, 2010 5:09 PM

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    I wonder if is possible to obtain more customers for each page printed.
    Could anyone help me?
    Thanks
    Gandalf
    Edited by: Umberto Gandalf on Dec 21, 2008 10:36 PM

    Hi,
    Though personally i havent tried this option, check the same
    Go to Menu: Settings >> Switch List
    This will make the value displayed in ALV format and then try taking print outs.
    Regards,
    Sridevi

  • When i print a pdf from preview it prints strange characters - it looks fine on screen

    when i print a pdf from preview it prints strange characters - it looks fine on screen

    You can also try opening the PDF with preview, then doing a copy and paste to TextEdit and printing from there.
    Adobe makes it easier, but you do have software to accomplish this.
    Only download Adobe reader from this site, to avoid "fakes/spoofs/malware" that will cause damage to your machine.
    http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/product.jsp?platform=macintosh&product=10
    Hope this helps

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