K
Kiere El-Shafie
I know InfoPath uses IE to render the print output. Does that mean that
there is absolutely no way to format the print so that sections are kept
together?
I have a form that uses optional sections and repeating tables. I can't use
page breaks because I don't know how many rows or sections a user may need.
When I create a test form and print it, I have several instances where the
field label is on one page and the form control is on the next page. That is
going to be very confusing because we fax the printed version of this form.
The person receiving the fax will think that data has been cut off.
Does anyone know of a solution or is that something we need to factor in to
our decision to use InfoPath for this project? What is the point of creating
a digital form application that doesn't print the form very well. Not
everyone needs a form application that submits to a database.
there is absolutely no way to format the print so that sections are kept
together?
I have a form that uses optional sections and repeating tables. I can't use
page breaks because I don't know how many rows or sections a user may need.
When I create a test form and print it, I have several instances where the
field label is on one page and the form control is on the next page. That is
going to be very confusing because we fax the printed version of this form.
The person receiving the fax will think that data has been cut off.
Does anyone know of a solution or is that something we need to factor in to
our decision to use InfoPath for this project? What is the point of creating
a digital form application that doesn't print the form very well. Not
everyone needs a form application that submits to a database.