Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have about 100 worksheets, each has an identical structure.
The area on each worksheet to be printed is small. If these areas were moved to co-exist on the same worksheet then the number of pages required to print everything would be a fraction of 100. (Moving these areas onto one worksheet is not an option given other reasons for structuring the workbook the way it is.) Can I print all worksheets at once and use fewer than 50 double sided pages? Many thanks, Stephen Powell |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Stephen
assuming you had, say, 10 full rows on each sheet, you'd have a total of 1000 rows to print. If you *could* just print them one after the other at, say, 60 rows per page, that would give you just under 17 pages. If you want to allow a three row gap between blocks of data, you'd have just under 22 pages. If you could align some of the data side by side, you'd be down to around 11 pages. And, if your printer can print double sided then half it again. So, a lot depends on how much data there is and how you want it presented. Assuming you have that clear in your head, you could code a macro to page through all the sheets and copy the *values* to a location on the "print control" sheet. Easy in theory Regards Trevor "Stephen POWELL" wrote in message ... I have about 100 worksheets, each has an identical structure. The area on each worksheet to be printed is small. If these areas were moved to co-exist on the same worksheet then the number of pages required to print everything would be a fraction of 100. (Moving these areas onto one worksheet is not an option given other reasons for structuring the workbook the way it is.) Can I print all worksheets at once and use fewer than 50 double sided pages? Many thanks, Stephen Powell |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Trevor:
Your suggestion is worth considering. Thanks. Stephen "Trevor Shuttleworth" wrote: Stephen assuming you had, say, 10 full rows on each sheet, you'd have a total of 1000 rows to print. If you *could* just print them one after the other at, say, 60 rows per page, that would give you just under 17 pages. If you want to allow a three row gap between blocks of data, you'd have just under 22 pages. If you could align some of the data side by side, you'd be down to around 11 pages. And, if your printer can print double sided then half it again. So, a lot depends on how much data there is and how you want it presented. Assuming you have that clear in your head, you could code a macro to page through all the sheets and copy the *values* to a location on the "print control" sheet. Easy in theory Regards Trevor "Stephen POWELL" wrote in message ... I have about 100 worksheets, each has an identical structure. The area on each worksheet to be printed is small. If these areas were moved to co-exist on the same worksheet then the number of pages required to print everything would be a fraction of 100. (Moving these areas onto one worksheet is not an option given other reasons for structuring the workbook the way it is.) Can I print all worksheets at once and use fewer than 50 double sided pages? Many thanks, Stephen Powell |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have about 100 worksheets, each has an identical structure.
The area on each worksheet to be printed is small. ... Can I print all worksheets at once and use fewer than 50 double sided pages? If you do this sort of thing a lot, "fineprint" might help: http://www.fineprint.com/products/fineprint/index.html Among its features is the ability to print four-up; that is, to print four "pages" on one side of one sheet. Two-up and eight-up, too. It isn't free, but it's worth the price if you use its features a lot. (I'm not affiliated with fineprint except as a customer. It has been useful to me.) |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
You could also try using the camera tool. The camera tool takes a picture of
the range of cells and you can place it on another sheet for printing along with pictures of the other ranges so that you can get as many on a print area as will fit. The picture of the range of cells has the range in the formula bar and can be edited. The camera tool needs to be added by tools, customize and drag the camera button to a toolbar. Gary "Jay" wrote: I have about 100 worksheets, each has an identical structure. The area on each worksheet to be printed is small. ... Can I print all worksheets at once and use fewer than 50 double sided pages? If you do this sort of thing a lot, "fineprint" might help: http://www.fineprint.com/products/fineprint/index.html Among its features is the ability to print four-up; that is, to print four "pages" on one side of one sheet. Two-up and eight-up, too. It isn't free, but it's worth the price if you use its features a lot. (I'm not affiliated with fineprint except as a customer. It has been useful to me.) |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gary:
Thank you for your suggestion. Given my limited skills with macros I am not likely to make good use of your idea (given the repetitious nature of using this feature on so many print areas), however, I can see how I could make use of this in other instances. Thanks again. Stephen "Gary Rowe" wrote: You could also try using the camera tool. The camera tool takes a picture of the range of cells and you can place it on another sheet for printing along with pictures of the other ranges so that you can get as many on a print area as will fit. The picture of the range of cells has the range in the formula bar and can be edited. The camera tool needs to be added by tools, customize and drag the camera button to a toolbar. Gary "Jay" wrote: I have about 100 worksheets, each has an identical structure. The area on each worksheet to be printed is small. ... Can I print all worksheets at once and use fewer than 50 double sided pages? If you do this sort of thing a lot, "fineprint" might help: http://www.fineprint.com/products/fineprint/index.html Among its features is the ability to print four-up; that is, to print four "pages" on one side of one sheet. Two-up and eight-up, too. It isn't free, but it's worth the price if you use its features a lot. (I'm not affiliated with fineprint except as a customer. It has been useful to me.) |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thank you Jay. Your suggestion is something that I was not aware of. I will
look into this. Seems really interesting. Stephen "Jay" wrote: I have about 100 worksheets, each has an identical structure. The area on each worksheet to be printed is small. ... Can I print all worksheets at once and use fewer than 50 double sided pages? If you do this sort of thing a lot, "fineprint" might help: http://www.fineprint.com/products/fineprint/index.html Among its features is the ability to print four-up; that is, to print four "pages" on one side of one sheet. Two-up and eight-up, too. It isn't free, but it's worth the price if you use its features a lot. (I'm not affiliated with fineprint except as a customer. It has been useful to me.) |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Print all charts in a workbook (multiple worksheets) | Charts and Charting in Excel | |||
How do I print row labels on alternating pages of an Excel workshe | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
How to print a worksheet but number the pages by workbook | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Print double-sided pages in Excel | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Multiple Worksheets and Print Merge function | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) |