How to skip the dialog of printing in printDocument.print() and print page directly?
Asked Answered
C

2

16

When I use MyPrintDocument.print() in a Windows application written in C#, a dialog is shown for the Windows processing print routine with a cancel button. I don't want this dialog shown, is it possible?

If not, which way should I use? My program uses a thermal printer.

Ceramic answered 13/5, 2012 at 14:10 Comment(0)
E
23

Which PrintController are you using.

The .NET Framework includes three print controllers that are derived from PrintController that help accomplish common tasks. The StandardPrintController prints a document to a printer. The PreviewPrintController generates a preview of what the document will look like when printed and is used by the PrintPreviewControl and PrintPreviewDialog classes. The PrintControllerWithStatusDialog provides a printing status dialog during the printing process.

It sounds like you are using the PrintControllerWithStatusDialog PrintController.


Caveat: I am not in a position to verify that the basic PrintController doesn't act the same way.

According to this MSDN Forum Posting the PrintControllerWithStatusDialog is the default:

He suggests something like this:

MyPrintDocument.PrintController = new System.Drawing.Printing.StandardPrintController();
Englut answered 13/5, 2012 at 14:27 Comment(0)
C
5

If you don't assign the PrintDocument.PrintController property then you get a default print controller. An instance of PrintControllerWithStatusDialog which displays the progress dialog, counting pages and generally informing the user that the program is unresponsive for a reason but otherwise not hung.

Simply reassign it in the form constructor. Boilerplate code is:

Public Class Form1
    Public Sub New()
        InitializeComponent()
        PrintDocument1.PrintController = New System.Drawing.Printing.StandardPrintController
    End Sub
End Class

And you'll have to do something else to tell the user that a print is in progress. At least display an hourglass cursor.

Cutter answered 13/5, 2012 at 14:46 Comment(0)

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