Printer won't print in colour using mac 08:21 AM. Product: envy 4522 Operating System: Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite I am a macbook pro owner. My new printer prints colour when using test pages. Only prints in greyscale when printing from Excel,Word, or webpages. This appears to be a common problem from the list on the site. Since I upgraded to Word 2016 for mac from the online download store, I've had spotty saving capability, and now it has stopped saving 90% of the time. I even tried to copy and paste it into a new document and it still won't save.
It can be very difficult to manage a large, printed-out Excel spreadsheet when you have columns, rows and data that are all spread out across multiple pages. We have previously written about, but this might not be a practical option for larger spreadsheets, as it will make the text very small. However, you can modify the printout of an Excel 2013 spreadsheet to only print all of your columns on one page, allowing documents with a large number of rows to be printed on multiple pages, just without any stray columns showing up on their own pages. So continue reading below to learn how print all of your columns on one page in Excel 2013. Have you been thinking about upgrading to Windows 8, or installing Office 2013 on some more computers?
And to see if they offer everything that you might need. Fit all Spreadsheet Columns on One Page in Excel 2013 This option is best left for situations where your spreadsheet might otherwise print some extra pages with only a handful of columns on them.
There is only a finite amount of space on a page, and the Excel print utility is going to reduce the size of the columns to force them all into that space. So while you may be tempted to force a 90 column spreadsheet to one page, the results may not be very useful. But you can experiment with the steps below to see how your document will look when you print all of the columns on one page, then you can check in Print Preview to see if you are happy with the result.
Step 1: Open your spreadsheet in Excel 2013. Step 2: Click the File tab at the top-left corner of the window.
Good morning. I'm running a MacBook Pro with OS X 10.5.8. I've had it for a little over a year and have had little to no problems with it. Suddenly about a week ago, it wouldn't let me print anything in landscape format.
Here's what I've tried to fix/diagnose the problem.Checked all settings within the given program or for a given printer.I switched to different printers -Converted from Excel, Word docs to PDF to see if it was a program issue -I even changed out USB cables When looking at the print preview it shows that it will print exactly the way I want it too, but then doesn't print correctly. Nothing seems to fix the problem, but I really do need it to print landscape and it's VERY frustrating that it won't. Can anyone tell me how to fix this issue?
So in this case, 'anything' means Word or Excel documents, I surmise. You could: 1. Find their respective plist files and 'rebuild' them.
Try another user account. Reinstall Office for Mac.
First, uninstall it. HD/Users/ YourUserName/Library/Preferences/Microsoft/com.microsoft.Excel.prefs.plist HD/Users/ YourUserName/Library/Preferences/Microsoft/com.microsoft.Word.prefs.plist Move those files to the Desktop.
![Excel for mac won print area Excel for mac won print area](https://www.biz.konicaminolta.com/download/users-guide/554e_454e_364e_284e_224e/en/contents/img/IC/ZEUSBK_MEN004810D_01.png)
Open Word and Excel. Try to print. Read about accounts in Mac Help if you need to. /Applications/Microsoft Office 2004/Additional Tools/Remove Office/Remove Office Not a mistake. The folder it's in has the same name. But, make sure you have the installation disc before you Remove Office!.plist is a preference file for an application.
Quit the application. You can then trash the.plist files (or put them on the desktop meantime).
Reopen the application, which will build a fresh.plist file. Then go through the Print routine, remembering to use Page Setup. If that doesn't solve the printing issue, something else you might consider is deleting ALL printers via Printer Setup Utility, and then reinstall whatever printers you're seeking to use. Last, but not least, repair Permissions using OnyX.
Restarting after a major change to the OS, eg. Deleting a printer, is a good idea, but I don't know if it's essential. You can but try it.
Deleting the printer.should. have removed its.plist file, but I suggest that you look for it and trash it if its Get Info date is prior to deleting the printer. No, DON'T delete all.plist files, that'll cause more trouble than it's worth.
If things get to that stage, you're better to reinstall the OS, but be sure to have a complete backup of the HD first; or do Archive & Install (which preserves non-OS files).