When you print your presentation, it is printed in the
wrong page orientation.
Landscape presentations may be printed in
portrait orientation. As a result, the presentation is centered on the page and
cut off on both sides of the printed page.
Portrait presentations may
be printed in landscape orientation. As a result, the presentation is centered
on the page and cut off at the bottom of the printed page.
Presentations that were printed correctly in earlier versions of Microsoft
PowerPoint are printed incorrectly in Microsoft PowerPoint 2002 and in later versions of PowerPoint.
PowerPoint 2002 and later versions change the way PowerPoint sends print
information to the printer driver. Certain unsigned printer drivers do not
interpret this information correctly, and use the current default driver
orientation.
In each case reported to Microsoft so far, Microsoft has
not signed the printer driver in question. Driver signing is a process in which
Microsoft certifies that a driver works properly with Microsoft Windows.
To resolve this problem, obtain a printer driver from your
hardware manufacturer that Microsoft has verified to work with your version of
Windows (a signed driver). For more information about Microsoft Windows
hardware compatibility, please go to the following Microsoft Web site:
To temporarily work around this problem, use either of the
following methods.
Method 1
Obtain the latest, unsigned driver for your printer. If this does
not resolve the problem, contact your printer manufacturer and ask whether
there are any signed drivers available for your printer. You can also ask
whether your printer can use drivers for a similar, signed print device.
Method 2
Change the default print orientation to portrait or landscape,
depending on how you want PowerPoint to print the presentation. To do this,
follow these steps.
NOTE: This setting affects anything printed from your computer.
- Click Start, point to Settings, and then click Printers.
- Right-click your printer, and then click Properties.
- Change the orientation to portrait or landscape as
appropriate, and then apply the setting.
NOTE: The specific steps to change the orientation depend upon your
print driver. - In PowerPoint, click Print Preview on the File menu. Verify that your presentation will be printed
correctly.
Definitions of Print Orientations
Landscape: This term refers to a page that is wider than it is tall. A
standard page with landscape orientation is 11 inches wide and 8.5 inches
tall.
Portrait: This term refers to a page that is taller than it is wide. A
standard page with portrait orientation is 8.5 inches wide and 11 inches
tall.
You cannot change the layout of your slide in print preview.
Changing orientation causes several layout problems that you cannot correct in
print preview.
For more information, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
285498Â
(http://kbalertz.com/Feedback.aspx?kbNumber=285498/
)
You cannot click the Landscape and Portrait buttons on the Print Preview toolbar in PowerPoint 2002 or PowerPoint 2003