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I've recently been working on a print stylesheet for a website, and I realized that I was at a loss for effective ways to tweak it. It's one thing to have a reload cycle for working on the on-screen layout:

  • change code
  • command-tab
  • reload

but that whole process gets much more arduous when you're trying to print:

  • change code
  • command-tab
  • reload
  • print
  • squint at print-preview image
  • open PDF in Preview for further inspection

Are there tools I'm missing out on here? Does WebKit's inspector have a "pretend this is paged media" checkbox? Is there some magic that Firebug (shudder) can do?

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13 Answers 13

333

There is an option for that in Chrome's inspector.

  1. Open the DevTools inspector (mac: Cmd + Shift + C , windows: Ctrl + Shift + C)
  2. Click on the Toggle device mode icon Toggle device mode button, located on the upper left corner of the DevTools panel. (windows: Ctrl+Shift+M, mac: Cmd+Shift+M).
  3. Click on the More overrides more overrides icon in the top right corner of the browser viewport to open the devtools drawer.
  4. Then, select Media in the emulation drawer, and check the CSS media checkbox.

    enter image description here

This should do the trick.

Update: The menus have changed in DevTools. It can now be found by clicking on the "three-dots" menu in the top right corner > More Tools > Rendering Settings > Emulate media > print.

Source: Google DevTools page*

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  • 21
    unfortunately it is not 100% accurate :(
    – maazza
    Sep 18, 2013 at 11:45
  • 2
    I wish I could up this post twice. It might not be 100% accurate, but it's accurate enough to solve a lot of strange and annoying problems.
    – wasatz
    Nov 15, 2013 at 14:35
  • 9
    In Chrome 32.0.1700.14 beta-m Aura, "Emulate CSS media [print]" is missing :(
    – gen_Eric
    Nov 15, 2013 at 14:48
  • 11
    This answer needs to be corrected. As of Chrome 48, the print stylesheet emulator is no longer under "Emulation" but under "Rendering."
    – chharvey
    Feb 10, 2016 at 17:39
  • 3
    Steps 2 and 3 are just wrong for the current Chrome (and the Chrome as of your most recent edit). This has absolutely nothing to do with device mode. Just open dev tools, open the panel (Esc or choose "show console" from the menu), and tick "Emulate print media". That's it. Apr 5, 2016 at 6:51
78
+25

I'm assuming you want as much control of the printed window as possible without using a HTML to PDF approach... Use @media screen to debug - @media print for final css

Modern browsers can give you a quick visual for what's going to happen at print time using inches and pts in a @media query.

@media screen and (max-width:8.5in) { /* resize your window until the event is triggered */
    html { width:8.5in; }
    body { font: 9pt/1.5 Arial, sans-serif; } /* Roughly 12px font */
 ...
}

Once your browser is displaying "inches" you'll have a better idea of what to expect. This approach should all but end the print preview method. All printers will work with pt and in units, and using the @media technique will allow you to quickly see what's going to happen and adjust accordingly. Firebug (or equivalent) will absolutely expedite that process. When you've added your changes to @media, you've got all the code you need for a linked CSS file using media = "print" attribute - just copy/paste the @media screen rules to the referenced file.

Good luck. The web wasn't built for print. Creating a solution that delivers all of your content, styles equal to what's seen in the browser can be impossible at times. For instance, a fluid layout for a predominantly 1280 x 1024 audience doesn't always translate easily to a nice and neat 8.5 x 11 laser print.

W3C reference for purusal: http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-mediaqueries/

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  • 1
    Just wanted to comment that this method is pretty clever. Much easier to resize the window slightly to "toggle" print styles than to use a print preview function. While you still have to do that sometimes for IE compatibility and such, this is great for initial iteration of print styles. Jun 17, 2011 at 16:24
  • @Chuck. Thanks Man. Hey, I realized my demo was off-line, so I created a fiddle for it. jsfiddle.net/dNEmT
    – Dawson
    Jun 18, 2011 at 5:15
21

Chrome 48 you can debug print styles within the Rendering tab.

Click the menu icon top right of inspector and Rendering Settings.

Edit
For Chrome 58 the location has changed to Web Inspector > Menu > More Tools > Rendering

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  • 4
    Chrome 49 : F12 (developer console) -> ESC (console) -> Rendering -> Emulate print media Mar 18, 2016 at 18:07
19

In Chrome v41, it's there, but in a slightly different spot.

enter image description here

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  • 3
    In v53 it's on the Rendering tab instead, at the bottom there's a checkbox for Emulate Media which will enable a dropdown that you can select Print in, similar to the provided screenshot
    – James Gray
    Oct 1, 2016 at 0:47
16

There's an easy way to debug your print stylesheet without switching any media attribute in your HTML code (of course, as pointed out, it doesn't solve the width / pages issue):

  • Use Firefox + Web Developer extension.
  • In the Web Developer menu, choose CSS / Display CSS by Media Type / Print
  • Go back to Web Developer menu, choose Options / Persist Features

Now you are viewing the print CSS and you can reload your page indefinitely. Once you're done, uncheck "Persist Features" and reload, you'll get the screen CSS again.

HTH.

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  • 7
    renders different than print preview, substantially. perhaps this is a quirk in my css. in any case, it doesn't solve the problem. thanks though.
    – heartpunk
    Mar 2, 2011 at 2:50
  • Yeah, completely different for me too. I followed this jsfiddle (jsfiddle.net/2wk6Q/3) and print preview shows pages with red margins, but this is just totally different.
    – duality_
    Oct 26, 2013 at 15:48
  • 1
    I must say that this "workaround" works best for me. Maybe I am lucky and thats why there are only small differences between native print screen and the web developers print screen but it definately helped me find out why gaps appear and whats most important - i can go throught the code with firebug and see what is going on Dec 2, 2015 at 7:31
14

Chrome's UI is different again as of v53.

I don't need to use this feature often, but whenever I do, it takes me forever to figure out where the Chrome team has moved it since the last time I burned cycles trying to track it down.

Notice it's the ... menu in Dev Tools pane not the ... menu in Chrome Browser pane.

Printer preview as of v53 on MacOS

Now scroll down in the Rendering section. It's often below the fold.

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  • 1
    You just saved me days of print.css debugging. You are awesome!
    – zazvorniki
    Mar 14, 2018 at 18:59
8

Following up to the answer by rflnogueira, the current Chrome settings (40.0.*) will look like below:

chrome print css emulation

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  • It took me a little time to identify the "Media" tab. I kept looking for it in the "Device" tab. Nov 4, 2015 at 19:45
5

Just show the print stylesheet in your browser using media="screen" while debugging. The print preview view uses the same rendering engine as normal browsing mode so you can get accurate results using that.

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  • 15
    Except the normal browsing mode doesn't have pages, so I have no idea how content will flow. Normal browsing mode has a width of a certain number of pixels, while a page has a width of a certain number of inches or centimeters. There are fundamental implementation-independent differences between screen and print. Debugging between those is what I'm after.
    – Jim Puls
    Mar 16, 2010 at 8:09
  • 1
    On chrome the rendering is quite different using this suggestion alone. Won't work.
    – heartpunk
    Feb 22, 2011 at 23:43
  • "Page" width isn't hard to nail down, it's height that's really difficult. Both browsers and printers will play a role in the 11in headache. Web pages are continuous length. Without a guarantee of output device type and browser, I don't think you'll ever hit it on the mark every time. Using a HTML to PDF approach would work, but that's beyond the scope of your question.
    – Dawson
    Feb 23, 2011 at 5:25
4

2019 - Updated instructions

  1. Open Chrome inspector
    • From Mac => option + command + i
    • From Windows => F12
  2. Click on the little 3 dots, customize and control devTools enter image description here

  3. Select More Tools

  4. Select Rendering

  5. Scroll to the bottom to Emulate CSS Media

  6. Select print from the down arrow

enter image description here

0

If you have a print function that rewrites the content of the page to a new window with your print style sheet referenced you'll get a much better idea of what its going to look like on paper , and you'll be able to debug it with the likes of firebug too.

Heres an example of how this can be done with JavaScript / jquery

        $("#Print").click(function () {
            var a = window.open('', '', 'scrollbars=yes,width=1024,height=768');
            a.document.open("text/html");
            a.document.write("<html><head>");
            a.document.write('<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/style.css" />');
            a.document.write('<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/print.css" />');
            a.document.write("</head><body>");
            a.document.write($('#Content').html());
            a.document.write('</body></html>');
            a.document.close();
            a.print();
        });
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  • 2
    The problem with this approach is that if a user simply selects "Print..." in their browser, this javascript function will never get invoked.
    – Ken Liu
    Mar 2, 2011 at 19:05
  • you don't need to display the print function to the user, you can simply use it for debugging purposes if you wish
    – Blowsie
    Mar 3, 2011 at 10:32
  • This is an over engineered solution to something the browser already does. Just use a media="print" and media="screen" respectively for your stylesheets and just use the browser menu or key combos to invoke print preview. (In this case it's no different than opening a popup) And if you are just debugging, apply the media="screen" attribute to your print styles until you are done debugging.
    – ORyan
    Mar 26, 2015 at 17:02
0

In Firefox (87.0), the "DOM and Style Inspector" has a toggle button for print media simulation.

enter image description here

One drawback is that it does not clearly delineate the page boundaries.

-1

enter image description here

In DreamWeaver there is a toolbar that shows virtually any rendering option you want: screen, print, handheld media, projection screen, tv media, desitn time style sheets, etc. This is what I use especially because it: instantly shows a preview with 1 single press of a button.

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    good to know, but it would require using a different rendering engine than what we develop for, and still requires more than a reload. thanks though.
    – heartpunk
    Mar 2, 2011 at 2:52
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    Already back in 2011 this was proprietary, purchase-only software only on limited platforms, which you needed to pay for to get the requested functionality to debug the open web.
    – Volker E.
    Dec 16, 2017 at 22:59
-7

I use macros to send keypress and mouse clicks repeatedly. Under Windows, AutoHotKey is a great software and under OS X you can read about Automator sort of an alternative AHK for OsX.

Under Windows (replace Ctrl by Cmd under OS X) "Ctrl-s / switch to Fx window wherever it is in the list of windows opened / Ctrl-r" bound to 1 unused key avoids frustration from uninteresting tasks and will ultimately save my arms from RSI :)

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