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I have never printed anything using C#. I was just wondering what the standard way to do this was. On my form I have a few listboxes and a few textboxes. I would like to print their contents and show them in a print preview, with a nice layout in a table. Then from their I would like the user to be able to print.

Thanks in advance!

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3 Answers

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You will want to use System.Drawing.Printing libraries. You'll use the PrintDocument.Print method which you can find on the MSDN Page with Example

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This method was perfect seeing as how I already have the user save the information to a text file. Thanks! – Bob Dylan Nov 5 at 21:24
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Here's a nice little tutorial on basic printing in C#. It deals with text but could be extended easily to draw anything else.

Printing in C# is very similar to custom painting in C#. The big difference is that the coordinate system is flipped from the screen representation and that you have to account for spanning of pages (if/when necessary.) The way you print is also a bit counter intuitive in that you have to initiate the print process and then handle the page print event.

Example:

Here is a simple example of a print event handler that assumes the presence of list box control named listBox1 with some items in it. It draws each item as well as a box around it.

private void printDocument1_PrintPage(object sender, System.Drawing.Printing.PrintPageEventArgs e)
{
	Font font = new Font("Arial", 10f);
	Graphics g = e.Graphics;
	Pen rectPen = new Pen(Color.Black, 2f);
	Brush brush = Brushes.Black;

	// find widest width of items
	for (int i=0; i<listBox1.Items.Count; i++)
		if(maxItemWidth < (int)g.MeasureString(listBox1.Items[i].ToString(), font).Width)
			maxItemWidth = (int)g.MeasureString(listBox1.Items[i].ToString(), font).Width;

	// starting positions:
	int itemHeight = (int)g.MeasureString("TEST", font).Height + 5;
	int maxItemWidth = 0;
	int xpos = 200;
	int ypos = 200;

	// print
	for (int i = 0; i < listBox1.Items.Count; i++)
	{
		g.DrawRectangle(rectPen, xpos, ypos, maxItemWidth, itemHeight );
		g.DrawString(listBox1.Items[i].ToString(), font, brush, xpos, ypos);

		ypos += itemHeight;
	}

	e.HasMorePages = false;
}
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One method is summarized nicely here at CodeProject having a Print implementation. As for Print Preview, somebody has tackled an implementation here.

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