I've found a workaround (at least, it works for me). In my instance i had a basic html page with some styling (screen.css & print.css) plus some javascript to progressively enhance the page with extra features, etc.
When it came time to print the page i realised that the js was affecting the layout (since i was doing some css styling via jquery).
What i ended up doing was this:
in "screen.css"
body {
background-color: #ccc; /* or whatever colour your designer chose; if it NEEDS to be white, simply change something else (e.g. background-image, font-size, etc.) */
}
in "print.css"
body {
background-color: #fff;
}
in "the-javascript-file.js"
$(document).ready(function()
{
if (isPrinting() == false)
{
init();
}
});
function isPrinting()
{
var isPrint = false;
/* I'm not 100% sure about the string literal check 'rgb(255, 255, 255)',
should do some testing here with other values || other attributes...
(font-size, color, line-height, other attributes that will have the
greatest difference / variation between "screen" and "print" styles)
*/
if ($('body').css('background-color') == 'rgb(255, 255, 255)')
{
isPrint = true;
}
return isPrint;
}
function init()
{
// All sorts of awesome goes here
}
And that was it! It worked!
Here's an overview of what's happening:
- User loads page
- Browser loads "screen.css"
- Body background colour is set to "#ccc"
- Browser loads "the-javascript-file.js"
- JS checks background colour... it's "#ccc"...
- JS does its thing
- User hits print command
- Browser loads "print.css"
- Body background colour changes to "#fff"
- Browser loads "the-javascript-file.js"
- JS checks body background colour
- JS realises background colour is "#fff"
- JS does nothing :)
Hope this helps someone out there :)