Typically, when I plug in my Zebra LP 2844-Z to the USB port, the computer sees it as a printer and I can print to it from notepad like any other generic printer. However, my application has some bar code features. My application parses some input and generates an in-memory string of ZPL. How would I send this ZPL data to my USB device?

link|improve this question

50% accept rate
feedback

5 Answers

You haven't mentioned a language, so I'm going to give you some some hints how to do it with the straight Windows API in C.

First, open a connection to the printer with OpenPrinter. Next, start a document with StartDocPrinter having the pDatatype field of the DOC_INFO_1 structure set to "RAW" - this tells the printer driver not to encode anything going to the printer, but to pass it along unchanged. Use StartPagePrinter to indicate the first page, WritePrinter to send the data to the printer, and close it with EndPagePrinter, EndDocPrinter and ClosePrinter when done.

link|improve this answer
This looks like it will be exactly what I need. When I get a chance to test this fully, I'll let you know how well it worked for me. Thanks! – Jason 'Bug' Fenter Dec 14 '10 at 19:41
feedback

I found the answer... or at least, the easiest answer (if there are multiple). When I installed the printer, I renamed it to "ICS Label Printer". Here's how to change the options to allow pass-through ZPL commands:

  1. Right-click on the "ICS Label Printer" and choose "Properties".
  2. On the "General" tab, click on the "Printing Preferences..." button.
  3. On the "Advanced Setup" tab, click on the "Other" button.
  4. Make sure there is a check in the box labeled "Enable Passthrough Mode".
  5. Make sure the "Start sequence:" is "${".
  6. Make sure the "End sequence:" is "}$".
  7. Click on the "Close" button.
  8. Click on the "OK" button.
  9. Click on the "OK" button.

In my code, I just have to add "${" to the beginning of my ZPL and "}$" to the end and print it as plain text. This is with the "Windows driver for ZDesigner LP 2844-Z printer Version 2.6.42 (Build 2382)". Works like a charm!

link|improve this answer
Interesting. I don't think that's a standard driver feature, it must be specific to the Zebra driver. – Mark Ransom Jun 24 '11 at 13:24
feedback

You can use COM, or P/Invoke from .Net, to open the Winspool.drv driver and send bytes directly to devices. But you don't want to do that; this typically works only for the one device on the one version of the one driver you test with, and breaks on everything else. Take this from long, painful, personal experience.

What you want to do is get a barcode font or library that draws barcodes using plain old GDI or GDI+ commands; there's one for .Net here. This works on all devices, even after Zebra changes the driver.

link|improve this answer
feedback

ZPL is the correct way to go. In most cases it is correct to use a driver that abstracts to GDI commands; however Zebra label printers are a special case. The best way to print to a Zebra printer is to generate ZPL directly. Note that the actual printer driver for a Zebra printer is a "plain text" printer - there is not a "driver" that could be updated or changed in the sense we think of most printers having drivers. It's just a driver in the absolute minimalist sense.

link|improve this answer
feedback
up vote 0 down vote accepted

I've found yet an easier way to write to a Zebra printer over a COM port. I went to the Windows control panel and added a new printer. For the port, I chose COM1 (the port the printer was plugged in to). I used a "Generic / Text Only" printer driver. I disabled the print spooler (a standard option in the printer preferences) as well as all advanced printing options. Now, I can just print any string to that printer and if the string contains ZPL, the printer renders the ZPL just fine! No need for special "start sequences" or funky stuff like that. Yay for simplicity!

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.