552

How do I print the indicated div (without manually disabling all other content on the page)?

I want to avoid a new preview dialog, so creating a new window with this content is not useful.

The page contains a couple of tables, one of them contains the div I want to print - the table is styled with visual styles for the web, that should not show in print.

1

34 Answers 34

1017

Here is a general solution, using CSS only, which I have verified to work.

@media print {
  body {
    visibility: hidden;
  }
  #section-to-print {
    visibility: visible;
    position: absolute;
    left: 0;
    top: 0;
  }
}

There's a Code Sandbox if you want to see this in action. Click the Open In New Window button above the preview; then you can use the browser's Print command to see a preview of the printout.

Alternative approaches aren't so good. Using display is tricky because if any element has display:none then none of its descendants will display either. To use it, you have to change the structure of your page.

Using visibility works better since you can turn on visibility for descendants. The invisible elements still affect the layout though, so I move section-to-print to the top left so it prints properly.

41
  • 35
    this is by far the fastest and cleanest way, i wonder why this answer didn't get the most votes -.- Nov 6, 2011 at 21:14
  • 46
    A problem to watch out for with this solution is that you can end up printing thousands of blank pages in some cases. In my case I was able to solve this by using some additional display:none styling for selected items but perhaps a more general solution is achievable by some combination of also forcing heights, overflow:none and absolute positioning for all divs or something. May 17, 2013 at 5:52
  • 8
    This is a great start but I had two troubles with it: for one if any of the element's parents established its own relative/absolute positioning the content would still be offset unless I used position:fixed instead. However, Chrome and Safari would also truncate content, especially after the first page. So my final workaround was to set both the target and all its parents to overflow:visible; position:absolute !important; top:0;left:0
    – natevw
    Dec 13, 2013 at 22:00
  • 1
    @dudeNumber4 #section-to-print matches the section itself; #section-to-print * matches each sub-element of the section. So that rule just makes the section and all its contents visible. Jul 14, 2015 at 21:54
  • 3
    You can try a JavaScript solution, but that won't work if your user uses the browser's Print command. Mar 15, 2016 at 0:37
296

I have a better solution with minimal code.

Place your printable part inside a div with an id like this:

<div id="printableArea">
      <h1>Print me</h1>
</div>

<input type="button" onclick="printDiv('printableArea')" value="print a div!" />

Then add an event like an onclick (as shown above), and pass the id of the div like I did above.

Now let's create a really simple javascript:

function printDiv(divId) {
     var printContents = document.getElementById(divId).innerHTML;
     var originalContents = document.body.innerHTML;

     document.body.innerHTML = printContents;

     window.print();

     document.body.innerHTML = originalContents;
}

Notice how simple this is? No popups, no new windows, no crazy styling, no JS libraries like jquery. The problem with really complicated solutions (the answer isn't complicated and not what I'm referring to) is the fact that it will NEVER translate across all browsers, ever! If you want to make the styles different, do as shown in the checked answer by adding the media attribute to a stylesheet link (media="print").

No fluff, lightweight, it just works.

24
  • 130
    @asprin warning! This is not mess free code. Using innerHTML to wipe out then recreate the whole body is fine for simple pages, but with more advanced customizations (menus, slideshows, etc.) it could erase some dynamic behaviors added by other scripts.
    – Christophe
    Nov 6, 2012 at 18:31
  • 26
    This solution is not going to work in any complex page where the elements in printable area depend on styles and/or position of parent elements. If you extract the printable div, it may look totally different because all of the parents are now missing. Dec 18, 2012 at 7:12
  • 1
    Sadly doesn't work well in Chrome if you close the Print preview window then try to do a jQuery .click. It's a shame, because the code is so lightweight.
    – rybo111
    Jul 11, 2013 at 20:36
  • 5
    @BorisGappov a very simple example with just one click event to prove my point: jsfiddle.net/dc7voLzt I'll say it again: this is not mess-free code! The issue is not with the print itself, it's about restoring the original page!
    – Christophe
    May 7, 2015 at 20:09
  • 1
    with this solution when i click to print the page and close the preview window i cant click to print again, any idea why print() only works once ?, im using React with Redux.
    – DJeanCar
    Jul 13, 2016 at 21:59
131

All the answers so far are pretty flawed - they either involve adding class="noprint" to everything or will mess up display within #printable.

I think the best solution would be to create a wrapper around the non-printable stuff:

<head>
    <style type="text/css">

    #printable { display: none; }

    @media print
    {
        #non-printable { display: none; }
        #printable { display: block; }
    }
    </style>
</head>
<body>
    <div id="non-printable">
        Your normal page contents
    </div>

    <div id="printable">
        Printer version
    </div>
</body>

Of course this is not perfect as it involves moving things around in your HTML a bit...

10
  • I think you're right, but how do I kill the styling of the table surrounding the div (if thats possible to remove the styling - I can print the table and exclude the rest of the content quite easily
    – noesgard
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:32
  • I uses Javascript to pickup the needed content and the CSS like above
    – noesgard
    Feb 3, 2009 at 13:07
  • 12
    I prefer using semantic HTML. Print formatting should ideally be handled by CSS. See my answer for how to do this: stackoverflow.com/questions/468881/… Apr 11, 2010 at 22:42
  • Agree with Bennett, using visibility instead of display is a much cleaner solution
    – guigouz
    May 27, 2011 at 2:33
  • I made a really simple solution at lower on this thread which I think will suit the asker's needs better. It doesn't rely on a print stylesheet, can be recycled all over your website, and is incredibly lightweight. Sep 23, 2011 at 17:42
117

With jQuery it's as simple as this:

w=window.open();
w.document.write($('.report_left_inner').html());
w.print();
w.close();
10
  • 3
    This is pretty cool, altho it shows up in Chrome as a blocked popup. Jun 9, 2011 at 21:40
  • 9
    the trick is to call it on user-generated event such as on mouse click. you can also add after first line: if(!w)alert('Please enable pop-ups');
    – romaninsh
    Jun 9, 2011 at 22:54
  • 1
    has anyone got this working on IE11? It just opens a window then closes it immediately. Works in Chrome, FF and safari though. Jul 6, 2015 at 21:17
  • 4
    I lost the css while printing with this, is there any way to maintain css?
    – Moxet Khan
    Apr 21, 2016 at 10:10
  • 2
    @MoxetKhan, this post has a solution with css vevlo.com/how-to-print-div-content-using-javascript Apr 29, 2018 at 10:56
22

Could you use a print stylesheet, and use CSS to arrange the content you wanted printed? Read this article for more pointers.

5
  • I do have a print style sheet - trying to avoid putting a style rule in all other content...
    – noesgard
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:18
  • I do have a table with styling on, containg the div in question, If I set the table to display:none - can I still display the div?
    – noesgard
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:27
  • I think so yes, and you could try marking the rule as !important to boost it!
    – Paul Dixon
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:46
  • if the table isn't displayed it won't matter even if the div is set to 'display: awesome;'. The parent is hidden and so are the children. Is this a situation where you need a table or is it just for page layout?
    – roborourke
    Jan 22, 2009 at 17:29
  • "Boom, headshot!" by table layouts. =|
    – ANeves
    May 5, 2010 at 13:03
18

I didn't really like any of these answers as a whole. If you have a class (say printableArea) and have that as an immediate child of body, then you can do something like this in your print CSS:

body > *:not(.printableArea) {
    display: none;
}

//Not needed if already showing
body > .printableArea {
    display: block;
}

For those looking for printableArea in another place, you would need to make sure the parents of printableArea are shown:

body > *:not(.parentDiv),
.parentDiv > *:not(.printableArea) {
    display: none;
}

//Not needed if already showing
body > .printableArea {
    display: block;
}

Using the visibility can cause a lot of spacing issues and blank pages. This is because the visibility maintains the elements space, just makes it hidden, where as display removes it and allows other elements to take up its space.

The reason why this solution works is that you are not grabbing all elements, just the immediate children of body and hiding them. The other solutions below with display css, hide all the elements, which effects everything inside of printableArea content.

I wouldn't suggest javascript as you would need to have a print button that the user clicks and the standard browser print buttons wouldn't have the same effect. If you really need to do that, what I would do is store the html of body, remove all unwanted elements, print, then add the html back. As mentioned though, I would avoid this if you can and use a CSS option like above.

NOTE: You can add whatever CSS into the print CSS using inline styles:

<style type="text/css">
@media print {
   //styles here
}
</style>

Or like I usually use is a link tag:

<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="print" href="print.css" />
8
  • What if the div you want to print is not "an immediate child of body"? I'm trying to do this in vue.js.. But I'm getting a lot of blank pages when using the accepted answer.
    – svenema
    Jan 8, 2020 at 20:47
  • @svenema, you can use any CSS you want. This was just an example. Jan 9, 2020 at 3:17
  • 1
    hmm, still, when I try this, there are indeed no additional blank pages, but the printableArea div is also not showing; I just have 1 empty blank page when I use this code.
    – svenema
    Jan 9, 2020 at 7:15
  • I found out that it is indeed because the printableArea div is not a direct child of the body tag, when I make it a direct child your solution works; however, in my case I cannot make the printableArea a direct child. Is there a way around this?
    – svenema
    Jan 9, 2020 at 9:40
  • still.. when the printableArea div is not a direct child of the body tag I get a blank page only. Could you post a fully working example perhaps?
    – svenema
    Jan 9, 2020 at 15:08
10
  1. Give whatever element you want to print the id printMe.

  2. Include this script in your head tag:

    <script language="javascript">
        var gAutoPrint = true;
    
        function processPrint(){
    
        if (document.getElementById != null){
        var html = '<HTML>\n<HEAD>\n';
        if (document.getElementsByTagName != null){
        var headTags = document.getElementsByTagName("head");
        if (headTags.length > 0) html += headTags[0].innerHTML;
        }
    
        html += '\n</HE' + 'AD>\n<BODY>\n';
        var printReadyElem = document.getElementById("printMe");
    
        if (printReadyElem != null) html += printReadyElem.innerHTML;
        else{
        alert("Error, no contents.");
        return;
        }
    
        html += '\n</BO' + 'DY>\n</HT' + 'ML>';
        var printWin = window.open("","processPrint");
        printWin.document.open();
        printWin.document.write(html);
        printWin.document.close();
    
        if (gAutoPrint) printWin.print();
        } else alert("Browser not supported.");
    
        }
    </script>
    
  3. Call the function

    <a href="javascript:void(processPrint());">Print</a>
    
1
  • This is a good job. But way too complicated and will not work properly cross-browser (especially older browsers). I suggest you take a look at my solution below. Sep 23, 2011 at 17:20
10

Step 1: Write the following javascript inside your head tag

<script language="javascript">
function PrintMe(DivID) {
var disp_setting="toolbar=yes,location=no,";
disp_setting+="directories=yes,menubar=yes,";
disp_setting+="scrollbars=yes,width=650, height=600, left=100, top=25";
   var content_vlue = document.getElementById(DivID).innerHTML;
   var docprint=window.open("","",disp_setting);
   docprint.document.open();
   docprint.document.write('<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"');
   docprint.document.write('"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">');
   docprint.document.write('<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en">');
   docprint.document.write('<head><title>My Title</title>');
   docprint.document.write('<style type="text/css">body{ margin:0px;');
   docprint.document.write('font-family:verdana,Arial;color:#000;');
   docprint.document.write('font-family:Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size:12px;}');
   docprint.document.write('a{color:#000;text-decoration:none;} </style>');
   docprint.document.write('</head><body onLoad="self.print()"><center>');
   docprint.document.write(content_vlue);
   docprint.document.write('</center></body></html>');
   docprint.document.close();
   docprint.focus();
}
</script>

Step 2: Call the PrintMe('DivID') function by an onclick event.

<input type="button" name="btnprint" value="Print" onclick="PrintMe('divid')"/>
<div id="divid">
here is some text to print inside this div with an id 'divid'
</div>
2
  • 1
    This is the one! Used it for a Modal and Gallerys. No Javascript errors after closing. Really helpful especially when u use modals which are longer than one page. Nicely wraps it up. Perfect for people who want to print to store.
    – TheWeeezel
    Dec 13, 2016 at 23:47
  • It does not copy the CSS within the HTML. Nov 19, 2023 at 2:38
7
<script type="text/javascript">
   function printDiv(divId) {
       var printContents = document.getElementById(divId).innerHTML;
       var originalContents = document.body.innerHTML;
       document.body.innerHTML = "<html><head><title></title></head><body>" + printContents + "</body>";
       window.print();
       document.body.innerHTML = originalContents;
   }
</script>

2
  • 8
    look nice but you loose all javascript bindings and other after print
    – Julien
    Nov 25, 2013 at 15:22
  • 1
    It is printing without css.
    – Moxet Khan
    May 3, 2016 at 14:20
6

hm ... use the type of a stylsheet for printing ... eg:

<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="print.css" media="print" />

print.css:

div { display: none; }
#yourdiv { display: block; }
8
  • This will not work if the document is not DIV-based or #yourdiv also includes further DIVs.
    – Gumbo
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:18
  • #yourdiv * { display: ... } if you place this on top of the page and have an up-to-date browser you can then work with more selectors to hide away non divs
    – user57508
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:20
  • "#yourdiv * { display: ... }" - what should the ... be without breaking the layout?
    – Greg
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:21
  • This would display inline elements also as block elements. But “#yourdiv, #yourdiv div { display:block }” will do it.
    – Gumbo
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:23
  • @dittodhole - think about it for a minute. What could you put in there that won't break the layout within #yourdiv?
    – Greg
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:30
6

The Best way to Print particular Div or any Element

printDiv("myDiv");

function printDiv(id){
        var printContents = document.getElementById(id).innerHTML;
        var originalContents = document.body.innerHTML;
        document.body.innerHTML = printContents;
        window.print();
        document.body.innerHTML = originalContents;
}
3
  • This solution of overwriting the whole page sometimes doesn't work, for example in APEX the menu stops working.
    – Tomasz
    Jan 16, 2022 at 22:02
  • hmm, may your event listener stop working, you can write event like $(document).on("click","#element",function(){ /*some code*/ }); , may it will help you or plz, describe or show your example... :) Jan 21, 2022 at 7:56
  • menu in oracle apex stops working after printing. ;(
    – Tomasz
    Feb 4, 2022 at 15:31
6

Without CSS clowning, html and pure javascript with iframe does its work best. Then simply click the text, you want to print. Current example for id elements with text content;

html body:

<div id="monitor" onclick="idElementPrint()">text i want to print</div>

pure javascript:

//or: monitor.textContent = "click me to print textual content";

const idElementPrint = () => {
    let ifram = document.createElement("iframe");
    ifram.style = "display:none";
    document.body.appendChild(ifram);
    pri = ifram.contentWindow;
    pri.document.open();
    pri.document.write(monitor.textContent);
    pri.document.close();
    pri.focus();
    pri.print();
    }
3

printDiv(divId): A generalized solution to print any div on any page.

I had a similar issue but I wanted (a) to be able to print the whole page, or (b) print any one of several specific areas. My solution, thanks to much of the above, allows you to specify any div object to be printed.

The key for this solution is to add an appropriate rule to the the print media style sheet so that the requested div (and its contents) will be printed.

First, create the needed print css to suppress everything (but without the specific rule to allow the element you want to print).

<style type="text/css" media="print">
   body {visibility:hidden; }
   .noprintarea {visibility:hidden; display:none}
   .noprintcontent { visibility:hidden; }
   .print { visibility:visible; display:block; }
</style>

Note that I have added new class rules:

  • noprintarea allows you to suppress the printing of elements within your div- both the content and the block.
  • noprintcontent allows you to suppress the printing of elements within your div- the content is suppressed but and the allocated area is left empty.
  • print allows you to have items that show up in the printed version but not on the screen page. These will normally have "display:none" for the screen style.

Then insert three JavaScript functions. The first merely toggles the print media style sheet on and off.

function disableSheet(thisSheet,setDisabled)
{ document.styleSheets[thisSheet].disabled=setDisabled; }   

The second does the real work and the third cleans up afterward. The second (printDiv) activates the print media style sheet, then appends a new rule to allow the desired div to print, issues the print, and then adds a delay before the final housekeeping (otherwise the styles can be reset before the print is actually done.)

function printDiv(divId)
{
  //  Enable the print CSS: (this temporarily disables being able to print the whole page)
  disableSheet(0,false);
  //  Get the print style sheet and add a new rule for this div
  var sheetObj=document.styleSheets[0];  
  var showDivCSS="visibility:visible;display:block;position:absolute;top:30px;left:30px;";
  if (sheetObj.rules) { sheetObj.addRule("#"+divId,showDivCSS); }
  else                { sheetObj.insertRule("#"+divId+"{"+showDivCSS+"}",sheetObj.cssRules.length); }
  print();
  //  need a brief delay or the whole page will print
  setTimeout("printDivRestore()",100);  
}

The final functions deletes the added rule and sets the print style again to disabled so the whole page can be printed.

function printDivRestore()
{
  // remove the div-specific rule
  var sheetObj=document.styleSheets[0];  
  if (sheetObj.rules) { sheetObj.removeRule(sheetObj.rules.length-1); }
  else                { sheetObj.deleteRule(sheetObj.cssRules.length-1); }
  //  and re-enable whole page printing
  disableSheet(0,true);
}

The only other thing to do is to add one line to your onload processing so that the print style is initially disabled thereby allowing whole page printing.

<body onLoad='disableSheet(0,true)'>

Then, from anywhere in your document, you can print a div. Just issue printDiv("thedivid") from a button or whatever.

A big plus for this approach it provides a general solution to printing selected content from within a page. It also allows use of existing styles for elements that are printed - including the containing div.

NOTE: In my implementation, this must be the first style sheet. Change the sheet references (0) to the appropriate sheet number if you need to make it later in the sheet sequence.

0
3

My approach - Simple CSS and JS. Works on React/NextJS too.

  const handlePrint = e => {
    e.preventDefault();
    const bodyElement = document.getElementsByTagName('body')[0];

    bodyElement.classList.add('printing');
    window.print();
    bodyElement.classList.remove('printing');
  };

.printing {
  visibility:hidden;
}

.printView {
  visibility:visible;
}

.printing .printView {
  /* You can have any CSS here to make the view better on print */
  position:absolute;
  top:0;
}

What it does?

  1. Adds .printing class to body element. With CSS we hide all body content with visibility:hidden;
  2. At the same time, we keep CSS ready with .printing .printView to have any kind of view we want for the print area.
  3. Trigger window.print();
  4. Remove .printing class from the body element when the user cancels / prints.

Example:


<button onclick="handlePrint">
    Download PDF
</button>

<div>
    <h1>Don't print this</h1>

    <div class="printView">Print this</div>
</div>

Let me know if this helps anyone :)

2

Sandro's method works great.

I tweaked it to allow for allowing multiple printMe links, particularily to be used in tabbed pages and expanding text.

function processPrint(printMe){ <-- calling for a variable here

var printReadyElem = document.getElementById(printMe); <-- removed the quotes around printMe to ask for a variable

<a href="javascript:void(processPrint('divID'));">Print</a> <-- passing the div ID to be printed on to the function to turn the printMe variable into the div ID. single quotes are needed

2

@Kevin Florida If you have multiple divs with same class, you can use it like this:

 <div style="display:none">
   <div id="modal-2" class="printableArea">
     <input type="button" class="printdiv-btn" value="print a div!" />
   </div>
 </div>

i was using Colorbox inner content type

$(document).on('click', '.printdiv-btn', function(e) {
    e.preventDefault();

    var $this = $(this);
    var originalContent = $('body').html();
    var printArea = $this.parents('.printableArea').html();

    $('body').html(printArea);
    window.print();
    $('body').html(originalContent);
});
2

In my case I had to print a image inside a page. When I used the solution voted, I had 1 blank page and the other one showing the image. Hope it will help someone.

Here is the css I used:

@media print {
  body * {
    visibility: hidden;
  }

  #not-print * {
    display: none;
  }

  #to-print, #to-print * {
    visibility: visible;
  }

  #to-print {
    display: block !important;
    position: absolute;
    left: 0;
    top: 0;
    width: auto;
    height: 99%;
  }
}

My html is:

<div id="not-print" >
  <header class="row wrapper page-heading">

  </header>

  <div class="wrapper wrapper-content">
    <%= image_tag @qrcode.image_url,  size: "250x250" , alt: "#{@qrcode.name}" %>
  </div>
</div>

<div id="to-print" style="display: none;">
  <%= image_tag @qrcode.image_url,  size: "300x300" , alt: "#{@qrcode.name}" %>
</div>
2

One more approch without affecting current page and it also persist the css while printing. Here selector must be specific div selector which content we need to print.

printWindow(selector, title) {
   var divContents = $(selector).html();
   var $cssLink = $('link');
   var printWindow = window.open('', '', 'height=' + window.outerHeight * 0.6 + ', width=' + window.outerWidth  * 0.6);
   printWindow.document.write('<html><head><h2><b><title>' + title + '</title></b></h2>');
   for(var i = 0; i<$cssLink.length; i++) {
    printWindow.document.write($cssLink[i].outerHTML);
   }
   printWindow.document.write('</head><body >');
   printWindow.document.write(divContents);
   printWindow.document.write('</body></html>');
   printWindow.document.close();
   printWindow.onload = function () {
            printWindow.focus();
            setTimeout( function () {
                printWindow.print();
                printWindow.close();
            }, 100);  
        }
}

Here provided some time out show that external css get applied to it.

1
  • CSS sometimes take time to load, this approach is what I was looking to reload the page before printing. Thanks Jun 19, 2018 at 11:24
2

All answers have trade-offs and cannot be used for all cases. They fall into 3 categories:

  1. Use a printing style sheet. This requires building the whole website to be print-aware.

  2. Hide all elements in <body> and only show the printable element. This works nicely for simple pages, but it is tricky for complex pages.

  3. Open a new window with the content of the printable element or replace the <body> content with the content of the element. The first will lose all styles, and the second is messy and can break events.

There is no one solution that will work well for all cases, so it is good to have all those choices and I'm adding another solution that works much better in some cases. This solution is a hybrid of two categories: hide all content of <body>, then copy the content of the printable element to a new <div> and append it to <body>. After printing, remove the newly added <div> and show the content of <body> back. This way, you won't lose the styles or events, and you don't mess up with opening a new window. But like all other solutions, it won't work well for all cases. If your printable element's styles depends on its parents, you'll lose those styles. It is still much easier to style your printable elements independently from its parents than having to style the entire website for printing.

The only hurdle is figuring out how to select all content of <body>. For simple pages, the generic style body>* will do the trick. However, complex pages usually have <script> tags at the end of body' and also some `s that are used for dialogs, etc. Hiding all those is fine, but you don't want to show them after printing.

In my case, I build all may websites with three sections inside <body>: <header>, <footer>, and between them <div id="Content">. Adjust the first line of the function below for your case:

function PrintArea(selector) {
    //First hide all content in body.
    var all = $("body > header, body > #Content, body > footer")
    all.hide();
    //Append a div for printing.
    $("body").append('<div id="PrintMe">');
    //Copy content of printing area to the printing div.
    var p = $("#PrintMe");
    p.html($(selector).html());
    //Call the print dialog.
    window.print();
    //Remove the printing div.
    p.remove();
    //Show all content in body.
    all.show();
}

I used jQuery because it's cleaner and simpler, but you can easily convert it to vanilla JavaScript if you like. And of course, you can change var to let as recommended for the local variables.

2
It's better solution. You can use it Angualr/React

Html

 <div class="row" id="printableId">
      Your html 
    </div>

Javascript

   function printPage(){
        
        var printHtml = window.open('', 'PRINT', 'height=400,width=600');
    
        printHtml.document.write('<html><head>');
        printHtml.document.write(document.getElementById("printableId").innerHTML);
        printHtml.document.write('</body></html>');
    
        printHtml.document.close(); 
        printHtml.focus(); = 10*/
    
        printHtml.print();
        printHtml.close();
    
        return true;
    
      }
1
  • 1
    It doesn't retain the styling of the section which I am printing. Is there a fix for that?
    – Rahul
    Dec 18, 2023 at 18:05
2

I tried many of the solutions provided.None of them worked perfectly. They either lose CSS or doesn't work in all browsers. I found a perfect and easy solution that neither losses CSS and work perfectly for all browsers.

Html

<div class="row" id="print-div">
      Your html 
    </div>

TYPESCRIPT

let popupWin = window.open('', '_blank', 'width=1080,height=595');
let printContents = document.getElementById("print-div").innerHTML;
let printHead = document.head.innerHTML;
popupWin.document
    .write(`<html>
     ${printHead}
    <body onload="window.print();">${printContents}</body></html>`);
popupWin.document.close();
0
1

The printDiv() function came out a few times, but in that case, you loose all your binding elements and input values. So, my solution is to create a div for everything called "body_allin" and another one outside the first one called "body_print".

Then you call this function:

function printDiv(divName){

    var printContents = document.getElementById(divName).innerHTML;

    document.getElementById("body_print").innerHTML = printContents;

    document.getElementById("body_allin").style.display = "none";
    document.getElementById("body_print").style.display = "";

    window.print();

    document.getElementById("body_print").innerHTML = "";
    document.getElementById("body_allin").style.display = "";
    document.getElementById("body_print").style.display = "none";

}
1
  • This line could be useful if you want unique id: printContents = printContents.replace(/id=("|')(.*?)("|')/g, 'id=$1$2_2$3');
    – pmrotule
    Feb 27, 2014 at 18:30
1

Best css to fit space empty height:

@media print {
  body * {
    visibility: hidden;
    height:0;
  }
  #section-to-print, #section-to-print * {
    visibility: visible;
    height:auto;
  }
  #section-to-print {
    position: absolute;
    left: 0;
    top: 0;
  }
}
1

I tried many of the solutions provided.None of them worked perfectly. They either lose CSS or JavaScript bindings. I found a perfect and easy solution that neither losses CSS nor JavaScript bindings.

HTML:

<div id='printarea'>
    <p>This is a sample text for printing purpose.</p>
    <input type='button' id='btn' value='Print' onclick='printFunc();'>
</div>
<p>Do not print.</p>

Javascript:

function printFunc() {
    var divToPrint = document.getElementById('printarea');
    var htmlToPrint = '' +
        '<style type="text/css">' +
        'table th, table td {' +
        'border:1px solid #000;' +
        'padding;0.5em;' +
        '}' +
        '</style>';
    htmlToPrint += divToPrint.outerHTML;
    newWin = window.open("");
    newWin.document.write("<h3 align='center'>Print Page</h3>");
    newWin.document.write(htmlToPrint);
    newWin.print();
    newWin.close();
    }
1
  • This opening and creation of another window that does not work on Android. Only direct window.print() works.
    – Merv
    Jan 14, 2019 at 3:10
1

I'm very late to this party, but I'd like to pitch in with yet another approach. I wrote a tiny JavaScript module called PrintElements for dynamically printing parts of a webpage.

It works by iterating through selected node elements, and for each node, it traverses up the DOM tree until the BODY element. At each level, including the initial one (which is the to-be-printed node’s level), it attaches a marker class (pe-preserve-print) to the current node. Then attaches another marker class (pe-no-print) to all siblings of the current node, but only if there is no pe-preserve-print class on them. As a third act, it also attaches another class to preserved ancestor elements pe-preserve-ancestor.

A dead-simple supplementary print-only css will hide and show respective elements. Some benefits of this approach is that all styles are preserved, it does not open a new window, there is no need to move around a lot of DOM elements, and generally it is non-invasive with your original document.

See the demo, or read the related article for further details.

1

I found the solution.

@media print {
    .print-area {
        background-color: white;
        height: 100%;
        width: auto;
        position: absolute;
        top: 0;
        bottom: 0;
        left: 0;
        right: 0;
        z-index:1500;
        visibility: visible;
    }
    @page{
        size: portrait;
        margin: 1cm;
    }
/*IF print-area parent element is position:absolute*/
    .ui-dialog,
    .ui-dialog .ui-dialog-content{
        position:unset !important;
        visibility: hidden;
    }
}
0

Use a special Stylesheet for printing

<link rel="stylesheet" href="print.css" type="text/css" media="print" />

and then add a class i.e. "noprint" to every tag which's content you don't want to print.

In the CSS use

.noprint {
  display: none;
}
0

With CSS 3 you could use the following:

body *:not(#printarea) {
    display: none;
}
5
  • Can't use that I'm afraid... (correct me if wrong) the page I'm working on is asp.net 1.1 / DHTML
    – noesgard
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:18
  • It depends on the browser whether the :not() selector is already available or not.
    – Gumbo
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:21
  • Well then is my proposal just a look into the future … No, seriously. I just mentioned it for the sake of completeness. I know that it’s not practicable right now. Unfortunately.
    – Gumbo
    Jan 22, 2009 at 12:26
  • You could use jQuery and this selector which (I think) would work in IE6 - $('body *:not(#printarea)').style('display', 'none'); Jan 22, 2009 at 14:28
  • 4
    this will hide all descendants of #printarea, since they are matched by *:not(#printarea). So basicly you end up with an empty container.
    – cytofu
    Jun 10, 2015 at 22:38
0

If you only want to print this div, you must use the instruction:

@media print{
    *{display:none;}
    #mydiv{display:block;}
}
0

You can use this: http://vikku.info/codesnippets/javascript/print-div-content-print-only-the-content-of-an-html-element-and-not-the-whole-document/

Or use visibility:visible and visibility:hidden css property together with @media print{}

'display:none' will hide all nested 'display:block'. That is not solution.

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