1

So far I've found two different ways to access what I believe are equivalent versions of the Printer DevMode from a wxPython User Interface:

window = wx.GetTopLevelWindows()[0].GetHandle()
name = self.itemMap['device'].GetValue() # returns a valid printer name.
handle = win32print.OpenPrinter(name)
dmin = None
dmout = pywintypes.DEVMODEType()
mode = DM_IN_BUFFER | DM_OUT_BUFFER | DM_IN_PROMPT

res = win32print.DocumentProperties(window, handle, name, dmout, dmin, mode)

if res == 1:
  print dmout.DriverData

and also

dlg = wx.PrintDialog(self, dgData)

res = dlg.ShowModal()

if res == wx.ID_OK:
  print dlg.GetPrintDialogData().PrintData.GetPrivData()

These to binary structures appear to contain the necessary information to control the device output behavior. This is fine and well, except that it can't be directly used to reload the PrintSetup dialogs with this stored devmode data. In the first case the PyDEVMODE object contains dozens of individual properties that need to be manually set (PyDEVMODE Reference). In the second case there are a handful of Getter / Setter methods that control some of the properties, but not all of them (wxPrintData Reference). Is anyone aware of a way to create a Python Devmode Object (I'll take either approach, the differences are trivial) from the actual DevMode (the binary data)? I'd like to avoid having to manually store / reset each individual attribute in order for the dialogs to re-open in the correct state every time.

2 Answers 2

1

You can also edit the pDevMode object within win32print.GetPrinter() by manipulating it through a new named object.

    import win32print, os

    name = win32print.GetDefaultPrinter()
    printdefaults = {"DesiredAccess": win32print.PRINTER_ACCESS_USE}
    handle = win32print.OpenPrinter(name, printdefaults)
    level = 2
    attributes = win32print.GetPrinter(handle, level)   
    # http://timgolden.me.uk/pywin32-docs/PyDEVMODE.html
    # Note: All pDevMode settings are int() variables

    attributes['pDevMode'].Copies = 2    # Num of copies

    #attributes['pDevMode'].Color = 1    # Color
    attributes['pDevMode'].Color = 2    # Monochrome

    attributes['pDevMode'].Collate = 1    # Collate TRUE
    #attributes['pDevMode'].Collate = 2    # Collate FALSE

I expanded upon the "attributes" naming structure provided by Yuri Gendelman in a similar question: Print PDF file in duplex mode via Python

Here is a sample of how I used it in my code.

    import win32print, os

    def autoprint(user):                     
        name = win32print.GetDefaultPrinter()
        printdefaults = {"DesiredAccess": win32print.PRINTER_ACCESS_USE}
        handle = win32print.OpenPrinter(name, printdefaults)
        level = 2
        attributes = win32print.GetPrinter(handle, level)   # http://timgolden.me.uk/pywin32-docs/PyDEVMODE.html
                                       # All are int() variables
        attributes['pDevMode'].Duplex = 1    # no flip
        #attributes['pDevMode'].Duplex = 2    # flip up
        #attributes['pDevMode'].Duplex = 3    # flip over

        attributes['pDevMode'].Copies = 2    # Num of copies

        #attributes['pDevMode'].Color = 1    # Color
        attributes['pDevMode'].Color = 2    # Monochrome

        attributes['pDevMode'].Collate = 1    # Collate TRUE
        #attributes['pDevMode'].Collate = 2    # Collate FALSE

        try:
            win32print.SetPrinter(handle, level, attributes, 0)
        except:
            print("win32print.SetPrinter: settings could not be changed")

        try:
            newfile_name = max([downloadPath + "\\" + user["FULL_NAME"] + "PDFToBePrinted.pdf"])
            Print2Copies = win32api.ShellExecute(0, 'print', newfile_name, None, '.', 0)
            time.sleep(1)

            Print2Copies 
            print("Printing now...")
            win32print.ClosePrinter(handle)

            final_filename = max([downloadPath + "\\" + user["FULL_NAME"] + "Printed.pdf"])
            os.rename(newfile_name, final_filename)

        except Exception as e:
            print(str(e))
            print("--Failed to print--")
            time.sleep(5)

Here is the code to check default settings:

win32print.GetPrinter(handle, level)['pDevMode'].Copies win32print.GetPrinter(handle, level)['pDevMode'].Duplex

In[115]: print(win32print.GetPrinter(handle, level)['pDevMode'].Copies)
Out[115]: 1

In[116]:win32print.GetPrinter(handle, level)['pDevMode'].Duplex
Out[116]: 1

In[117]:win32print.GetPrinter(handle, level)['pDevMode'].Color
Out[117]: 1

Here are the other printer settings you can change with pDevMode: http://timgolden.me.uk/pywin32-docs/PyDEVMODE.html

1
  • Yeah - I linked that PyDEVMODE page in my original question. The limitations to that are: 1. I have to manually set each property. 2. It doesn't expose ways to set additional DevMode data for printer drivers that expose extra/proprietary functionality.
    – g.d.d.c
    Jun 18, 2019 at 16:53
0

It appears that at this point there's no elegant way to achieve this directly in Python. The closest I was able to come up with was a dll written in c++ that I'm able to call into. I end up with the full binary DevMode Structure, and can reload from it. The code for that c++ dll looks like this:

#include "stdafx.h"
#include <iobind/base64_policy.hpp>

#include <string>
#ifdef _UNICODE
    typedef std::wstring string_t;
#else
    typedef std::string string_t;
#endif
typedef std::string cstring;


extern "C" BOOL WINAPI DllMain( HMODULE hModule, DWORD dwReason, LPVOID lpReserved ) {
    switch ( dwReason ){
        case DLL_PROCESS_ATTACH:
            DisableThreadLibraryCalls( hModule );
            break;
        case DLL_PROCESS_DETACH:
            break;
    }

    return TRUE;
}


extern "C" DOEXPORT int CleanupA( char *output ) {
    if ( output ) {
        free( output );
        output = NULL;
    }
    return 0;
}


extern "C" DOEXPORT int CleanupW( wchar_t *output ) {
    if ( output ) {
        free( output );
        output = NULL;
    }
    return 0;
}


extern "C" DOEXPORT int printer_setup( 
        void *handle, const TCHAR *printer_in, const char *input,
        int local_only, TCHAR **printer, char **output ) 
{
    HWND hwnd = (HWND)handle;   
    HRESULT hResult = 0;

    LPPRINTDLG pPD = NULL;
    LPPRINTPAGERANGE pPageRanges = NULL;

    // Allocate structure.
    pPD = (LPPRINTDLG)GlobalAlloc(GPTR, sizeof(PRINTDLG));
    if (!pPD) return E_OUTOFMEMORY;

    //  Initialize structure.
    pPD->lStructSize = sizeof(PRINTDLG);
    pPD->hwndOwner = hwnd;

    pPD->hDevMode = NULL;
    if ( input ){
        std::string dec = iobind::encode( input, iobind::from_base64_p );
        if ( !dec.empty() ) {
            HGLOBAL devmode = pPD->hDevMode = ::GlobalAlloc(GPTR, dec.size());
            if ( devmode ){         
                LPDEVMODE src = (LPDEVMODE)&dec[0];
                memcpy( devmode, src, dec.size() );
            }
        }
    }

    pPD->hDevNames = NULL;
    if ( printer_in ){
        HGLOBAL printer = pPD->hDevNames = ::GlobalAlloc(GPTR, sizeof(DEVNAMES)+_tcslen(printer_in)*sizeof(TCHAR)+sizeof(TCHAR));
        if ( printer ){
            LPDEVNAMES dv = (LPDEVNAMES)printer;
            dv->wDefault = 0;
            dv->wDriverOffset = 0;
            dv->wOutputOffset = 0;
            dv->wDeviceOffset = sizeof(DEVNAMES)/sizeof(TCHAR);
            TCHAR *dest = (TCHAR *)(unsigned long)dv + dv->wDeviceOffset;
            _tcscpy( dest, printer_in );
        }
    }

    pPD->hDC = NULL;
    pPD->Flags = PD_PRINTSETUP;

    if ( local_only ) {
        pPD->Flags |= /*PD_ENABLESETUPHOOK |*/ PD_NONETWORKBUTTON;
    }

    pPD->nMinPage = 1;
    pPD->nMaxPage = 1000;
    pPD->nCopies = 1;
    pPD->hInstance = 0;
    pPD->lpPrintTemplateName = NULL;

    //  Invoke the Print property sheet.
    hResult = PrintDlg(pPD);
    if ( hResult != 0 ) {
        if ( pPD->hDevMode ) {
            LPDEVMODE devmode = (LPDEVMODE)::GlobalLock( pPD->hDevMode );
            size_t size = devmode->dmSize + devmode->dmDriverExtra;
            if ( output ) {
                std::string tmp;
                tmp.resize( size );
                memcpy( &tmp[0], devmode, tmp.size() );

                std::string enc = iobind::encode( tmp, iobind::to_base64_p );
                *output = _strdup( enc.c_str() );
            }
            ::GlobalUnlock( pPD->hDevMode );
        }

        if ( pPD->hDevNames ) {
            LPDEVNAMES devnames = (LPDEVNAMES)::GlobalLock( pPD->hDevNames );
            TCHAR *device = (TCHAR *)(unsigned long)devnames + devnames->wDeviceOffset;
            *printer = _tcsdup(device);
            ::GlobalUnlock( pPD->hDevNames );
        }
    }
    else {
        DWORD dlgerr = ::CommDlgExtendedError();
        hResult = dlgerr;
    }

    if (pPD->hDC != NULL) {
        DeleteDC( pPD->hDC );
    }
    if (pPD->hDevMode != NULL) { 
        GlobalFree( pPD->hDevMode );
    }
    if (pPD->hDevNames != NULL) {
        GlobalFree( pPD->hDevNames );
    }
    return hResult;
}

In Python, it's called into like so:

client = ctypes.cdll.LoadLibrary(os.path.join(myDir, 'rpmclient.dll'))
client.printer_setup.argtypes = [ctypes.c_void_p,
                                 ctypes.c_wchar_p,
                                 ctypes.c_char_p,
                                 ctypes.c_int32,
                                 ctypes.POINTER(ctypes.c_wchar_p),
                                 ctypes.POINTER(ctypes.c_char_p)]

client.printer_setup.restype = ctypes.c_int32
client.CleanupA.argtypes = [ctypes.c_char_p]
client.CleanupA.restype = ctypes.c_int32
client.CleanupW.argtypes = [ctypes.c_wchar_p]
client.CleanupW.restype = ctypes.c_int32

p_in = ctypes.c_wchar_p(self.itemMap['device'].GetValue())
p_out = ctypes.c_wchar_p()

d_in = ctypes.c_char_p(getattr(self, 'devmode', ''))
d_out = ctypes.c_char_p()

res = client.printer_setup(self.GetHandle(),
                           p_in,
                           d_in,
                           False,
                           p_out,
                           d_out)

if res == 0:
  return

if res > 1:
  # Error display code here.

  return

self.devmode = d_out.value

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