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              Print layers
              There are two options:

              •  Print ALL FOREGROUND LAYERS.
              •  Print only the currently VISIBLE FOREGROUND LAYERS.


              Note that only foreground layers are printed. Background layers are never printed.


              Print As
              NORMAL is suitable for most types of document.

              However some printers do not reproduce consistent colors when printing bitmaps or
              vector objects that are the same color (this is a fault with the printer driver). This is
              noticeable if objects overlap onto bitmaps or onto objects with transparency applied to
              them. In this case, select BITMAP or ANTI-ALIASED BITMAP and retry.

              The choice between BITMAP and ANTI-ALIASED BITMAP depends on the printer and
              personal preference. Some printers give best results with anti-aliasing turned off
              especially when printing thin lines. As a rule, using anti-aliasing allows lower resolution
              printing. For example, 150 DPI bitmap printing is usually good enough for all uses-even
              typesetting. Without anti-aliasing, higher resolutions may be needed which gives much
              slower printing.

              Transparency resolution
              When printing, Xara Designer Pro X's transparency effects are created using bitmaps.

              This option controls the resolution of those bitmaps when sent to the printer. Automatic is
              suitable for most drawings, and means Xara Designer Pro X automatically selects a
              resolution suitable for the current printer.  This might be unsuitable if printing to a very
              high resolution printer such as image setting devices. In this case you may wish to
              control the print resolution manually by entering the desired value.
              Note that modern printers often claim to be able to print at over 1000 dots-per-inch, but
              this is not the same thing as "pixels-per-inch", which is what you see on screen.
              Generally, it's never necessary to print at more than 600 pixels-per-inch, and typically
              300 pixels per inch produces perfectly adequate print results, especially if anti-aliased.

              Fill quality

              Using this option, you can choose how many steps make up the graduated fills in your
              document when it is printed. The NORMAL setting is suitable for most purposes. This
              option is dimmed for PostScript printers.

              Text options
              If your printer has problems reproducing fonts, select the PRINT ALL TEXT AS SHAPES
              option. All text is then converted to vector shapes before the document is sent to the
              printer. This may be slower, but will reproduce exactly what you see on screen.
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