Ricoh INFOPRINT XT GLD0-0025-01 User Manual

Page 182

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background image

maps

the

job

to

the

user

who

submitted

it.

InfoPrint

Manager

maps

a

local

job

ID

to

a

global

job

ID.

logical

destination.

In

InfoPrint

Manager,

an

object

to

which

users

or

programs

submit

jobs.

The

destination

routes

the

jobs

to

one

or

more

actual

destinations

that

represent

output

devices,

such

as

printers,

electronic

mail

systems,

or

fax

machines.

logical

page.

Synonymous

with

page.

logical

printer.

In

InfoPrint

Manager,

a

type

of

logical

destination.

The

logical

printer

routes

jobs

to

one

or

more

physical

printers,

which

represent

printer

devices.

M

Management

Console.

In

InfoPrint

Manager,

a

graphical

user

interface

for

doing

administrative

tasks.

medium.

In

InfoPrint

Manager,

an

object

representing

the

physical

material

on

which

the

job

prints.

metrics

directory.

In

InfoPrint

XT,

the

directory

in

which

it

stores

the

metrics

files

for

all

the

Xerox

resources

that

you

load.

The

metrics

directory

is

one

of

these:

v

%PDXTWORKDIR%\resources\common\metrics

v

%PDXTWORKDIR%\resources\

resgrp\metrics

v

C:\OtherDirectory\metrics

message

catalog.

(1)

A

file

that

contains

all

the

possible

messages

that

can

display

during

the

processing

done

by

an

application.

(2)

An

indexed

table

of

messages.

Two

or

more

catalogs

can

contain

the

same

index

values.

The

index

value

in

each

table

refers

to

a

different

language

version

of

the

same

message.

Mixed

Object

Document

Content

Architecture

(MO:DCA).

An

architected,

device-independent

data

stream

for

interchanging

documents.

Mixed

Object

Document

Content

Architecture-

Presentation

(MO:DCA-P).

A

subset

of

MO:DCA

that

defines

presentation

documents.

MO:DCA.

Mixed

Object

Document

Content

Architecture.

MO:DCA-P.

Mixed

Object

Document

Content

Architecture-Presentation.

monospaced

font.

(1)

A

font

in

which

the

spacing

of

the

characters

does

not

vary.

(2)

A

font

in

which

the

graphic

characters

have

uniform

character

increments.

Contrast

with

proportionally-spaced

font.

multiple-up

printing.

The

arrangement

of

more

than

one

page

of

data

on

a

single

sheet

of

paper.

Synonymous

with

N_UP.

N

N_UP.

(1)

The

partitioning

of

a

side

of

a

sheet

into

a

fixed

number

of

equal

size

partitions.

For

example,

4-up

divides

each

side

of

a

sheet

into

four

equal

partitions.

(2)

Pertaining

to

the

number

of

forms

that

you

put

together

in

a

layout.

Typical

layouts

are

2_UP,

4_UP,

8_UP,

16_UP,

and

so

on.

You

specify

N_UP

printing

to

use

the

maximum

area

of

the

print

sheet.

Synonymous

with

multiple-up

printing.

non-process

runout

(NPRO).

(1)

An

operation

that

moves

paper

or

forms

through

the

paper

path

of

a

printer

without

printing.

(2)

The

process

of

removing

the

last

few

sheets

of

a

job

that

has

finished

printing

on

a

continuous-forms

printer.

Typically,

the

last

sheets

of

a

job

remain

in

the

printer,

and

the

next

job

forces

the

last

sheets

of

the

previous

job

out

of

the

printer.

This

procedure

saves

time

when

printing

is

continuous,

but

when

a

delay

exists

between

jobs,

it

is

necessary

to

remove

the

end

of

the

last

job.

After

a

period

of

time,

as

specified

by

an

NPRO

parameter,

the

printer

clears

out

the

last

sheets

of

the

job.

normal

duplex

printing.

Duplex

printing

for

sheets

that

are

bound

on

the

long

edge

of

the

paper,

regardless

of

whether

the

printing

is

in

portrait

orientation

or

landscape

orientation.

Contrast

with

tumble

duplex

printing.

NPRO.

Non-process

runout.

O

offset

stacking.

For

certain

printer

devices,

a

function

through

which

the

printer

can

offset

the

printed

output

pages

for

easy

job

separation.

orientation.

(1)

In

printing,

the

number

of

degrees

an

object

is

rotated

relative

to

a

reference;

for

example,

the

orientation

of

an

overlay

relative

to

the

logical

page

origin,

or

the

orientation

of

printing

on

a

page

relative

to

the

page

coordinates.

Orientation

usually

applies

to

blocks

of

information.

Character

rotation

applies

to

individual

characters.

(2)

The

angle

between

the

top

or

bottom

edge

of

the

page

and

the

baselines

of

text,

as

measured

in

a

clockwise

direction.

(3)

The

rotation

of

an

element

relative

to

a

fixed

reference.

operator.

In

InfoPrint

Manager

and

InfoPrint

XT,

the

person

responsible

for

printer

devices.

Also,

this

person

does

a

subset

of

tasks

for

InfoPrint

Manager

queues

and

actual

destinations,

and

does

some

job-related

tasks.

output

writer.

On

a

z/OS

system,

the

part

of

the

job

entry

subsystem

that

receives

job

output

from

the

system

spool.

overlay.

(1)

A

resource

object

that

can

contain

text,

image,

graphics,

and

bar

code

data.

Overlays

define

162

InfoPrint

XT

Guide

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