Epson FX-980 User Manual

Page 227

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Glossary

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high-speed draft

A draft printing mode you can select using the printer’s default-setting mode or
the EPSON Remote! utility. High-speed draft uses a minimum number of dots
per character to produce extremely high-speed printing. See also draft and near
letter quality
.

interface

The connection (via a cable) between the computer and the printer through
which print data is transmitted to the printer.

initialization

Returns the printer to its default settings (a fixed set of conditions).

landscape

Printing that is oriented sideways on the page. This orientation gives you a page
that is wider than it is high and is useful for printing spreadsheets. See also
portrait.

line feed (LF)

A control panel button and control code that advances the paper one line space.

micro adjust

A printer feature that allows you to precisely adjust the tear-off and top-of-form
positions.

near letter quality(NLQ)

The print mode used by your printer when you select Roman or Sans Serif as the
font. Printing with near letter-quality fonts provides better readability and
appearance at a reduced print speed. See also draft and high-speed draft.

paper positions

There are three paper positions for continuous paper printing: standby, tear-off,
and top-of-form. For single-sheet printing, there is only the top-of-form position.
See also standby position, tear-off position, and top-of-form position. For detailed
information on these positions, see “Paper positions” on page 5 of the Glossary.

pitch

The size of the font, which is measured in the number of character per inch (cpi).
The standard is 10 cpi. See also character per inch.

platen

The black roller that provides a backing for the paper during printing.

portrait

Printing that is oriented upright on the page (as opposed to landscape, in which
printing is sideways on the page). This is the standard orientation for printing
letters or documents. See also landscape.

printable area

The area of a page on which the printer can print. It is smaller than the physical
size of the page because of margins.

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