Wednesday, February 15, 2017

CSS Printing - @media Rule

You can use CSS to change the appearance of your web page when it's printed on a paper. You can specify one font for the screen version and another for the print version.

You have seen @media rule in previous chapters. This rule allows you to specify different style for different media. So, you can define different rules for screen and a printer.
The example below specifies different font families for screen and print. The next CSS uses the same font size for both screen as well as printer.
<style tyle="text/css">
   <!--
   @media screen
   {
      p.bodyText {font-family:verdana, arial, sans-serif;}
   }

   @media print
   {
      p.bodyText {font-family:georgia, times, serif;}
   }
   @media screen, print
   {
      p.bodyText {font-size:10pt}
   }
   -->
</style>
If you are defining your style sheet in a separate file, then you can also use the media attribute when linking to an external style sheet −
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="print" href="mystyle.css">

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