Which of the following are printer languages select three

1 - On = Print Trans Emp Name and #; Off = Print Chk Emp Name and #

Select this option to print the employee name and number of the transaction operator on the order chit. Deselect to print the employee name and number of the check operator.

3 - Print Dopplebon

Select this option to print a separate order chit for each menu item in the current service round (dopplebon style). Deselect to print one order chit for all menu items in the current service round (the default printing style).

4 - Print Dopplebon Summary

Select this option to print an order summary chit before printing an order's dopplebon order chits. Deselect to suppress dopplebon summary chit printing

6 - Print Seat Numbers with Individual Items

Select this option to print seat numbers with each individual menu item.

If the order device is set to consolidate (Sort/Consolidate Method on the General tab), the seats print as a Seat Header above the detail item.

7 - Print Revenue Center Name on Orders

Select this option to print the revenue center name with each order sent to this order device. The name prints in double-wide characters. Deselect to suppress printing the revenue center name.

9 - On = Print void marker before Void; Off = Print Void in Red

Select this option to print a VV VOID VV line, in red or inverse, in front of voided menu items. Deselect to print voided items in red, without the VV Void VV line.

10 - Print Condiments in Red (Overrides Print Class Settings)

Select this option to print condiments in red ink or in inverse. Deselect to print condiments in red/inverse or in black, depending on the Print Class Red/Black option setting.

11 - Print Both Menu Item Names

Select this option to print both names entered for a Menu Item Definition on the order chit. Deselect to print only one name.

When this option is deselected, the name that prints is determined by the Menu Item Definition's Menu Item Class option Print Name 2 on Order Output Instead of Name 1.

13 - Print Guest Check Info Lines Before Header on Order Device

Select this option to print guest check information lines before the order device header.

14 - Print Guest Check Info Lines After Header on Order Device

Select this option to print guest check information lines after the order device header.

15 - Print Guest Check Info Lines After Trailer on Order Device

Select this option to print guest check information lines after the order device trailer.

16 - Print Secondary Items

See Secondary Printing for more information.

21 - Exclude Voids

Select this option if you do not want voids of previous round items to be sent to the kitchen.

22 - Intersperse Different Languages

If you are printing in more than one language, select this option to print the menu item in each language before printing any condiments. For example, the output will be menu item name in language 1, menu item name in language 2, 1st condiment in language 1, 1st condiment in language 2.

23 - Identify Combo Meals

Select this option to print a flag to denote menu items that are part of a combo meal. If printing Asian characters, the information is printed on the preceding line due to space limitations.

24 - Print Dining Course Header

Select this option to print a dining course header and to group the menu items by dining course.

25 - Format Prefix On Separate Line

Select this option to print the prefix on a separate line above the condiment. Deselect to print the prefix on the same line as the condiment that it modifies.

26 - Print Single Wide

Select this option to print orders in single-width characters.

This supports longer menu item names, but has the drawback of not being as readable from a distance.

Before the advent of laser and inkjet technology, impact printers could only print standard, justified text with no variation in letter size or font style. Today, printers are able to process complex documents with embedded images, charts, and tables in multiple frames and in several languages, all on one page. Such complexity must adhere to some format conventions. This is what spurred the development of the page description language (or PDL) -- a specialized document formatting language specially made for computer communication with printers.

Over the years, printer manufacturers have developed their own proprietary languages to describe document formats. However, such proprietary languages applied only to the printers that the manufacturers created themselves. If, for example, you were to send a print-ready file using a proprietary PDL to a professional press, there was no guarantee that your file would be compatible with the printer's machines. The issue of portability came into question.

Xerox® developed the Interpress™ protocol for their line of printers, but full adoption of the language by the rest of the printing industry was never realized. Two original developers of Interpress left Xerox and formed Adobe®, a software company catering mostly to electronic graphics and document professionals. At Adobe, they developed a widely-adopted PDL called PostScript™, which uses a markup language to describe text formatting and image information that could be processed by printers. At the same time, the Hewlett-Packard® Company developed the Printer Control Language™ (or PCL) for use in their ubiquitous laser and inkjet printer lines. PostScript and PCL are now widely adopted PDLs and are supported by most printer manufacturers.

PDLs work on the same principle as computer programming languages. When a document is ready for printing, the PC or workstation takes the images, typographical information, and document layout, and uses them as objects that form instructions for the printer to process. The printer then translates those objects into rasters, a series of scanned lines that form an image of the document (called Raster Image Processing or RIP), and prints the output onto the page as one image, complete with text and any graphics included. This process makes printed documents more consistent, resulting in little or no variation when printing the same document on different model printers. PDLs are designed to be portable to any format, and scalable to fit different paper sizes.

Choosing the right printer is a matter of determining what standards the various departments in your organization have adopted for their needs. Most departments use word processing and other productivity software that use the PostScript language for outputting to printers. However, if your graphics department requires PCL or some proprietary form of printing, you must take that into consideration as well.

Which of the following languages are used by printers?

The primary printer languages these days are Hewlett Packard's Printer Command Language (PCL) and Adobe's Postscript.

What are three printer languages that printers commonly understand?

What are three printer languages that printers commonly understand? Escape Codes(dot matrix), Printer Control Language(PCL), PostScript(more expensive).

Which connector is most commonly used to connect printers to desktop PC systems?

Most printers use a USB connector to connect directly to a desktop PC system.

Which of the following allows a computer to communicate with the printer?

Printer drivers are software applications that help your computer communicate with the printer.