Forum Discussion
Elliot Kirk
Apr 08, 2019Former Employee
We're Listening!
Greetings Microsoft Edge Insiders!
Let us start off by saying, welcome to the Microsoft Edge Insider community! We’re so excited to have you here, and we can’t wait to start learning from you. If...
Drew1903
Nov 24, 2019Silver Contributor
Brady2495
Brady, possibly you've not noticed all that's in the print controls with Edge C. It can save to PDF & it shrinks to fit, although, here it is called scaling. There's a bunch of choices in the top box with its scroll arrow. The red arrow at Less settings did say More settings. Hit that to see Scaling. It goes by 5s from 100% to zero.
Cheers,
Drew
erikvp
Nov 24, 2019Brass Contributor
Missed that too. But that is a bit of guesswork to get it to fit. The old Size to Fit was a lot easier. One-click and you knew it would fit.
- Drew1903Nov 25, 2019Silver Contributor
erikvp
Erik, I may have misunderstood... thought you hadn't found or seen any means to scale it down (or up). Yes, there was Shrink to Fit. On the other hand, scaling in Edge C offers increments of 5% whilst, Shrink to Fit in Edge is increments of 25%. I have oft found 5 or 10% is enough to bring 2 pages down to one, for example.
Cheers,
Drew- HotCakeXNov 25, 2019MVPA quick Google search reveals that "shrink to width" for PDF is available for PDF readers.
Not for converting web pages to PDFs, but when printing actual and real PDF documents into physical papers.
websites/webpages have lots of customizations, they gotta be stripped down first and turned into a proper reading style using Immersive reader and then converted to PDF. - HotCakeXNov 25, 2019MVPScale isn't the same as shrink to fit.