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Print Preview Not Matching Original Document
wingsofElyon sorry I don't have a solution for you. But when I open your workbook the alignment isn't correct on my screen nor in print preview. I don't know how you are creating those circles but the non-bold circles appear to be some form of text code in the cell while the bold circles are shapes added on top of the sheet. If you want alignment, you might have better luck using all shapes (or all characters but guessing you couldn't do the bold that way and hence added the drawing objects) and maybe even group the shapes, but that is just a thought.
- mtarlerMay 18, 2020Silver Contributor
wingsofElyon I also agree with mathetes that you are not using Excel in the way it is really designed (but then again I do that all the time) and that I would also suggest word or a typeset package like Publisher. I also agree with SergeiBaklan that non-monospaced fonts are going to cause more problems, but even with monospaced fonts the way a page is rendered it will render fonts different than images. So I go back to suggesting you might want to convert everything to objects that you specify the exact location for. You can probably get away with some text for headers and such that don't require specific alignment. Also, I didn't check what fonts you were using to create those circles and such, but you can also run into problems with font libraries that aren't truetype fonts because although the software may scale it one way the printer may step it differently. And you still have the issue that as you open it on different machines, they will be viewed differently (your sheet didn't view right on my computer) and not show right.
- mathetesMay 18, 2020Silver Contributor
Another idea: but first, an observation: you're not really using Excel for the kinds of things that Excel excels in; rather, you're using it more because of its rows and columns, i.e., its layout features. Yet it's precisely its layout that is messing you up.
So my suggestion: use Microsoft Word instead. You can insert a table in Word, where that's appropriate. You can insert graphic features....
If I had been tasked with creating the kind of scoring sheet you're trying to create here, I would have started with Word rather than Excel.... But I might also have gone for more of a complete graphics program. Come to think of it: you could create this as a PowerPoint slide.
- wingsofElyonMay 18, 2020Copper Contributor
mathetes
I stated this in the comment below with an answer given (wondering if it is the same reason) but I wanted to state it here also for you. I was able to get a copy of Microsoft word to work on my computer (2007) and started doing this. It is doing the same exact thing on word.- mathetesMay 18, 2020Silver Contributor
I actually think Power Point gives more flexibility when it comes to positioning things. Give it a try
- wingsofElyonMay 18, 2020Copper ContributorI appreciate your feedback. I wanted to use Word and tried, but it isn’t working at all on my computer so I was hoping it would work on this as in the past I have been forced to use excel for things similar (for school assignments) and had no issues. Maybe my best bet is to try and borrow someone else’s technology to use Word. I confess...I never thought about using PowerPoint and will see if I have it on my computer to try (never tried on this computer). Thank you for your response!
- SergeiBaklanMay 18, 2020Diamond Contributor
That's since not monospace font is used. You may compare View->Normal
and View->Page Layout
Same with shapes - they stay on place but the text string with circle characters is scaled.
Bit more details is here The column width is not the same when printed in Excel
By the way, same scale effect will be if you try to play with theme fonts
Monospace font most probably could solve the issue, but I'm not sure you'll find proper unicode characters for such fonts.