Frank wrote:
> I assumed (yes I know <g>) that all Windows had some kind of print
> spooler that would spool a print job to disk or memory and then send
> it to the printer in the background.

It does. On all printer drivers I've seen, there's a bit under the
"Advanced" tab that determines whether applications print directly to the
printer or whether they print to the spooler, which then frees the
application from waiting for the print job to complete. This seems to
default to spooling the jobs. Perhaps it has been changed on your machine,
or you're using a bad driver. Though given WinNT etc have a print spooler
service, I don't think it's actually a function of the printer driver
itself.

You could also check your "Print Spooler" service is running!

In principle there could be problems with the spool directory- real files
are created on the disk that I found once, and if they can't be created then
it may fall back to direct printing without telling you. Never seen this
happen though.

-- 
Dr. Craig Graham, Software Engineer
Advanced Analysis and Integration Limited, UK. http://www.aail.co.uk/





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