![]() ![]() Instructions on how to take and save a screen shot may be found at. It would also help, if you were able to take, copy and send to the User Help desk at the same time a screen shot of what is going wrong. It will look something like this: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1 WOW64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/.106 Safari/537.36. ![]() ![]() It will help them greatly, if you can give as much detail as possible about the browser(s) and operating system(s) you are using, preferably by going to and copying and pasting into you email what you get there as your full ‘user agent string’. When they do and you are unable to resolve them, please send details to the User Help desk and they will investigate your difficulty. Despite all the above, there are now so many different types of computers, smart phones, browsers etc out there that individual problems will continue to arise. With Macs the same effect, I think, can be achieved by holding down the Command key (the one to the left of the space bar) and hitting + or – in the same way.ġ. With standard personal computers, hold down the Ctrl key and hit either the + or the – sign as many times as you want. If, with the basic interactive puzzle on your screen, you want to increase the type size of the clues for greater legibility (or decrease it so as to be able to see all the clues and the whole grid at the same time) this is easily achieved. The downside is that there are more things to go wrong for example, the grid may not display properly, or the clues may run to more than one page, or the special instructions and setter’s name may not appear on cryptic puzzles. With this option you have some control over the layout of the grid and the clues by adjusting your printer and/or browser settings. At the ‘print preview’ stage, click in the box on the left on ‘Print using system dialogue’. Print dialogue option (recommended only for those who know what they are doing). If you choose smaller paper than A4, the print size will reduce (or, if the ‘Fit to page’ box is not ticked, the clues will stay the same but run over on to more than one page).ģ. You need to ensure that the ‘Fit to page’ box has a tick in it. Start the printing process (as for 1 above) and the ‘preview’ box on the left will now allow you to choose a paper size to suit. You should now have new page, with solid black grid squares and the solution to the previous puzzle at the bottom right. At this stage you can also choose other destinations for the image than your usual default printer.Ģ. If you do so, the clues may run over to more than one page. For most of you this should be A4, but you can try others. If you then click ‘+ more settings’, you can check on the default paper size. If you print this out (on my PC this involves poising the mouse arrow over the image and ‘right-clicking’ once, with other machines things will be different), you are offered a box to check before moving on to the printing itself. This should open a new page, with a white grid and grey squares (to save you ink) and clues formatted to fit an A4 page. Having got the interactive version of your puzzle on the screen, click on the ‘Print’ option above the grid. There are now three routes to printing puzzles and you can choose the one that suits your needs best.ġ. The type size for the clues, which was already larger than that in the printed paper itself, has been increased and the previous ‘print preview’ stage has been reintroduced, so that you can now make personal size adjustments before actually printing out. The developers have been working to improve this side of things. ![]()
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