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Using the Wpf DocumentViewer control I can't figure out how to set the PageOrientation on the PrintDialog that the DocumentViewer displays when the user clicks the print button. Is there a way to hook into this?

2 Answers2

16

Mike's answer works. The way I chose to implement it was to instead create my own doc viewer derived from DocumentViewer. Also, casting the Document property to FixedDocument wasn't working for me - casting to FixedDocumentSequence was.

GetDesiredPageOrientation is whatever you need it to be. In my case, I'm inspecting the first page's dimensions, because I generate documents that are uniform size and orientation for all pages in the document, and with only one doc in the sequence.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using System.Windows.Controls;
using System.Windows.Xps;
using System.Printing;
using System.Windows.Documents;

public class MyDocumentViewer : DocumentViewer
{
    protected override void OnPrintCommand()
    {
        // get a print dialog, defaulted to default printer and default printer's preferences.
        PrintDialog printDialog = new PrintDialog();
        printDialog.PrintQueue = LocalPrintServer.GetDefaultPrintQueue();
        printDialog.PrintTicket = printDialog.PrintQueue.DefaultPrintTicket;

        // get a reference to the FixedDocumentSequence for the viewer.
        FixedDocumentSequence docSeq = this.Document as FixedDocumentSequence;

        // set the default page orientation based on the desired output.
        printDialog.PrintTicket.PageOrientation = GetDesiredPageOrientation(docSeq);

        if (printDialog.ShowDialog() == true)
        {
            // set the print ticket for the document sequence and write it to the printer.
            docSeq.PrintTicket = printDialog.PrintTicket;

            XpsDocumentWriter writer = PrintQueue.CreateXpsDocumentWriter(printDialog.PrintQueue);
            writer.WriteAsync(docSeq, printDialog.PrintTicket);
        }
    }
}
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  • I had already overridden the default DocumentViewer because it contains text that is non-l18n-friendly so this turned out to be a great solution. Thanks! – JoeB Feb 18 '13 at 17:40
  • Should it be printDialog.PrintTicket = printDialog.PrintQueue.DefaultPrintTicket;? Doesn't compile otherwise – Anders Lindén Apr 25 '13 at 11:58
  • Would also be nice to see your implementation of GetDesiredPageOrientation! – Anders Lindén Apr 25 '13 at 12:15
  • Noted, and fixed. Thanks. Also: https://gist.github.com/mcw0933/5543526 Just call GetPageOrientationOfFirstPageOfFixedDocSeq. – mcw May 08 '13 at 20:47
10

The workaround I used to set the orientation on my DocumentViewer's print dialog was to hide the print button on the DocumentViewer control by omitting the button from the template. I then provided my own print button and tied it to the following code:

public bool Print()
    {
        PrintDialog dialog = new PrintDialog();
        dialog.PrintQueue = LocalPrintServer.GetDefaultPrintQueue();
        dialog.PrintTicket = dialog.PrintQueue.DefaultPrintTicket;
        dialog.PrintTicket.PageOrientation = PageOrientation.Landscape;

        if (dialog.ShowDialog() == true)
        {
            XpsDocumentWriter writer = PrintQueue.CreateXpsDocumentWriter(dialog.PrintQueue);
            writer.WriteAsync(_DocumentViewer.Document as FixedDocument, dialog.PrintTicket);
            return true;
        }

        return false;
    }