The present application claims priority to and incorporates by reference the entire contents of Japanese priority document 2007-113289 filed in Japan on Apr. 23, 2007.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an image forming apparatus, a computer program product, and an image forming method.
2. Description of the Related Art
Recently, networking of image forming apparatuses, such as printers and multifunction printers (MFP), has been rapidly developing. Operators can instruct printing of image data or the like to an image forming apparatus from a client terminal networked to the image forming apparatus.
An image forming apparatus has been developed that has a sheet-size decision table that makes the sheet sizes of print sheets correspond to the orientations (directions) of the print sheets and image sizes (width, height, resolution) of the image data printable on the print sheets. By referring to the sheet-size decision table, the image forming apparatus selects a sheet size corresponding to the image size of image data whose printing is instructed from client terminals, and prints the image data on the print sheet of the sheet size selected. However, a problem occurs when a client terminal instruct printing of image data of an image size that is not available in the sheet-size decision table.
It is an object of the present invention to at least partially solve the problems in the conventional technology.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided an image forming apparatus including a storage unit that stores therein a sheet-size decision table indicative of a correspondence of a plurality of sheet sizes and an image size printable on each sheet size; an acquiring unit that acquires image data; an extracting unit that extracts an image size of the image data; a searching unit that searches the sheet-size decision table for a sheet size corresponding to the image size; a selecting unit that selects, when the searching unit cannot find a sheet size corresponding to the image size, a sheet size that can accommodate the image data when printed; and a printing unit that prints the image data on a print sheet corresponding to the sheet size selected by the selecting unit.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided an image forming method including preparing a sheet-size decision table indicative of a correspondence of a plurality of sheet sizes and an image size printable on each sheet size; acquiring image data and extracting an image size of the image data; searching the sheet-size decision table for a sheet size corresponding to the image size; selecting, when a sheet size corresponding to the image size is not found at the searching, a sheet size that can accommodate the image data when printed; and printing the image data on a print sheet corresponding to the sheet size selected at the selecting.
According to still another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a computer program product comprising a computer usable medium having computer readable program codes embodied in the medium that, when executed, causes a computer to execute the above method.
The above and other objects, features, advantages and technical and industrial significance of this invention will be better understood by reading the following detailed description of presently preferred embodiments of the invention, when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention are described below in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
A color digital multifunction product 1000 according to the embodiments, as shown in
A configuration of and operations performed by the color digital multifunction product 1000 according to the embodiment are described based on
The color digital multifunction product 1000 makes it possible to select an original box function, a copy function, a print function, and a facsimile function by sequentially switching an application switching key in an operation displaying unit 400 (see
At first, the scanner unit 200 is described. The scanner unit 200 includes an auto document feeder (ADF) 1 and a scanning unit 50.
A stack of originals is placed with the image side up on an original sheet tray 2 of the ADF 1. When a print key (not shown) on the operation displaying unit 400 is pressed by a user, a feeding roller 3 and a feeding belt 4 feed the lowest original from the stack onto a predetermined position on a contact glass 6. The color digital multifunction product 1000 has a count function that counts up the number of originals each time when an original of them is fed to a predetermined position on the contact glass 6.
Then, the scanning unit 50 scans the image data of the original that is fed onto the predetermined position on the contact glass 6.
The scanning unit 50 is described in detail here. The scanning unit 50 includes the contact glass 6 and an optical scanning system. The optical scanning system includes exposure lamps 51 that function as illuminating units, a first mirror 52, a lens unit 53, and a charge coupled device (CCD) image sensor 54. The exposure lamps 51 and the first mirror 52 are installed on a first carriage (not shown), and a second mirror 55 and a third mirror 56 are installed on a second carriage (not shown). A scanner drive motor (not shown) drives the optical scanning system. The scanning unit 50 provides a process in which an original is scanned by the exposure lamps 51 turned on and by traveling bodies, the first and the second carriages, moving and scanning to a right direction with a scanner driving motor when the original is placed on the contact glass 6 and another process in which an original that the ADF 1 is transporting is scanned by the exposure lamps 51 turned on while the first and the second carriages are halting. Any of the processes is selectable. In the scan process that an original is scanned by the first carriage and the second carriages moved to the right direction with the scanner driving motor, the first carriage and the second carriage are mechanically scanned in a subscanning direction with a relative velocity of the first carriage and the second carriage in a ratio of 2 to 1 to keep a light path length constant when an original image is scanned. The CCD image sensor 54 collects light reflected from the original image, converts the light into an electrical signal, and outputs the signal, which is analog signal. An analog to digital (AD) converter (not shown) converts the signal output from the CCD image sensor 54 into digital data (image data).,
The digital data is used in various manners as information for each scanner unit 200. For example, the digital data is sent to the printing unit 300 for printing on a printing medium, or the digital data is sent to a storage apparatus (such as a hard disk drive (HDD) 1118 in
Once the original is scanned, the feeding belt 4 and a discharging roller 5 discharge it outside of the color digital multifunction product 1000.
If an original set detector 7 detects next original on the original sheet tray 2, the next original is fed onto the contact glass 6 in the same manner of the previous original.
The feeding motor drives each of the feeding roller 3, the feeding belt 4, and the discharging roller 5.
The printing unit 300 is described next. The printing unit 300 includes an image forming station 70, a fixing unit 17, a paper feeding unit 80, and a both-sided paper feeding unit 111.
The image forming station 70 forms images by an electrophotographic process. The image forming station 70 includes a writing unit 57, photosensitive bodies 15 of a tandem type with 4 drams, and developing units 19, which are set on each of the photosensitive bodies, correspond to cyan(C), magenta(M), yellow(Y), and black(B), and a transporting belt 16, in the shape like a belt, that transports the sheet so that images formed on the photosensitive body 15 can be sequentially transferred on a print sheet P at each transferring position.
The paper feeding unit 80 includes a first tray 8, a second tray 9, a third tray 10, a first paper feeding apparatus 11, a second paper feeding apparatus 12, a third paper feeding apparatus 13, and a vertical transporting unit 14. The first paper feeding apparatus 11, the second paper feeding apparatus 12, and the third paper feeding apparatus 13 feed print sheets P loaded in the first tray 8, the second tray 9, and the third tray 10, respectively and the vertical transporting unit 14 transports them to a position where the print sheet abuts on the photosensitive body 15 positioned in the upstream side of a transporting direction.
A laser beam emitted from the writing unit 57 writes the image data scanned by the scanning unit 50 in each photosensitive body 15. The passage through each developing unit 19 of the image data forms a toner image. The writing unit 57 includes a laser emitting unit 58, image formation lenses 59, and a mirror 60. The laser emitting unit 58 includes therein a laser diode of a laser light source and a polygon mirror that rotates at a high velocity with a motor. In addition, although not shown in
Each toner image on each photosensitive body 15 is transferred on the print sheet P that is transported by the transporting belt 16 with the velocity equal to the rotation of each photosensitive body 15 and a color image is formed on the print sheet P. Then, after the print sheet P is transported to the fixing unit 17 and the image is fixed thereon, a paper-discharging unit 18 discharges it to the finisher 100 of a post processing apparatus.
The finisher 100 can guide the print sheet P transported by a paper-discharging roller 18a in the paper-discharging unit 18 by switching from a regular paper-discharging roller 102 direction to a staple processing unit direction. More particularly, the finisher 100 can discharge the print sheet P to the regular paper-discharging tray 104 through the transporting roller 103 by switching a switching board 101 upward and can transport the print sheet P to a staple table 108 through transporting rollers 105 and 107 by switching the switching board 101 downward.
A jogger 109, which aligns paper sheets, aligns the end of loaded print sheets P on the staple table 108 each time when a sheet is discharged and a stapler 106 staples the sheets when copying of a set of sheets is completed. The group of the print sheets P, which sets have been stapled with the stapler 106, are placed by self-weight in a staple completion paper-discharging tray 110.
The regular paper-discharging tray 104 in the finisher 100 is a paper-discharging tray that is movable back and forth. The movable paper-discharging tray 104 sorts copied sheets simply discharged by moving back and forth for every original or every copy set sorted by an image memory.
The color digital multifunction product 1000 can form images on both sides of a print sheet P. When forming images on the both sides of a print sheet P, without guiding the print sheet P fed from each paper feeding tray 8, 9, or 10 to the paper-discharging tray 104 direction, the print sheet P is once stocked in the both-sided paper feeding unit 111 by setting a branch claw 112 upward to change the path of the paper-discharging unit 18. Then, a print sheet P stocked in the both-sided paper feeding unit 111 is again fed in a reversed state from the both-sided paper feeding unit 111 for toner images to be transferred thereon, the toner images being formed again on the photosensitive body 15. Further, the print sheet P is guided to the paper-discharging tray 104 through the branch claw 112 set downward. Thus, the both-sided paper feeding unit 111 is used when images are formed on the both sides of a print sheet P. The both-sided paper feeding unit 111 can be also used to reverse a print sheet P from the front side, on which an image has been copied, when the back side is copied thereon.
The controller 1101 includes a central processing unit (CPU) 1111, which is a main processing unit of a computer, a system memory (MEM-P) 1112, a north bridge (NB) 1113, a south bridge (SB) 1114, an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) 1116, a local memory (MEM-C) 1117, and a-hard disk drive (HDD) 1118. An accelerated graphics port (AGP) bus 1115 connects the NB 1113 and the ASIC 1116. The MEM-P 1112 further includes a read only memory (ROM) 1112a and a random access memory (RAM) 1112b.
The CPU 1111 controls the operation of the entire digital multifunction product 1000. The CPU 1111 includes chip-sets comprised of the NB 1113, the MEM-P 1112, and the SB 1114, and it is connected to other apparatuses through the chip-sets.
The NB 1113 is a bridge to connect the CPU 1111 to the MEM-P 1112, the SB 1114, and the AGP bus 1115. The NB 1113 includes a memory controller (not shown) that controls writing to and reading from the MEM-P 1112, a PCI master, and an AGP target.
The MEM-P 1112 includes the ROM 1112a and the RAM 1112b. The MEM-P 1112 functions as a system memory that is used as a storage memory for computer programs and data, a developing memory for computer programs and data, an image forming memory for printers, and the like. The ROM 1112a functions as a read only memory that is used as a storage memory for data and computer programs for controlling operations of the CPU 1111. The RAM 1112b is a writable and readable memory and it is used as a developing memory for computer programs and data, an image forming memory for printers, and the like.
The SB 1114 is a bridge to connect the NB 1113 to PCI devices and peripheral devices. The SB 1114 is connected to the NB 1113 through the PCI bus. Moreover, a network interface (I/F) unit 1104 and the like are connected to this PCI bus.
The ASIC 1116 is an integrated circuit (IC) for processing images, the IC having hardware components of processing images, and functions as a bridge that connects the AGP bus 1115, the PCI bus, the HDD 1118, and the MEM-C 1117 to each other. Although not shown, the ASIC 1116 includes a PCI target and an AGP master, an arbiter (ARB) as a core of the ASIC 1116, a memory controller that controls the MEM-C 1117, a plurality of direct memory access controllers (DMAC) that perform rotation of image data or other actions by hardware logic or the like, and a PCI unit that transports data through a PCI bus between the printing unit 300 and scanner unit 200. The ASIC 1116 is connected to a FAX control unit (FCU) 1121, a universal serial bus (USB) 1122, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 1394 (IEEE 1394) interface 1123 through the PCI bus.
The MEM-C 1117 is a local memory used as a copy image buffer and a code buffer. The HDD 1118 is a storage that stores therein image data, computer programs to control the operation of the CPU 1111, font data, and various forms.
The AGP bus 1115 is a bus interface for a graphic accelerator card proposed for accelerating graphic processes. The AGP bus 1115 accelerates the graphic accelerator card by direct access to the MEM-P 1112 in a high throughput.
A print process, which is a characteristic of a first embodiment, performed when a print function is selected is described below. The controller 1101 realizes this print function according to a computer program.
As shown in
The sheet-size decision table T, as shown in
The image data acquiring unit 21 acquires image data from another apparatus via a network (Step S1). The image data acquiring unit 21 can acquire the image data from the scanners 2001, 2002, 2003, or the PC 2000 connected to a network 3000 through the IEEE 1394 (1123). The image data that is a TIFF type image data has an identifier called “tag”, in which attribution information of image data is entered, in the head part of the image data so that different operation systems (OS) or computers can exchange image data therebetween. As shown in
The extracting unit 22 extracts an image size of image data acquired by the image data acquiring unit 21 (Step S2). The color digital multifunction product 1000 extracts attribution information on the image size of the image data from the head tag of the image data acquired by the image data acquiring-unit 21. More particularly, at first, the extracting unit 22 determines whether the format of image data entered in a tag is TIFF type. When the format of the image data is not TIFF type, a print process is completed because the format is not available for the color digital multifunction product 1000. On the other hand, when the format of the image data is TIFF type, the image size of the image data entered in the tag is extracted.
The sheet size searching unit 23 searches a sheet size corresponding to the image size extracted by the extracting unit 22 based on the sheet-size decision table T (Step S3). The sheet size searching unit 23 searches the sheet size from the sheet-size decision table T stored in the sheet size storage unit 26.
The sheet size selecting unit 24, when the sheet size searching unit 23 cannot find the sheet size corresponding to the image size (No at Step S3), executes a sheet size selection process for selecting a printable sheet size for the image data based on the image size (Step S4). The sheet size selecting unit 24, when the sheet size searching unit 24 can find the sheet size corresponding to the image size (Yes at Step S3), selects the sheet size corresponding to the image size (Step S5).
The sheet size selection process performed at Step S4 is described below with reference to
Returning to the explanation of
When the sheet searching unit 25 does not find the paper feeding apparatuses (11, 12, and 13) (No at Step S6) that can feed the print sheets of the sheet sizes selected at Step S4 or Step S5 in
The sheet size selecting unit 24 determines whether the selected sheet size is big enough to accommodate the image size (Step S8). Specifically, the sheet size selecting unit 24 determines whether the image size extracted at Step S3 can be accommodated in the sheet size selected at Steps S4, S5, or S7. If the image size can be accommodated (Yes at Step S8), a print process starts (Step S10 in
In this manner, the color digital multifunction product 1000 extracts image sizes entered in a tag of image data sent from a client terminal connected to a network and searches a sheet size corresponding to the image size extracted from a sheet-size decision table. When no sheet size that can accommodate the image is found, a sheet size that can accommodate the image is selected. In other words, an image can be printed on a paper of an appropriate size even when the sheet-size decision table does not contain the image size of the image data sent from the client terminal. Therefore, operability for a series of operations to perform print processes can be improved.
It is possible that paper of the selected sheet size is not present in the paper tray.
The sheet detecting unit 27 detects whether print sheets of the sheet size selected by the sheet size selecting unit 24 is left in the paper feeding unit that feeds print sheets to the printing unit (Step S25 in
The display controlling unit 28 displays a message on the displaying unit that no paper is left in the paper feeding unit (Step S27). In this situation, the display controlling unit 28 urges users to supply print sheets in the trays by causing the operation displaying unit 400 to display a message indicating that no paper is left in the trays (the first, the second, and the third trays (8, 9, and 10)) when the sheet detecting unit 27 detects that no paper is left in the paper feeding unit. The print process is not performed when the sheet detecting unit 27 detects that no paper is left in the paper feeding unit. Instead of displaying on the operation displaying unit 400 the message that no paper is left, similar message can be displayed on a screen of a computer that is connected to the network. Alternatively, the message can be displayed on both the operation displaying unit 400 and the screen of a computer that is connected to the network.
Thus, the color digital multifunction product 1000 extracts image sizes entered in a tag of image data sent from client terminals, such as scanners and computers connected to a network, searches a sheet size corresponding to the image size from the sheet-size decision table, and selects an appropriate sheet size when no sheet size corresponding to the image size is found. When no print sheet is left in the paper tray, the color digital multifunction product 1000 notifies that no paper is available to the user. Thus, the color digital multifunction product 1000 can quickly recover from problems.
According to an aspect of the present invention, an image can be printed on a paper of appropriate size even if a paper of size specified from the client terminal is not available in the sheet-size decision table.
According to another aspect of the present invention, the fact that paper is not present in the paper tray is notified to the users, so that they can quickly replenish the paper.
According to still another aspects of the present invention, an image is automatically scaled down so as to be accommodated on a paper of available size so that the operability can be improved.
Although the invention has been described with respect to specific embodiments for a complete and clear disclosure, the appended claims are not to be thus limited but are to be construed as embodying all modifications and alternative constructions that may occur to one skilled in the art that fairly fall within the basic teaching herein set forth.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2007-113289 | Apr 2007 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4796056 | Ito | Jan 1989 | A |
5289236 | Yoshino | Feb 1994 | A |
20070116486 | Katahira | May 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2005-278143 | Oct 2005 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080260414 A1 | Oct 2008 | US |