To generate and print a document on an electrophotographic marking engine, it is first required to create a print job with an application program that generates and assembles defined pages into a single print job. This print job is then converted to a printer control language to provide a file script that can be interpreted by a destination printer to generate rasterized data in a raster image processor (“RIP”) engine. This rasterized data is then transferred to a marking engine associated with the printer and the subsequent transfer to paper stock.
In general, most documents are assembled in the print job such that they can be printed on a common paper stock. Whenever different paper stock is involved, a problem is presented. This is the case with respect to tab pages wherein the page is designed to be the same length and width as a conventional page of the document with the exception of a portion thereof protruding from the side as a tab. The feed mechanism can usually handle the feeding of these tab pages and even insertion of the tab in the appropriate place along the edge of the document. However, if the printing engine is also to print information on the tab, then there must be an accommodation made for this, due to the fact that the tab is outside of the normal image space for the document. As an example, consider an 8½×11 sheet of paper that is typically edge fed in the marking engine. The dimension of the image along the feed path is typically equal to the width of the widest document accommodated in the marking engine—8.5 inches. When accommodating a tab page, a wider page, and thus a longer feed path, must be accommodated. This has been facilitated in the past with the use of a “shift” of the image, such that the original document actually places the tab information within the boundaries of a conventional size document and this is then shifted when the image for that page is actually printed.
When the document is printed, there will typically be provided two paper bins to source paper, one for the conventional paper and one for the tab stock. The tab stock will typically be conventional tab stock that is sequenced in such a manner that each subsequent tab is vertically offset along the right edge of the page. This requires information that is to be placed on a tab be correctly positioned along the edge and also that the correct tab page be selected from a tab page containing bin. Once this operation is synchronized, then the tab information will be placed on the correct position on the appropriate tab stock.
Methods and apparatus in accordance with this invention process a print job including a plurality of raster image processed pages. In one embodiment, a tab page is created that includes a tab image located at a predetermined position in the tab page, the predetermined position associated with a tab position on tab stock. The tab page is then raster image processed, and the rasterized tab page is inserted at a selected position in the print job. The tab image is detected on the rasterized tab page at the predetermined location, and the rasterized tab image is then positioned at the associated tab position. The print job may then be printed on an output substrate. In another embodiment, thumbnail images of the rasterized pages of the print job are displayed, and one of the thumbnail images is selected. The rasterized tab page may be inserted either before or after the selected page in the print job.
Features of the present invention can be more clearly understood from the following detailed description considered in conjunction with the following drawings, in which the same reference numerals denote the same elements throughout, and in which:
Referring now to
The information that is transferred to printer 102 can be in the form of a bit-mapped image or the information could be assembled into a script in printer control language. If the job is forwarded in a printer control language, then printer 102 must process this information to generate the bit-mapped image with the use of a RIP, which then is utilized by the marking engine internal to printer 102 for generating the image. In the disclosed embodiment, workstations 110 transfer bit-mapped images, although it should be understood that any type of information regarding a print job could be transferred to the marking engine with the processing either distributed to workstations 110 or contained within printer 102 or any combination thereof.
In the present embodiment, a job is typically comprised of a plurality of pages which are designed to have tab pages inserted at predetermined locations therein. When printing the job, the individual non-tab pages and tab pages are printed, such that the document is printed in the original sequence of the pages in the document. However, it is difficult to assemble the paper into a single paper bin with the tabs pages disposed at the appropriate locations such that all of the source substrate material could be extracted from a single bin. Therefore, tab stock is disposed in separate bins, and printer 102 is controlled to pull a tab page when it appears in the document sequence. When the tab page is extracted, the tab information can then be printed onto the body of the tab page or onto the tab itself, as will be disclosed below.
Referring now to
Typically, tab stock includes a plurality of pages that are arranged such that the tabs are equally offset along the vertical edge. For example, if the stock were a 3-tab stock, this would mean that the first page of the tab stock would have the tab in the upper right corner, the second page therein would have the tab in the center and the third page would have the tab in the lower right corner, all of the tabs being disposed on the right vertical edge. In one form, tab stock can be purchased such that it is stacked in an order from top right to bottom right for the first three pages, top right to bottom right for pages 4-6, and so on. However, the tab stock could be arranged such that one bin 106 could have just the upper right corner tab stock, the second bin having all stock associated with the middle tab and the third bin having tab stock associated with the lower right corner tab. This is the embodiment illustrated in
With further reference to
During processing of the job, tab pages must be inserted at particular locations. In the job illustrated in
As an alternate embodiment illustrated in
Referring now to
Referring now to
In a conventional printing system, the image is synchronized such that the leading edge of the document, that being leftmost edge 306 of the tab stock, will be passed through the transfer roller initially. Because the synchronization typically requires the image to be initiated at the leading edge (the left vertical edge), and then terminated at the right vertical edge, printing of an image on a tab page will be terminated prior to actually printing information on the tab. However, as illustrated in an expanded view of a tab 422, it is desired that a tab image 424 be disposed on the tab 422 which is outside of the boundaries of a conventional image for the stock.
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
These RIPed pages, which include tab pages, are extracted from memory 706 in the order they exist within the job and are distributed to one or more marking engines 710 with a page distributor 712. Page distributor 712 interfaces with the marking engine through a print adapter 714, such that the distributor 712 can pass RIPed pages to the various marking engines 710, it being understood that only one marking engine is required for a given print job, but multiple marking engines could be utilized, depending upon the configuration. The job distributor 712 is under control of a print station manager 718 which defines how the pages are distributed. Further, the print station manager 718 actually generates tab pages and inserts them into the document that is stored in the memory 706, as will be described below.
Referring now to
Referring now to
In the RIPed job of
Referring now to
For example, if 3-tab stock is accommodated, this is known to the user. When detecting image data for a tab, the region 1004 is divided into three regions 1006, 1008 and 1010 associated with the three tab positions. The image can then be predefined by the user at the job creation step to be in a predetermined position such that the image will then be converted from the region 1006 to tab 1014 on tab page 1012. In this mode, the auto detect merely detects the presence of a RIPed or bit-mapped image in the region 1006 and then utilizes a shift operation to cause it to be shifted to the tab, this operation always forcing the tab to be in the same associated position. Of course, as will be described below, once the image is defined, this image can actually be shifted to different positions, depending upon the software or the application. This will be the case in the event that a tab page were inserted or a particular tab page that was auto detected were to be inserted in a different position, as will be described below.
Referring now to
The detect operation can be effected with a number of procedures. In a first embodiment, the detect region has disposed therein bit-mapped information that is extracted. This bit-mapped pattern comprises exactly what information is to be disposed on the tab. It is an image that is extracted from the RIPed image and placed on an area associated with the tab. The image can then be shifted to a different tab position or otherwise manipulated. Further, in this embodiment, the simplest operation is to merely copy the bit-mapped image to the tab. However, the image could be manipulated by rotating the image and even resizing the image. In a second embodiment, information is placed in region 1004 that is extracted from the bit-mapped image and this information provides either content, instructions or both. For example, the information may be a hyperlink to other information such as an image or a predefined configuration that opens a dialog box to view the image and the associated content.
Referring now to
As will be described below, the system will allow tab pages to be added to any RIPed job output, wherein the marking engine supports tabs. No preprocessing is required, because the tab page will actually be generated during the printing process. The operator is allowed to select the tab position for each tab page in the job, wherein the default operation allows the system to step through a bank of tab pages, or the default operation can be bypassed and the operator can choose a specific tab position for an individual tab page. This latter operation is useful in creating a multi-chapter job with tab pages in each chapter, wherein the tab location for the chapter is at a specified location. Text is automatically placed on a tab position in a pre-defined position or it can be repositioned. Further, images or text can be placed within the 8½×11 image area (or other image area of a conventional page) of the page associated with the tab.
Referring now to
Referring now to
If tab data has been automatically detected and converted in function block 1408 and it is not desired to change that tab data, the program will flow along the “N” path to a block 1418 to perform the automatic operation and utilize that tab data and determine the tab position. Although not illustrated, there is an automatic operation wherein the system performs an auto detect on each RIPed page to determine if, first, it is a tab page and, second, if it has tab data associated therewith. In this operation, the program will automatically go from block 1402 to bock 1406 and then it will automatically flow from decision block 1410 along the “N” path to the block 1418. This will then auto detect all pages in the document and create the appropriate tab pages.
Referring now to
Referring now to
A check box 1614 is provided if the user desires the text that is in the field 1606 and 1608 to be displayed on the tab. An optional field 1618 is provided for inserting a picture or image on the tab. There are two check boxes 1620 and 1622 for allowing the white areas of the picture to be transparent and also to allow for removal of the picture, respectively. An area 1624 illustrates the tab and the appearance thereof. An advanced button 1626 allows access to the advance features. Table 1 illustrates the functions of each of the above noted fields.
Referring now to
A second region provides three field selections 1706 for the picture. This provides for picture rotation, picture vertical alignment and picture horizontal alignment. Radial buttons are provided in each of these fields for choices therein. For picture rotation, there is provided a selection for “none” wherein no rotation is selected, “90” for rotating the image 90°, “180” for rotating the image 180° and “270” for rotating the image 270°. The picture vertical alignment field allows for vertical positioning of the picture on the tab between left, center, right and absolute position. For the picture horizontal field, the horizontal position of the picture is set to left, center, right or absolute position.
A third region provides a single field 1708 for the tab style. A radial selection button provides for beveled or not beveled, depending on the type of tab stock that is being utilized. This is illustrated in a picture region 1710 on the screen shot 1702. The functions in the advance display screen shot 1702 are illustrated in Table 2.
Referring now to
Referring now to
For the locked & reset operation, there is provided an original region 1920 which has a Tab page 3, designated by reference numeral 1922 that is locked at position 1 and a new tab page inserted thereabove. As such, a tab page 1922 at tab position 3 in the original configuration will then constitute a Tab page 1924 in a modified region 1926 that will be at tab position 1. A new Tab page 1928 will be inserted at tab position 3, the original tab position for region 1920 will now comprise tab position 2 at a Tab page 1930 in a modified region 1926 and the tab page in tab position 5 in the original configuration will now constitute a Tab page 1932 in tab position 3. Therefore, what will happen is that upon initiation of the job, the first three tab pages in first bank set will be accessed and then Tab pages 4 and 5 discarded, then Tab page 1924, Tab page 1, will be selected followed by Tab pages 2 and 3, and so on.
Referring now to
If the system were in the locked mode and not the locked & reset mode, the program will flow along a path 2014 to a function block 2016 to discard from the previous tab page to the locked tab page. The program then flows to function block 2018 to select the next tab page, which will be that associated with the locked tab value. The program then proceeds to a function block 2020 to increment the counter value and then to the function block 2022 to discard all tab pages up to the current counter value and then to the function block 2008. This is substantially the operation illustrated in the region 1908 for the modified output.
If the system were determined to be in locked & reset mode, the program will flow from the decision block 2004 along a path 2024 to function block 2026 to discard tab pages to the locked tab value and then to a function block 2028 to reset the counter to the locked tab value and the proceed to the function block 2008 to select the top page in the tab bin and then to the function block 2010 to increment the counter. When tab page are discarded, they are discarded to a separate output bin for later collection and disposal/reuse.
Referring now to
A print option region 2108 provides three selections 2110 to allow selection of either printing the tab pages at the jobs, not printing the tab pages at the jobs or printing tab pages only. A tab order region 2112 provides two selections 2114 to allow the tab order to be normal or reversed. Normal order is where the tab pages are selected from the top of the bin. In this order, the tab pages usually start with the first tab in the upper right hand corner and the last tab in a given bank disposed in the lower right corner. However, there are some printing systems that pull from the bottom of the stack, such that the first tab page in a bank will be that with a tab in the lower rightmost corner. To accommodate for this in prior art systems, it was necessary to reorder the tab pages manually, which is difficult and time consuming. By selecting the reverse order option, the tab pages are then numbered beginning with the lower rightmost tab and then proceeding to the upper rightmost tab for a given bank.
A template configuration region 2116 provides the user with the ability to set the various configuration for a tab page, such as the type of tab template to use in a field 2118, the label height and width, associated with two fields 2120, the bank size in a field 2122, the top margin, bottom margin and vertical pitch in fields 2124. Each of these are described in Table 4. Additionally, there is provided a template configuration panel illustrated in
Although the preferred embodiment has been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alterations can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/922,419, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,097,369, which claims the benefit of U.S. Patent Application No. 60/496,724, filed 20 Aug. 2003.
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Child | 11465523 | US |