However, > looking at the RTF specification, it appears that there is support for > those two specific settings. > All of the above is with respect to printer settings generally (which > include far more than just the paper size and orientation). But such data would still only be specifically accessible by > your application lacking a specification for storing that data, no other > application would understand it. In > which case, depending on how you're accessing the printer settings > themselves, you may be able to store the specific data in the RTF > document. > It's possible that RTF defines a way to escape arbitrary kinds of data. Many programs do in fact save > printer settings with their document files, but AFAIK this isn't inherent > in the RTF format. > The settings you're talking about paper size and orientation are > printer settings, not document attributes. That said, it's not really a > C# or.NET question, so your ability to get useful advice here is limited. > Any suggestions? > anyone? > Sorrydidn't notice your question earlier. The intention is that when a user opens the RTF-file using Ms Word, the > page is in A4 format and in landcape.
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