About Printing
One of the chief features of Windows printing functions is their support of
device independence; instead of issuing device-specific commands to draw output
on a particular printer or plotter, an application calls high-level functions
from graphics device interface (GDI). For example, to print a bitmapped image, an
application can call the
BitBlt function, supplying the coordinates for the bitmap as well as handles
identifying the source and destination device contexts (DCs). The call to
BitBlt is then converted to raw device commands by a printer device driver. A device
driver is a Windows dynamic-link library (DLL) that supports the Windows
device driver interface (DDI). A device driver generates raw device commands when it
processes calls to DDI functions made by the graphics engine. The commands are
processed by the printer when it prints the image. The syntax, number, and
type of these commands vary from device to device.
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