A permanent copy of a display image generated on an output device such as a printer or plotter, and which can be carried away A printed copy of machine output in a visually readable form; for example, printed reports, listings, documents, and summaries
Hardcopy is the generic term used to describe the materials containing images of our layouts and artwork that come out of a laser printer or an imagesetter
generally information that is either printed from electronic data or written or printed information including text and pictures, that has not yet been converted to electronic data A web designer may receive web site input from a client in the form of e-mailed pictures (electronic data) or as photos to scan (hardcopy) from the client Text sent by email is electronic data Text provided as brochures or typed pages is hardcopy (See also: "data" )
Information printed on paper (This may seem odd, as paper is not very hard But once something is printed on to paper, it cannot be affected by, for example, a hard disk crash ) The equivalent term for information stored in a computer is soft copy
Hardcopy means printed output Emacs has commands for making printed listings of text in Emacs buffers See section 26 9 Hardcopy Output
Hardcopy means printed output Emacs has commands for making printed listings of text in Emacs buffers Section 31 18
Hardcopy means printed output Emacs has commands for making printed listings of text in Emacs buffers See section 30 16 Hardcopy Output
Hardcopy means printed output Emacs has commands for making printed listings of text in Emacs buffers See section ï½¥ï¾ï½¡ï½¼ï½¥ï¾‰ï½¥ï½³ï½¥ï¾”。シスï¾ï¾Žï¾
Hardcopy means printed output Emacs has commands for making printed listings of text in Emacs buffers See section AC 18 Hardcopy Output
the printout of a computer file or the typewritten copy submitted to a printer to be typeset