Visual Studio 2017 design report that prints Original and Duplicate
I'm working on my first MVC project (with Polymer components) and all the printing is done through a Visual Studio 2017 Reporting Services project.
I need to create a report that prints shipment documents in Original, Duplicate and Triplicate format. For example, a shipment document which has 10 pages (a shipment document is a set of header, body and footer), must print the first set of 10 pages as "Original", the second set as "Duplicate" and the third one as "Triplicate".
Could anyone give me some suggestion on how to achieve this?
My first thought is to design all the three "sections" in the same report, but that doesn't seem a "clean" solution. :)
model-view-controller reporting-services visual-studio-2017
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I'm working on my first MVC project (with Polymer components) and all the printing is done through a Visual Studio 2017 Reporting Services project.
I need to create a report that prints shipment documents in Original, Duplicate and Triplicate format. For example, a shipment document which has 10 pages (a shipment document is a set of header, body and footer), must print the first set of 10 pages as "Original", the second set as "Duplicate" and the third one as "Triplicate".
Could anyone give me some suggestion on how to achieve this?
My first thought is to design all the three "sections" in the same report, but that doesn't seem a "clean" solution. :)
model-view-controller reporting-services visual-studio-2017
easiest would be to have a main report with three sub reports.. pass all necessary parameters from the main report to the sub reports. design the sub reports to say what ever you want.. Original Duplicate Triplicate etc.. it should work a treat.. I've done this many times and it works well.
– Harry
Nov 12 '18 at 19:31
I agree with Harry. 1 subreport that can print your 10 pages and can accept a parameter that you can use to pass whatever text you want to it. Then a main report that called the subreport three times, each time with your different text.
– Alan Schofield
Nov 13 '18 at 0:08
Thanks, I will follow your suggestions.
– zpgm
Nov 13 '18 at 15:17
add a comment |
I'm working on my first MVC project (with Polymer components) and all the printing is done through a Visual Studio 2017 Reporting Services project.
I need to create a report that prints shipment documents in Original, Duplicate and Triplicate format. For example, a shipment document which has 10 pages (a shipment document is a set of header, body and footer), must print the first set of 10 pages as "Original", the second set as "Duplicate" and the third one as "Triplicate".
Could anyone give me some suggestion on how to achieve this?
My first thought is to design all the three "sections" in the same report, but that doesn't seem a "clean" solution. :)
model-view-controller reporting-services visual-studio-2017
I'm working on my first MVC project (with Polymer components) and all the printing is done through a Visual Studio 2017 Reporting Services project.
I need to create a report that prints shipment documents in Original, Duplicate and Triplicate format. For example, a shipment document which has 10 pages (a shipment document is a set of header, body and footer), must print the first set of 10 pages as "Original", the second set as "Duplicate" and the third one as "Triplicate".
Could anyone give me some suggestion on how to achieve this?
My first thought is to design all the three "sections" in the same report, but that doesn't seem a "clean" solution. :)
model-view-controller reporting-services visual-studio-2017
model-view-controller reporting-services visual-studio-2017
edited Nov 12 '18 at 18:36
CGritton
1,0571218
1,0571218
asked Nov 12 '18 at 16:03
zpgmzpgm
11
11
easiest would be to have a main report with three sub reports.. pass all necessary parameters from the main report to the sub reports. design the sub reports to say what ever you want.. Original Duplicate Triplicate etc.. it should work a treat.. I've done this many times and it works well.
– Harry
Nov 12 '18 at 19:31
I agree with Harry. 1 subreport that can print your 10 pages and can accept a parameter that you can use to pass whatever text you want to it. Then a main report that called the subreport three times, each time with your different text.
– Alan Schofield
Nov 13 '18 at 0:08
Thanks, I will follow your suggestions.
– zpgm
Nov 13 '18 at 15:17
add a comment |
easiest would be to have a main report with three sub reports.. pass all necessary parameters from the main report to the sub reports. design the sub reports to say what ever you want.. Original Duplicate Triplicate etc.. it should work a treat.. I've done this many times and it works well.
– Harry
Nov 12 '18 at 19:31
I agree with Harry. 1 subreport that can print your 10 pages and can accept a parameter that you can use to pass whatever text you want to it. Then a main report that called the subreport three times, each time with your different text.
– Alan Schofield
Nov 13 '18 at 0:08
Thanks, I will follow your suggestions.
– zpgm
Nov 13 '18 at 15:17
easiest would be to have a main report with three sub reports.. pass all necessary parameters from the main report to the sub reports. design the sub reports to say what ever you want.. Original Duplicate Triplicate etc.. it should work a treat.. I've done this many times and it works well.
– Harry
Nov 12 '18 at 19:31
easiest would be to have a main report with three sub reports.. pass all necessary parameters from the main report to the sub reports. design the sub reports to say what ever you want.. Original Duplicate Triplicate etc.. it should work a treat.. I've done this many times and it works well.
– Harry
Nov 12 '18 at 19:31
I agree with Harry. 1 subreport that can print your 10 pages and can accept a parameter that you can use to pass whatever text you want to it. Then a main report that called the subreport three times, each time with your different text.
– Alan Schofield
Nov 13 '18 at 0:08
I agree with Harry. 1 subreport that can print your 10 pages and can accept a parameter that you can use to pass whatever text you want to it. Then a main report that called the subreport three times, each time with your different text.
– Alan Schofield
Nov 13 '18 at 0:08
Thanks, I will follow your suggestions.
– zpgm
Nov 13 '18 at 15:17
Thanks, I will follow your suggestions.
– zpgm
Nov 13 '18 at 15:17
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easiest would be to have a main report with three sub reports.. pass all necessary parameters from the main report to the sub reports. design the sub reports to say what ever you want.. Original Duplicate Triplicate etc.. it should work a treat.. I've done this many times and it works well.
– Harry
Nov 12 '18 at 19:31
I agree with Harry. 1 subreport that can print your 10 pages and can accept a parameter that you can use to pass whatever text you want to it. Then a main report that called the subreport three times, each time with your different text.
– Alan Schofield
Nov 13 '18 at 0:08
Thanks, I will follow your suggestions.
– zpgm
Nov 13 '18 at 15:17