I've been building a POS application for a restaurant/bar.
The design part is done and for the past month I've been coding it.
Everything works fine except now I need to print. I have to print to a receipt printer connected to the computer running the software and later I'll try to print in a remote printer like a kitchen one.
I've searched for help in the matter only to find that the standard for printing in these types of printers is using POS for .NET. The thing is, this is now a bit outdated or at least it hasn't had any updates since a couple of years. There's a lot of questions being asked on how to use this library and most of the answers aren't quite easy to follow. So if anybody could give a step by step help on printing like a simple phrase ("Hello World") on a receipt printer i would be very grateful.
I'm using visual studio 2012 running on a 64 bit windows 7 and i'm coding WPF in c#.
I know this is an old post, but for those still looking for a solution, I can tell you what I did.
After spending many hours messing with OPOS and POS for .Net, I ended up just abandoning those and just using the built-in
System.Drawing.Printing
libraries. The OPOS and POS for .Net ended up being a pain to get working and ultimately didn't work as well as the built-in libraries.I'm using an Epson TM-T20II receipt printer.
Here's some code that worked well for me.
Hopefully it helps someone skip all the messing around with custom drivers. :)
If you want to print at the full speed of the printer, you will probably need to use printer-specific escape codes, and generate the "raw" output.
Have a look at Michael Buen's answer to this SO question, especially the UPDATE bit.
POS for .NET is probably the way to go.
Most receipt printer manufacturers will provide an OPOS service object.
And as this MSDN article states, POS for .NET is compatible with OPOS v1.8 service objects.
OPOS / UPOS (on which POS for .NET is based) is IMHO a poorly-designed API (designed by device manufacturers rather than application developers), but it's the best you have today.
I don't have any specific samples but the basics are the same as OPOS - you need to Open, Claim, Enable a device, then you can call its methods (such as Print). You might try looking at an OPOS sample, for example this PosPrinter1 sample, which will probably be very similar to POS for .NET.
This blog has some information about setting up POS for .NET that might be helpful.
UPDATE
Here's a VB Hello World for an OPOS printer. You first need to create a printer and add it to the registry with the required Logical Device Name = LDN. I believe the Epson ADK includes a utility to add a printer in the registry. This utility can also perform a health check on the printer to check it is installed correctly. Once you've done this, it should be easy enough to adapt the code below to POS for .NET
.NET Printing
Printing under .NET isn't too difficult. Take a look here and on msdn.
Printing to a POS / receipt printer will be the same as printing to any other printer, assuming it is a Windows printer, network or otherwise. If you are using a serial printer, things may be a little more difficult because you will more then likely need to use manufacturer specific API's, fortunately though most good POS printers these days are fully supported by the OS.
First, you will need to add a reference to
System.Printing
dll to your project.Then printing is as simple as
To use..
You can also leverage the PrintDialog.PrintVisual and define your document using xaml template.
The print settings can be set using the PrintDialog properties.
Getting the printer you want to print to
A few things to keep in mind though when printing to a receipt printer, you will need to take into account formatting. More specifically you will need to consider the width of your page and how many characters you can fit on each line; this was a lot of trial and error for me, especially with different font sizes.
In most cases you don't really need to worry about paging, the printer will cut the paper automatically when it has completed your document.