![]() • Open the item that you want to print. • Choose Print from the File menu, or press Command (⌘)-P. • Choose your printer from the Printer pop-up menu. Open the item that you want to print. Choose Print from the File menu, or press Command (⌘)-P. Choose your printer from the Printer pop-up menu. You might need to wait a moment for your printer to appear. If it doesn't appear, get help resolving printer issues. Change any of the printing options shown, if needed. ![]() You might need to wait a moment for your printer to appear. If it doesn't appear,. • Change any of the printing options shown, if needed. These options are determined by your printer and the app you're printing from. For example, options such as printing in black and white, two-sided printing, and printing to different paper sizes or media types all vary by printer and app. Click Show Details for more options, or Hide Details for fewer options. • Click Print to send the print job to your print queue. After you click Print, the print job goes to your print queue, which automatically sends the job to the printer. To open your print queue: • Click the icon of your printer in the Dock. The printer icon appears when the print queue contains jobs. • Or go to Apple menu > System Preferences, then click Printers & Scanners. Select your printer from the list, then click Open Print Queue. You can take any of these actions from the print queue: • View status messages about your printer, such as 'Printer is not connected.' • View jobs that are in progress, waiting to be printed, or couldn't be printed because of a problem with the printer or its connection. • Pause, resume, or delete jobs. • View settings and other information about your printer, such as the printer's name and supply levels. • Preview your document by double-clicking it or selecting it and pressing Space bar. Information about products not manufactured by Apple, or independent websites not controlled or tested by Apple, is provided without recommendation or endorsement. Apple assumes no responsibility with regard to the selection, performance, or use of third-party websites or products. Apple makes no representations regarding third-party website accuracy or reliability. Risks are inherent in the use of the Internet. For additional information. Other company and product names may be trademarks of their respective owners. A free solution, is to convert the PDF to an image, then save it as a PDF again. The only drawback is that the PDF will remove any OCR info it might have had. Steps: • Open the PDF file to redact in Preview. • Black out text using any method you want (e.g. Use the rectangle annotation tool with black as the color and choose the thickest border. Then draw the shape as many times as needed until your document is blacked out.) • File > Save As, and choose an image format such as PNG or GIF. • Open the saved image file, then File > Save As, and choose PDF. I tried saving my image as an image in preview and this only works if your pdf is one page. If it's multiple pages, exporting as an image will only save the first page. The solution I found was this (it's a bit tedious, but you can get through it pretty fast once you get the hang of it): Open PDF in GIMP (free photo editor) as an image. Only open those pages that need redaction. When you open it as an image, it essentially flattens the pdf so you're no longer able to highlight and copy text. Use tools in GIMP to black out text. Then, file -> print. On the print screen, choose 'Print Preview'. This will bring up the pdf in Preview where you can export/save the file. If you have more than once page, then you can choose the thumbnail view in Preview and drag/drop the pdfs onto one another to form a larger document that you can then print. This is what I do when I have to sign just a few pages of a large pdf document. Hope this helps! Include redaction. Using a demo version today: the option to redact is greyed out, so I can't confirm its efficacy. According to: the redaction tool worked pretty well. Actually, it even seemed to muck up the text in a live pdf document so you couldn’t copy what was under the redaction. I can’t say how much I’d trust this feature with sensitive live text. I scanned all of my documents to PDF with no OCR before I did my redaction.
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