Pages is a powerful word processor that lets you create stunning documents, and comes included with most Apple devices. And with real-time collaboration, your team can work together from anywhere, whether they’re on Mac, iPad, iPhone, or using a PC.
Steps to Print Two Pages Per Sheet on Mac. Follow the steps below to print two or more pages per sheet of paper on your Mac. First, open the document that you want to print. Next, click on File option in the top menu-bar on your mac and then click on Print in the drop-down menu. Apple’s iWork apps (Pages, Keynote, Numbers) are now available for free to any Mac or iOS user, so I thought it might be good to document some of the lesser known talents of Apple’s now-free.
From the start, Pages places you in the perfect creative environment. It puts all the right tools in all the right places, so it’s easy to choose a look, customize fonts, personalize text styles, and add beautiful graphics. And everyone collaborating on a document has access to the same powerful features.
Start with something beautiful.
Choose from over 70 beautiful Apple‑designed templates, and customize your reports, letters, and other documents any way you like. And, if you’ve ever dreamed of writing a book or fairy tale, it’s easy to create interactive stories right inside Pages.
Make progress you can see.
Track changes, add highlights, and have threaded conversations with your team. Your edits are saved automatically.
Stunning results. Effortlessly.
Liven up your text by filling it with color gradients or images. And, take the entire page to the next level by adding photos, galleries, audio clips, video, math equations, charts, or more than 700 customizable shapes.
What’s new in Pages.
Skim through in style.
Now, on your iPhone and iPad, you can read through your document, zoom in and out, and interact with it — without accidentally changing anything.
Play videos right in your documents.
Play YouTube and Vimeo videos right in Pages, without the need to open a web browser. Simply add a link, and play your web video inside your document or book.
Captions and titles stick with objects.
Easily add text to images, videos, and shapes. Your words will automatically stay with objects — if and when you move them.
You don’t work in one place on just one device. The same goes for Pages. Work seamlessly across all your Apple devices. The documents you create using a Mac or iPad will look the same on an iPhone or web browser — and vice versa.
You can also work on documents stored on iCloud or Box using a PC.
Work together in the same document, from across town or across the world. You can see your team’s edits as they make them — and they can watch as you make yours, too. Just click the Collaborate button and invite people to join.
Use Apple Pencil on your iPad to sketch, illustrate, and create documents. Draw and fine-tune your idea, then press play to watch each stroke animate onto the page. Plus, with Smart Annotation, your edits stay with the marked-up text, making it easy for you and your team to incorporate changes.
Teaming up with someone who uses Microsoft Word? Pages makes it simple. You can save Pages documents as Word files. Or import and edit Word documents right in Pages.
Numbers
Create great-looking
spreadsheets. Together.
Keynote
Build stunning, memorable
presentations. Easily.
Mac Pages App Print Document Properties Free
You can print your Pages document on real paper, of course, but don’t forget that you can also save a tree by creating an electronic, PDF-format document instead of a printout.
To print your Pages document on old-fashioned paper, follow these steps:
Within Pages, click File and choose Print.
Pages displays a Print sheet. (Some settings may vary depending on your printer’s specific features.)
Click in the Copies field and enter the number of copies you need.
Select the pages to print.
To print the entire document, select All.
To print a range of selected pages, select the From radio button and enter the starting and ending pages.
Click the Print button to send the document to your printer.
Mac Properties Jobs
Besides printing — which is, after all, so passé — you can choose to share your Pages document electronically in a number of ways:
Mac Pages App Print Document Properties For Sale
Sharing on iWork.com. Apple provides an iWork website, where you can invite others to view and comment on your Pages document, complete with e-mail notifications when a new comment is added. (If you like, you can require a password before visitors to iWork.com can see anything you’ve shared.)
Click the Share button on the Pages toolbar to get started, and the site will walk you through the rest of the process.
You’ll need an Internet connection to use iWork.com (naturally), as well as an Apple ID and a working Apple Mail account. If you didn’t create an Apple ID when buying your MacBook or installing Lion, you can save the day by clicking the Create New Account button.
Sharing through e-mail. Click Share→Send via Mail, and you can choose to add your Pages document to a Mail message in three different formats: as a native Pages document file, as a Word format document, or as a PDF file. After you’ve selected a format, Pages obligingly launches Apple Mail for you automatically and creates a new message, ready for you to address and send!
Sharing through iWeb. Again, click the Share menu, but this time choose Send to iWeb. Pages automatically opens the iWeb site you last edited and provides your Pages document as a native Pages document file or as a PDF file. (If your visitors may be using PCs or Linux, choose the PDF option.)
Exporting. Don’t forget that Pages can export your work in one of four different formats: a PDF document; a Word format document; an RTF (Rich Text Format) file; or even plain text. Click Share→Export, pick your format, click Next, and select the location where Pages should save the file. Click Export and sit back while your favorite desktop publishing application does all the work.
To keep your document as close to how it appears in Pages as possible, go with either PDF or Word. Your document will retain far more of your original formatting than an RTF or plain-text document would.