Search Knowledgebase. Note: The Reprint Receipt selection is enabled on the Gift menu only if the gift is marked as Receipted and a receipt number is entered on the gift. On the Reprint Receipt screen, enter the appropriate information. Note: For more information on Reissue vs. Receipt history reason: Enter a brief reason about why the receipt is being generated again. What is entered here appears on the Receipt History screen.
Use this parameter file: lf Reissue or Reprint is selected, select the existing receipt parameter file to use. Receipt number to use: Select the receipt number to use: Next Available will use the next available number from the Receipt Stack selected on the Gift record.
Same will use the existing receipt number. Other allows a number to be manually entered. Message to print on receipt: Enter a message to automatically appear on Pre-Printed Receipts. If you export receipts, the message is added to the export file. This message overwrites any message in the receipt's parameter file, which you select on the Format Tab, Output Options of the mail task.
This message also overwrites any benefit Notes, entered on the Benefits screen, accessed through the gift record.
Tip: For consolidated receipts, enter a message with the full date range the gifts were given. A date will not automatically print for consolidated receipts.
Click Merge, Print, or Preview to run the Receipt. Hence, when the first edition gives way to the second edition, the second edition to the third edition, and so on, a definite change in content is implied.
The work may have been revised in whole or in part, whether by bringing it up-to-date or by varying it this is especially true of newspapers to suit a particular clientele, but in all cases there must have been changes involving an entire or partial resetting of type before a work can be said to go into a new edition.
Impression applies to all of the books also prints or engravings run off by the press at one time. The standing type or plates are then stored until a later impression often called a reprinting is needed.
It is now the general practice among publishers to speak of the aggregate number of copies of a new book run off from the press in a large number and at one time or, in technical language, printed in a continuous run from a single make-ready as an impression rather than an edition, thereby respecting the latter word's implication of substantial changes in content.
Printing is often used as practically equivalent to impression or reprinting but it is sometimes preferred as implying some minor corrections.
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