https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=395383
Ross <r.esmaeilbe...@gmail.com> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |r.esmaeilbe...@gmail.com --- Comment #4 from Ross <r.esmaeilbe...@gmail.com> --- I want to second it. I have almost the same issue: SUMMARY On Kubuntu 18.04.1 with Plasma 5.12.7 I can not save printer options properly. I have used the same printer with the same driver with Ubuntu 18.04 without any issues. STEPS TO REPRODUCE 1. Open 'Printers--System Settings Module' 2. In 'Configure your printer' section, select 'Add printer' 3. Choose 'Manual URI' 4. In 'connections' type 'socket://IP' where IP is the ip address for the printer and then click on 'Next'. 5. Select 'Manually provide a PPD file' and then 'Next'. 6. Give the printer a name ... Note: the driver is KONIKA MINOLTA C652SeriesPS(P) After the printer is appeared in the list of Printers: 7. Set it as 'default' and click on 'Configure' 8. In 'Printer Options'change some settings 9. Apply -> OK 10. Open the Printer settings again and you see that the settings have not been saved. OBSERVED RESULT When opening a PDF file with evince to print, I think most of the options are available. The printer will print normally except that I do not see the staple option in evince (in the advanced tab) and so the printer does not apply staple. In Okular I do not see any staple option and presumably it should use the default settings (which are not saved in this case). An observation in the first try: Only in the first try to add staple option, I observed that evince has the option 'staple' available but together with a yellow color (kind of warning, don't remember exactly). EXPECTED RESULT Printer settings are not saved. In particular, staple options do not apply. SOFTWARE/OS VERSIONS Linux/KDE Plasma: Kubuntu 18.04.1 (available in About System) KDE Plasma Version: 5.12.7 KDE Frameworks Version: 5.44.0 Qt Version: 5.9.5 -- You are receiving this mail because: You are watching all bug changes.