| If you're
running DeskLot version 3.5 or above, this tutorial is obsolete.
The sticker design environment has changed greatly. Press F1 in
the sticker design screens for help and view the tutorials
within that help system or click
here for a PDF copy of one of the tutorials for version 3.5 or
greater. Thank you. 


This tutorial is designed to cover and walk you through the
fundamentals of sticker design with DeskLot in the shortest time
possible. The tutorial takes the average person about 5 minutes
to complete and can easily save you 10 times that amount of
time.



To begin editing existing sticker designs (or to create a new
one), click the "Window Stickers" menu option
from within DeskLot and then "Configure Window
Stickers".

You will then be presented with the "Stickers"
selection screen.

To edit or view an existing sticker configuration, select a
configuration to work with from the dropdown list (shown above)
and then click the "Select" button. To create a
new/blank sticker configuration, click the "New"
button. We suggest finding a sticker configuration you want to
modify, selecting it from the list, and then using the "Copy"
function to copy it to a new name which will let you keep the
original in case you make a mistake or ever wish to resort back
to it.
To practice making a copy of a sticker so that you may safely
modify it without risking losing the initial good configuration,
select "SAMPLE: Sample 2, Joe Sample of Dallas"
from the list and then click the "Copy" button.
A dialog box will pop up asking you for a new name for the copy
of the configuration. Name it "My Test" and
then click "OK" to make the copy.



For the rest of this getting started document we will be
starting with a totally new blank sticker design.
Click "New" from the "Stickers"
selection screen (shown above). A dialog box will popup
asking you to name the new sticker. Call it "My New
Sticker". Now from the "Stickers"
selection screen use the dropdown list to find and select the
configuration named "My New Sticker" and then
click "Select". This will open the sticker
design stage (shown below).
The most important part of the sticker design process is
placing different element types onto the "Preview
Stage" (the blank white section taking up the majority
of the left half of the screen shown above). This Preview Stage
is basically just a WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get)
representation of the piece of paper you will be printing on. It
shows the actual size of the paper (less the printer margins...
i.e. a 1/4" or so that is not printable area as defined by
your printer driver... the printer margins).

If you want to select a different paper size, say for example
you are going to print on 8 1/2" x 14" paper, select "File"
and then "Print Setup" from the menu at the top
of the screen, which will popup a print properties menu where
you can select a different paper size.

If you want to print to a custom user defined paper size such as
17" x 11", you may define a custom paper size via the "Settings"
screen which is available via the main menu option "File"
and then "Settings" (if you already have
the Sticker Configuration screen open, you will have to close it
and then re-open it for the custom paper size to show up in the
list). After changing the paper size, printer, or other "Print
Properties", The "Preview Stage" will
then be updated with the height/width of the newly selected
paper size or printer settings.

Another useful feature which is often overlooked is the "Grid"
option which is also available by selecting "View"
and then "Grid" from the menu at the top of the
screen. By selecting this option, a dot (pixel) is displayed
every 10 pixels on the screen as well as on the printout printed
from this screen (along with a ruler) which is useful for
getting more exact position settings for various sticker
elements. For example, when we are designing stickers to print
data on pre-printed forms, we will print the grid to a blank
piece of paper, manually lay that paper over the pre-printed
form and therefore know more exactly what numeric position
values to type in for various sticker elements such as where to
print the Year, Make or Model.
 
Placing elements on the stage (sticker design preview) is done
by clicking on one of the "Elements" on the "Toolbox"
(shown at the right) and then clicking the location on the
stage where you want to place the element.
Notice that as you do this, the text of the top of the border
around the preview stage that says "Preview Stage"
also reveals the mouse's X and Y coordinates (such as "Preview
Stage (X Position 125 / Y Position 25)"), so, if you
are using a printout of the grid (as mentioned above) to layout
elements, this, in combination with the Preview Stage showing
you X and Y coordinates of the mouse can help you get darn close
when dropping elements onto the stage.
Concerning the "Toolbox", if you ever need
to know what an icon does, simply move your mouse pointer over
it and leave it there for a moment. A "Help Tip"
will be displayed.

For this example, let's place a "Vehicle Field"
onto the "Preview Stage". Click the "Vehicle
Field Element" icon
so that it is the depressed icon. Now move your mouse pointer
over the "Preview Stage". You will notice the
mouse pointer turns to a cross hair. Place the center of the
cross hair where you want the upper left of the vehicle field
value to be displayed and then click your left mouse button ONCE
(you do not have to be exact... you can tweak the position
later).
You
will now notice some sample data displayed on your "Preview
Stage". The vehicle field by default is the Stock
Number (we will show you how to change it to what you want
later). When designing a sticker, DeskLot always displays sample
data from the 1st vehicle record (the one with the
smallest ID number) in your database so in this case, the Stock
Number for your 1st vehicle record (assuming you have records
with data in them) is displayed on the "Preview
Stage" (as shown to the right).
You
will also notice that the "Select a Current Element to
Modify" box (shown to the left) now has
one entry in it (Vehicle Field Data 1).
Next we will select a different vehicle field to display
here. We'll make DeskLot display the "Make" (i.e.
Ford, Mazda, etc) for this element as opposed to the Stock
Number.
From the "Select a Current Element to Modify"
section click on the "Element" named "Vehicle
Field Data 1" (the only one that exists in the list at
this point).
Once you select an Element from the list, DeskLot will enable
various properties in the "Set Selected Element
Properties" section (shown below to the left)
which you may set for the element. In this case, the 1st
thing we want to do is use the dropdown list entitled "Vehicle
Field" (which currently displays Stock Number as the
selected value) and we want to select "Make".
Once you select "Make" (or change any other "Element
Property" for that matter), nothing happened... nothing
changed. That is because DeskLot only updates the "Preview
Stage" once you click off of a setting into another
one. This is to increase performance in limiting the number of
redraws to the "Preview Stage" Desklot has to
do.
Click into any other property, for example the "Width"
setting box, and you will notice that where the "Stock
Number" data WAS displayed on the stage now displays
the "Make" data from your first vehicle record
in the database.
 
Next we will fine tune position the "Element"
to where we want. Notice that the "Preview Stage"
in our graphics (shown above to the right) is showing dots every
10 pixels. That is because while designing this tutorial, we
turned the "Grid" on. You may do the same if
you like by clicking the "View" menu at the top
of the screen and then "Grid".
The reason we display dots every 10 pixels is because the
position settings in DeskLot are based on screen pixels.
Basically everything you see on any Windows™ screen is a
colored dot... called a pixel. So, when we want to position an "Element"
somewhere, we basically tell DeskLot to display it "X"
number of pixels to the right of zero (far left) and "Y"
number of pixels from the top. The dots or "Grid"
help us know where to display an "Element".
In this example, we will set the "Make"
field data to be displayed 20 pixels from the left ("X
Position") of the paper edge and 40 pixels from the top
("Y Position") of the paper edge.
If it is not already selected from the "Select a
Current Element to Modify" list, select "Vehicle
Field Data 1" by clicking it in the list.
Now, use the "X Position" property setting
(shown below to the right) to change the numeric
value from whatever it is to "20" (or you may
use the mini scroll bars to set the value).
Click
off into another property setting (for example, into the "Y
Position" Field) and you will notice the "Vehicle
Field Data" on the "Preview Stage",
in this case the "Vehicle Make" moved from left
to right so that the left most edge of the data is display 20
pixels from the left of the printable paper edge.
Now click into the "Y Position" property
setting and change the value to "40", and then
click off into another property setting. You will notice the
position of the data moved from top to bottom to 40 pixels from
the top of the printable page area.
For reference, the width setting tells DeskLot how far to
allow the text to go from left to right before forcing it to
wrap to a new line.

Probably one of the easiest ways to design a new sticker
configuration is to initially just place each element you wish
to be included on your sticker onto the general vicinity
where you want it, then set the "Grid" dots to "on"
(i.e. checked) and click "File" and then "Print"
from the menu at the top of the screen. This will make a print
out of the configuration with "Rulers" on each
edge so you may more easily know exactly what "X"
and "Y" coordinates as well as "Widths"
and "Heights" you want to set "Elements"
to.
Go ahead. Spend 5 minutes placing each element type on the
preview stage and playing with each of the property settings
that are available for the various elements, such as position,
height, width, font, color, custom text, graphics, vehicle
photo's, etc. Once you spend this 5 minutes, you will be very
comfortable designing your own sticker configurations.
As with learning any new program, there is always a bit of a
learning curve however, it is typically being reported to us
that most people are able to learn the DeskLot sticker
configuration screen and design their 1st sticker within from 30
minutes to an hour. Not bad considering that once you are done,
you are done and can begin saving thousands upon thousands by
printing your own stickers... and there is no feeling like
designing your own sticker and having the gratification each
time you look on the lot and see what you made.
DeskLot is a little more difficult than other inferior window
sticker printing software packages because it can do so
much and leaves you in control of what you want to place and
where. Most window sticker printing software just has you fill
in a blank here and there... however, you can tell that this
limits you to what THEY wanted and where THEY wanted it. With
DeskLot, whether it be how you design your stickers, how you
configure exporting or importing data from other services and
software, or exporting your inventory to your website, you are
in control because DeskLot lets you do it your way.

Don't forget to press F1 within the sticker design screen (or
anywhere else within DeskLot) and a detailed help system. We
suggest reading the help associated with the sticker design
environment. It will help you understand much more than you will
accidentally discover.
Happy designing! |