In most note‑taking or document apps, the way to “display the view where you can view how your notes will print” is to open Print Preview (or the equivalent) for the current note or document.

Below are the typical ways this works and how you can describe it clearly in your content.

Plain‑English core answer

To display the view where you can see how your notes will print, open the note you want, then use the app’s print command and choose the preview option (often called “Print Preview” or a preview pane in the print dialog).

  • On many desktop apps:
    • Go to File → Print… , then click Preview (or the preview icon) before actually printing.
  • On some note apps that removed a separate preview window, clicking Print… itself shows a right‑hand preview pane that acts as the print view.

This “print preview” view lets you see page breaks, margins, and layout before you send the job to the printer.

Mini “Quick Scoop” sections

What this view is

  • It is usually called Print Preview , Preview , or a preview pane inside the print dialog.
  • It shows your note as pages, including page breaks, margins, and how text will wrap when printed.

Example phrasing you can use in your own post:

Open the note, choose Print , then use Print Preview to display the view where you can see exactly how your notes will print, including page breaks and margins.

Typical steps (generic)

Numbered so you can reuse them in your “Quick Scoop”:

  1. Open the note you want to print.
  2. Open the main menu (often File or a three‑dots menu on the note).
  3. Select Print….
  4. In the print window, click Preview or look at the built‑in preview pane on the side.
  1. Scroll through the pages to check layout, page breaks, and spacing.

If your app no longer has a separate Print Preview button, the print dialog’s preview pane is usually the replacement.

Small forum‑style note

Some apps (for example, certain versions of Evernote) used to have a dedicated Print Preview command and later removed it, forcing users to go through Print and rely on the printer dialog or a PDF printer to preview the note. This is why users in forums sometimes complain that “print preview is gone” and suggest printing to PDF as a workaround to see the layout first.

SEO‑friendly angle (for your post)

If you’re writing an article or forum answer around the query “display the view where you can view how your notes will print,” you can naturally weave in phrases like:

  • “Use Print Preview to display the view where you can see how your notes will print, including page breaks.”
  • “If your note app removed the old print preview window, use the print dialog’s preview pane or print to PDF to check layout before printing.”

This keeps your focus keyword while giving a clear, practical explanation that matches what users actually experience in modern note apps.

Meta description style line you can reuse: Display the view where you can see how your notes will print by opening the note, choosing Print, and using the print preview or preview pane to check page layout before printing.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.