InDesign can continue to list fonts as missing if they are activated after the PageMaker publication is opened. InDesign uses a different hyphenation method than PageMaker, so line breaks can be different.Īll fonts in a PageMaker publication should be active when the publication is opened in InDesign. The First Baseline of converted text is set to Leading, but the First Baseline of text created in InDesign is set to Ascent by default. The First Baseline of converted text can appear different than text created in InDesign. Vertical Alignment settings are maintained when you open PageMaker publications. Proportional and Top of Caps leading in PageMaker convert to Baseline leading in InDesign, resulting in text shifting. In InDesign, the single-line text composition engine chooses line breaks more similarly to the PageMaker composition engine, but text could still reflow. However, you can assign the single-line composer to one or more paragraphs. InDesign assigns its Paragraph composer to all paragraphs. Table of Contents text converts as a Table of Contents, with PageMaker TOC Style available in the style pop-up menu in the InDesign TOC dialog box. (See the Layers listing in this section.)Īll objects designated in PageMaker as Non-Printing are converted with Non-Printing selected in the InDesign Attribute palette. Some layers could be added to the document. To retain the stacking order established in the original PageMaker publication. Master pages in PageMaker convert to master pages in InDesign and retain all objects including page numbering and guides. Master Default contains the Master page items. To maintain the order of overlapping items, InDesign creates two layers when converting a PageMaker publication: Default and Master Default. InDesign uses a different pasteboard for each spread. Text with cross-references that use the See Herein or See Also Herein option are mapped as See or See Also.Īll items on the PageMaker pasteboard appear on the pasteboard of the first spread in the InDesign document. Index entries from a PageMaker publication appear in the InDesign Index palette. Text blocks and frames are no longer threaded, however. The booked publications are combined into one. If you want to open all the publications on a Booklist together, run the Build Booklet plug-in in PageMaker with a layout of None selected. InDesign ignores Booklists when opening PageMaker publications. However, Overprint Stroke or Overprint Fill is deselected in the Attributes palette. When Auto-overprint black strokes or fills (or both) are selected in the Trapping Preferences dialog box in PageMaker, the setting carries over to InDesign. TrueType Display (Preserve Line Spacing/ Character Shape) PostScript Printing-Memory Freed for Graphics When both Double-Sided and Facing Pages are selected, files are converted into facing-page spreads. Subject to being accepted, and abuse complaints.InDesign converts double-sided documents that do not contain facing pages into single-page spreads. Would have to peer with mixmin to make it work, and that would be >impossible to change what comes to the left though.
Easy to do that using the right software or service, >Again, anything past the inclusion could have been added by
Impossible to change what comes to the left though. > 4u.nlĪgain, anything past the inclusion could have been added by > That's because I pick up from albasani. > Craig, you *do* know that wasn't Yrrah you replied to I hope. X-Antivirus: avast! (VPS 111016-0, ), Inbound message
Subject: Pooh's weekly ACFy round up has justĬontent-Type: text/plain charset=us-ascii >path, which of course added on by the forger. >which doesn't propagate) invalidates what follows to the right in the The inclusion of " !" (a remailer service > Care to explain? Perhaps Ron May will help you. Which is why it's used to put out excellent magazines.
The stuff is totally professional publication grade, Talking about software that goes for $700 street price, I get MS Publisher, which is a sort-of beginners toy. I've used a handful ofĪdobe's higher-powered professional tools, much more arcane than
I only use Adobe stuff when someone else is paying for it. I doubt that it does the sort of hand-holding that MS Publisherĭoes. Non-standard layouts on the page with it, too. I haveĪ friend who has raved about one of them, but I can't recall the
Other free Word Processing programs that are superb, too. The OP also neglected to tell us what he wants to use this > requirements are? You deserve cat puke and bear poop. Do you expect us to figure out what these programs do and what your