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February 3, 2010 at 3:40 am in reply to: Installing Japanese Indesign, while having the Roman version #51799
Bob Levine
ParticipantJust found this: https://kb2.adobe.com/cps/331/331644.html
This done seem to be OS specific.
February 3, 2010 at 3:35 am in reply to: Installing Japanese Indesign, while having the Roman version #51798Bob Levine
ParticipantWell then, I stand corrected but man, I could have sworn you couldn't do this.
February 3, 2010 at 1:48 am in reply to: Installing Japanese Indesign, while having the Roman version #51793Bob Levine
ParticipantUnless something has changed, you can't have the Japanese and English versions (or any other combination of versions) installed.
February 3, 2010 at 12:49 am in reply to: Keep formatting etc. when Placing Excel sheets in InDesign #51731Bob Levine
ParticipantI'm not sure I get what you're trying to do. You say you want to keep the formatting but then you mention converting the table to text.
In my experience, if the table if properly formatted in Excel and you place it choosing formatted table, you shouldn't have any major issues.
If you do want text, consider creating a nested paragraph style using tabs to begin and end the styling. Pasting the table as text will convert the cell borders to tabs.
Bob
Bob Levine
ParticipantSomething else to look out for in Word docs is tracked changes. Make sure to accept all before placing into ID.
Bob Levine
ParticipantSomething else to look out for in Word docs is tracked changes. Make sure to accept all before placing into ID.
Bob Levine
ParticipantI'll make the assumption that you've created a text frame with the table in it and cut/pasted it into a new frame with rounded corners. If so, why not just make the table a bit larger and let the frame crop it down.
Seems like the easiest way to handle it.
Bob Levine
ParticipantI'll make the assumption that you've created a text frame with the table in it and cut/pasted it into a new frame with rounded corners. If so, why not just make the table a bit larger and let the frame crop it down.
Seems like the easiest way to handle it.
Bob Levine
ParticipantDisable the display with no files open.View>hide rulers
Hank, I believe the OP is referring to the actual horizontal and vertical rulers, not the guides.
Bob Levine
ParticipantHave you looked for an updated video driver? If you're using the Windows stock driver, check the manfacturer's website to see if they have something available for download.
Bob Levine
ParticipantDisable the display with no files open.View>hide rulers
Hank, I believe the OP is referring to the actual horizontal and vertical rulers, not the guides.
Bob Levine
ParticipantHave you looked for an updated video driver? If you're using the Windows stock driver, check the manfacturer's website to see if they have something available for download.
Bob Levine
ParticipantIf you override a master item and bring it to a live page, it's still connected to the master page for any attribute you don't change.
Example: you put a text frame on the master. You override it to bring it to the live page. You fill it with text and change the fill color to yellow but don't touch the size or location.
Go to the master page and rotate the frame. When you return to the live page, the frame will be rotated.
Bob Levine
ParticipantIf you override a master item and bring it to a live page, it's still connected to the master page for any attribute you don't change.
Example: you put a text frame on the master. You override it to bring it to the live page. You fill it with text and change the fill color to yellow but don't touch the size or location.
Go to the master page and rotate the frame. When you return to the live page, the frame will be rotated.
Bob Levine
ParticipantI've not heard of anything like that either, but the first thing I'd try doing is resetting your preferences. If you're not familiar with the procedure, there's an excellent guide here: https://forums.adobe.com/thread/526990
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