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Bob Rubey
MemberTry previewing the affected pages with Overprint Preview on before exporting to check the elements (or just change to Preview mode). You state that all elements have the same attributes, but having a white fill and/or stroke set to overprint will cause the problem you describe.
Bob Rubey
MemberYes. In Acrobat Pro’s Print Production area look for Flattener Preview. There’s an option to convert all text to outlines there.
Bob Rubey
MemberCongratulations on the forward progress. And don’t worry about “Wheel.” Users with admin rights can be assigned to this “super group.”
Owner – The owner is most often the user who created the file. Almost all files and folders in your home directory will have your username listed as the owner.
Group – Admin users are members of the groups called “staff” and “admin”. The super user “root” is a member of these and several other groups. Non-admin users are members of “staff” only. Typically, all files and folders are assigned to either “staff,” “admin,” or “wheel”.
Others – Others refers to all other users that are not the owner or part of the group for a file or folder.Bob Rubey
MemberChad:
I’m hesitant to jump in here, but I’ll add a couple of things. If you need to uninstall/install again, you may want to look into this: https://www.adobe.com/support/contact/cscleanertool.html It’s supposed to do a better clean-up job than us mere humans.
It may not do much, but have you trashed your ~/Library/Cache folder? You can trash the folder and all contents as long as nothing is running. It doesn’t apply in this case, but in a network setting I find that InDesign is more sensitive to low space than other CS apps (but it usually warns you) and trashing the cache helps.
And one really simple thing you might try first. Locate InDesign’s plist file in the preferences folder and remove or rename (preferred) it and let InDesign rebuild it.
My suggestions may not help at all, but it sounds like you’ve nothing to lose. GOOD LUCK!
Bob
Bob Rubey
MemberI really don’t know if this will help or not. If so, I suspect the answer is near the end of the video: https://tv.adobe.com/watch/creative-cloud-for-design/sync-settings-in-indesign-cc/
Bob Rubey
MemberPerhaps there’s some help here: https://creativepro.com/why-is-some-feature-grayed-out-in-indesign.php
Bob Rubey
MemberLora wrote:
I did this using a blank document, then closed the program which is supposed to be the steps to making the default setting.Well, that would be incorrect. See David’s initial reply on how it should be done.
Whether that solves anything or not, I don’t know; I just wanted to point out a potential problem.
Bob
Bob Rubey
MemberNo guarantees, but see if this helps: https://creativepro.com/get-your-old-scripts-running-again-with-make-it-run.php
Bob Rubey
MemberHi Furry,
And I’ll answer you again (I think they’re still having issues with the new site; my profile is hosed from the changeover).
With NO documents open, go to View > Structure > Hide Structure. That should do it.
Bob
Bob Rubey
MemberFurry,
You pose interesting questions. I played around with ID for a while, saw your problem, and struck out but Google came to the rescue. After switching to the Direct Selection tool, hit the Escape key and the text wrap will become visible. https://forums.adobe.com/thread/667436
Bob
Bob Rubey
MemberYou might want to take a look at a script from Jongware: https://creativepro.com/topic/split-text-into-separate-non-threaded-frames
And a version he tweaked a bit later: https://forums.adobe.com/thread/652308
Bob Rubey
MemberHmmm, right church, wrong pew.
Bob Rubey
MemberBob Rubey
MemberIn Windows it’s Ctrl+Alt+X.
To find it, go to Edit > Keyboard Shortcuts…, change Product Area to Type Menu, then scroll to Insert White Space: Nonbreaking Space. The fixed width version is directly below it.
Bob Rubey
MemberYou need to go to Edit > Keyboard Shortcuts… to even find the assignment, but on the Mac it appears to be Opt+Cmd+X.
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