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David BlatnerKeymaster
Often the best way to ensure everything is in a grid is to put it inside a table. You can turn off the table strokes if you don’t want it to look like a table, of course.
But there are other options. Here’s a couple articles I’ve written on making things look like a grid:
andDavid BlatnerKeymasterHi Lindsey! Great that you’re trying this. This might work:
(?<=,\s).+?(?=serves)
That searches for anything PRECEDED by a comma followed by a space, and followed by the word "serves"
There are a ton of resources here:
David BlatnerKeymasterMy first thought it that the character may actually be a different character in the font. Try selecting it and looking at the unicode value in the Info panel (it’s the code with the x in it). If that’s the case, the font designer may simply have made a mistake or changed the character width for some reason.
You could use grep styles to apply a character style with a very slight adjustment (like 98% horizontal scaling) to that character perhaps.
David BlatnerKeymasterAldo, almost nothing has changed about InDesign’s book feature in over 10 years!
David BlatnerKeymasterThere are other ideas here:
andZanelli Releases MultiPageImporter for Importing both PDF and INDD Files
David BlatnerKeymasterGlad you could come to the event, Aldo!
You cannot convert a document into a book. The book contains multiple InDesign documents. So you would have to break the big document into smaller documents first, and then add them.HOWEVER, I would ask: Do you really need to convert it into a book? I always try to keep InDesign publications in a single document if I can. Once the file gets over 400 pages, then maybe it is better split up. But not necessarily. You can make InDesign files with over 1000 pages and they can be okay.
David BlatnerKeymasterThat’s strange, Bruce. Have you tried it in the most recent version of InDesign?
David BlatnerKeymasterHave you tried a different browser, or clearing your cache? I wonder if it’s something like that.
(If you were dropped from the program — which seems unlikely — you wouldn’t see it in your listing. So I’m thinking this might just be an issue on your end?)David BlatnerKeymasterNope. Nothing has changed. I keep hoping that Harbs’ old “Power Headers” tool will be revived.
David BlatnerKeymasterWhen you log in to prerelease, there should be two tabs across the top: My Programs and Available Programs. Do you see InDesign in the available programs? Perhaps you unsubscribed and need to join again?
David BlatnerKeymasterRight… there are “public betas” and prerelease versions.
You can get access to prerelease here: https://www.adobeprerelease.com/
You’ll need to log in with your Adobe ID.David BlatnerKeymasterPeter Kahrel wrote some scripts to make “blind endnotes”… search here:
https://creativepro.com/files/kahrel/indesign/footnotes.htmlDavid BlatnerKeymasterOh… and how to find email addresses? If the email address is simple, like the ones above, it’s not that hard to write a GREP for the GREP tab of the Find/Change dialog box, like:
[\l\u\d.]+@[\l\u\d.]+
But if the emails are wide and varied, then there are more complicated solutions, such as:
more here:
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