Anonymous
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21 results found
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24 votes
Thanks for reporting the issue. We will review it shortly
-InDesign Team
Anonymous supported this idea · -
251 votes
SVG import has been implemented in InDesign 2020. Please upgrade to this version of InDesign to use this feature.
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Adobe InDesign teamAn error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous supported this idea · -
19 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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57 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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5 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedThese votes and this feature should be merged with/added to…
https://indesign.uservoice.com/forums/601021-adobe-indesign-feature-requests/suggestions/31494361-add-full-fullscreen-splitscreen-support-for-mac-osAnonymous supported this idea · -
3 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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25 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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3 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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64 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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32 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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178 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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25 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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9 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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44 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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191 votes
Dear All,
This is fixed in latest InDesign CC version. Please upgrade to the latest release.
Thanks
Abhinav AgarwalAnonymous supported this idea · -
30 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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119 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedA revamp of Data Merge is much needed: it is becoming increasingly buggy and less useful as time goes on. (preview bug, missing values bug, @symbol needed in image columns,…)
Using an ExCel file as a source is a much needed addition:
1/ ExCel is a standard spreadsheet format.
2/ Most Data used in a lay-out is delivered to us through ExCel, so we win quite some time/money if we can skip conversions.
3/ Most spreadsheet apps can reliably convert to ExCel, but conversion to CSV remains problematic.
4/ Changing data rapidly is easier if the data file is a simple ExCel file.
5/ If a solid ExCel standard (.xlsx?) can be decided upon, this could become a standard way of working with data.Anonymous supported this idea · -
454 votes
Thanks for the suggestion. We have started to explore this feature. Will share more details soon
Thanks
AbhinavAnonymous supported this idea · -
84 votesAnonymous supported this idea ·
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43 votesAnonymous shared this idea ·
As SVG files have been “launched” by Adobe, and their popularity (especially online) is growing, it seems strange and convoluted we need to open SVG files in Illustrator, then export them to AI or EPS only to be able to place them in an INDD doc.
I’m not talking about editable paths, only as a placed document. This is not possible at the moment, even when SVG files are becoming more commonplace (the Noun Project, web site bullets,…) and are a very compact way of using vector artwork. Being able to color them would be even better. :-)