Peter Kahrel
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3 votesPeter Kahrel shared this idea ·
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3 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·
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3 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·
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4 votes
Hello All,
Thank you for reporting the issue to us.
We have fixed the issue in the latest version of InDesign, Id 14.0.3Please upgrade your InDesign application to the latest version to try out the fix.
If you are unable to see the update yet, go to Creative Cloud desktop application, open the menu (three dots) from the top-right corner and click on ‘Check For App Updates’.
If you face any problems with the new update, do let us know in the comments.
You may also follow the below given link for the list of all fixed issues in Id 14.0.3
https://helpx.adobe.com/indesign/kb/fixed-issues.htmlPeter Kahrel supported this idea · -
7 votes
Thanks for reporting
We are reviewing the issue-InDesign Team
Peter Kahrel supported this idea · -
1 vote
Marking this as solved as confirmed by user.
-Aman
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5 votesPeter Kahrel shared this idea ·
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7 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·
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11 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·
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104 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·
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72 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·
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33 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·Peter Kahrel shared this idea ·
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19 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment Peter Kahrel commentedSince this is a script that was not supplied by Adobe there's no point submitting a feature request here. You should write to the script's author, see the link below, posted by Daniel Soileau.
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9 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·
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60 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·
An error occurred while saving the comment Peter Kahrel commentedGood request.
Note that an orphan is the first line of a paragraph that ends the page (and a widow id the last line of a paragraph at the top of the page). What Matt describes here doesn't have an official name. 'Short end line', and 'short last line' are the official terms, but 'runt' (coined by David Blatner) is gaining in popularity.
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49 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·
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30 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·
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6 votesPeter Kahrel supported this idea ·
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1 vote
Hi,
In step 4, are you setting the find format field to be the character style you have created in step step 1?
If yes, then InDesign will only find those “x” which have the character style same as in the find format field (=character style created in step 1 and applied to only first x)
https://helpx.adobe.com/indesign/using/find-change.htmlPlease can you elaborate a little more on the steps.
-Aman
An error occurred while saving the comment Peter Kahrel commented> In step 4, are you setting the find format field to be the character style you have created in step step 1?
Yes, that's right.
The point is that when you look for x using the Glyph tab, only the x in the character style is found. The Glyph search should ignore any format set in Text tab.
Peter Kahrel shared this idea ·
This works correctly when the TOC is generated manually, but not when the TOC is generated by a script. See
https://indesign.uservoice.com/forums/913162-adobe-indesign-sdk-scripting-bugs-and-features/suggestions/34775464-epub-toc-links-are-not-created-when-a-document-s-t
Peter