Brian Brunsting
My feedback
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10 votes
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13 votes
There is a script by Peter Kahrel which just does exactly what you’re looking for.
See this article on indesignsecrets.com:
https://indesignsecrets.com/delete-images-from-multiple-indesign-graphic-frames-quickly.phpHope you find this useful.
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Adobe InDesign teamBrian Brunsting supported this idea · -
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148 votes
As confirmed by multiple users, this issue is fixed in latest version of InDesign.
Thanks for your feedback.
-InDesign Team
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35 votes
The issue reported is at Apple’s end.
Hence, Apple is recommending to update macOS to 10.15.x version in order to resolve this issue.Please update your macOS to Catalina. If you still face this issue in macOS 10.15 do add your comment in this thread.
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Adobe InDesign teamBrian Brunsting supported this idea · -
67 votes
We're happy to announce that the fix for this issue is now available in the latest update of InDesign - version 17.2 that is available from Creative Cloud Desktop application.
Please update to this latest version to get the fix.
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Adobe InDesign team
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53 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment Brian Brunsting commentedThe particular case you mention, if I am understanding it correctly, can be done with variables. My assumption is that you have the chapter number and title on one line in the book as well as the running heads. If that isn't the case, just having a separate variable for each paragraph style and placing those both in the running heads would work. Multiple variables can be used side by side and uniquely formatted.
If those two elements are in one line in the book, this is how I would deal with that:
First, create two character styles that don't actually need to do anything (one for chapter number and one for chapter title). Then, in the paragraph style you are using for that element, create a nested style that is applied through the first colon (using chapter number character style) and then create a second nested style applied through an "end nested style character" (using the chapter title character style), which will just run through the rest of the paragraph since that character isn't there. Then create 2 "Running Header (character style)" variables, one for each character style you created. Those variables can then be used side by side in the running heads and have different local formatting applied.Hope that helps. I apologize if I misunderstood the issue.
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Between this issue, the problem with numbers in variables (footnote calls included) shifting to old style (depending on the font), and now finding random Hebrew vowels dropping out in our pdf exports, we are considering having to downgrade ID in order to produce something good enough to print. ID 19.5 added yet another bug (wrong indent if tab and ligature present on same line) causing us to already avoid that update.