Anonymous
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149 votes
As confirmed by multiple users, this issue is fixed in latest version of InDesign.
Thanks for your feedback.
-InDesign Team
An error occurred while saving the comment An error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedDear Adobe,
This issue is very serious!
We're having previously trashed and permanently deleted package folders magically reappear on our desktop.
This appears to be related to the packaging of fonts. Only the package folders where we included fonts reappear. If you do not include fonts then the package folder does not reappear.
Steps to replicate on our system (Mac OS 10.14.6, InDesign 15.0.2)
1) Restart InDesign and reset the preferences by holding down the requisite key combination.
Note: Deleting the InDesign preferences clears the condition temporarily, until the next time you package a document and include fonts.
2) Create a new document, or open an existing one.
3) Package the document and include fonts. Save package to the desktop as folder "PKG-1"
4) Delete the PKG-1 folder and empty the trash.
5) Repeat step 3 but save the package folder as "PKG-2".
6) The PKG-2 folder will be created, but the previously-deleted PKG-1 folder will reappear on the desktop as well.
Kindly repair this as soon as possible.
Thank you,
JK
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35 votes
Fix is available in version 13.1 of InDesign.
Please update to the latest version available to you via Creative Cloud Desktop application.Thanks,
Adobe InDesign teamAn error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedAny update on this?
An error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedYes, reproducible, but on my system it is not only vertical justification. It appears that *all* of the object style overrides (including vertical justification) are being reset to their defaults after the paste.
There is also the other issue (mentioned in previous comment) where an object style override is (apparently) being applied immediately to every text frame as soon as it is created in CC 2018 (and also in CC 2017) but not in earlier versions.
This all points to some issue with the handling of object styles and overrides in general.
Anonymous supported this idea ·An error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedOne more interesting thing that I noticed beginning in CC 2017.
With the Object Styles panel open, create a brand new document.
Drag out a text frame and click on it with the Selection (pointer) tool. Immediately, you will see a plus '+' sign appear next to the [Basic Text Frame] style in the Object Styles panel. This indicates that an override has been applied to the text frame (which I cannot see how that is possible considering I just created it).
This behavior cannot be replicated in CC 2015 or any version prior. As such, I believe this represents a bug that was introduced in CC 2017, related to object style overrides, which has propagated into the CC 2018 release, but has become more apparent now as the override issue is affecting copy/paste operations.
I hope this helps Adobe track down the problem. And of course if this behavior is as-designed, please post an explanation about how things work now. Perhaps there is some new preference available for controlling this behavior.
Thanks.
An error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedHi, this problem has been reported recently by several of our plug-in customers. I believe this behavior is definitely a bug in CC 2018. Here are the steps required to replicate, and an explanation of what I believe is happening:
1) First, create a new document. Then drag out a single text frame and type some text into it.
2) Next, open the Object Styles panel. You should see that the text frame has been assigned to the [Basic Text Frame] style.
3) Right click on the text frame, select "Text Frame Options", and change vertical alignment to "Center". This centers the text vertically in the frame.
4) OPTIONAL: If you now edit the [Basic Text Frame] object style, you will see that this remains at the default of setting of "Top" for vertical alignment. So in fact, by modifying the text frame for vertical alignment, this is an *override* on the default [Basic Text Frame] object style that was applied to the frame.
5) Now, copy the text frame to the clipboard.
6) Finally, create a brand new document and paste the text frame onto it. The text now aligns to the top, which is *not* correct. The override applied to the text frame in the original document did not come over with the copy/paste.
In both documents, the default text frame object style is set to Top align. The copy/paste should retain the vertical alignment override that was been applied to the frame, as it does in CC 2017, and also as it does as far back as CS6.
When this occurs, it is not obvious, provides no warning, and is very easy to miss. Frankly, this is a serious issue.
Quick follow-up.
I downgraded to InDesign 15.0.1 and the problem went away.
So this appears to be an issue introduced in the 15.0.2 version of InDesign.