Adobe InDesign CS3 Bedienungsanleitung Seite 532

  • Herunterladen
  • Zu meinen Handbüchern hinzufügen
  • Drucken
  • Seite
    / 672
  • Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • LESEZEICHEN
  • Bewertet. / 5. Basierend auf Kundenbewertungen
Seitenansicht 531
INDESIGN CS3
User Guide
525
4 Select a color for the tag if you created your tag from the Tags panel menu. (If you created your tag with the New
Tag button, you can choose a color by changing the color of the tag.)
Note: You can assign the same color to different tags. The color you select appears when you apply the tag to a frame and
choose View > Structure > Show Tagged Frames, or when you apply the tag to text within a frame and choose View >
Structure > Show Tag Markers. (Tag colors do not appear in exported XML files.)
5 Click OK.
Load XML tags from another source
You can load tags from an XML file, an InDesign document, or an InCopy document.
Note: InDesignatically adds tags to the Tags panel when you load an XML file.
1 Choose Load Tags from the Tags panel menu.
2 Select the file containing the tags you want to load into the Tags panel, and then click Open.
Change tag name or color
1
Double-click a tag name in the Tags panel or choose Tag Options in the Tags panel menu.
2 Change the name or the color of the tag, and click OK.
Note: You cannot change the name of locked tags. InDesign automatically locks tags specified in a loaded DTD file. To
change the name of these tags, you must edit the DTD file and reload it into the document.
Tag items
Before you export content to an XML file, you must tag the text and other items (such as frames and tables) that you
want to export. You also need to tag items that you have created as placeholders for imported XML content. Items
that have been tagged appear as elements in the Structure pane.
Create (or load) tags to identify each content element that you want to export or import. Then tag text or page items
using one of these techniques:
Manual tagging Select a frame or text and then click a tag in the Tags panel, or simply drag a tag from the Tags panel
to a text or graphics frame.
Automatic tagging Select a text frame, table, table cells, or image, and then click the Autotag icon in the Tags panel.
Items are tagged according to your tagging preset options.
Map tags to styles Associatetagswithparagraph,character,table,orcellstyles,andthenapplytagsautomaticallyto
text, a table, table cells, and paragraphs that were assigned those styles.
When tagging page items, note the following:
You can apply tags to stories as well as to text within stories. For example, you might want to apply an Article tag
to a story, and then apply more specific tags, such as
Title and Body, to paragraphs within the story.
You can apply only one tag to a story. When you tag a frame in a threaded story, all other frames in the story, along
with any overset text, are assigned the same tag.
You can apply only one tag to a graphics frame. When you tag a graphics frame, InDesign records a reference to
the graphics location (on disk).
You cannot tag a group of objects. To tag an item thats part of a group, use the Direct Selection tool to select
the item.
Seitenansicht 531
1 2 ... 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 ... 671 672

Kommentare zu diesen Handbüchern

Eric 02 Mar 2024 | 15:32:04

Dear manymanuals.pl Admin! my name’s Eric and for just a second, imagine this… - Someone does a search and winds up at manymanuals.pl. - They hang out for a minute to check it out. I’m interested… but… maybe… - And then they hit the back button and check out the other search results instead. - Bottom line – you got an eyeball, but nothing else to show for it. - There they go. This isn’t really your fault – it happens a LOT – studies show 7 out of 10 visitors to any site disap

Eric 03 Mar 2024 | 05:37:29

Dear, Eric here with a quick thought about your website manymanuals.pl Owner! I’m on the internet a lot and I look at a lot of business websites. Like yours, many of them have great content. But all too often, they come up short when it comes to engaging and connecting with anyone who visits. I get it – it’s hard. Studies show 7 out of 10 people who land on a site, abandon it in moments without leaving even a trace. You got the eyeball, but nothing else. Here’s a solution for y