InDesign CS4 For Dummies
By Galen Gruman
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About this ebook
Whether you’re an experienced designer or just want to create a cool newsletter for the school soccer team, you’ll benefit from Galen Gruman’s guidance. This desktop publishing expert shows you how to navigate InDesign menus, dialog boxes, panels, and panes; streamline your work with templates; prepare your creations for printing or online publication, and more.
- Explore the new tools, work with the application frame, and set preferences for the way you work
- Learn to open and save documents and export content
- Get familiar with the Pages panel, apply Master Pages, and work with Layers
- Make the most of color with color libraries, multi-ink colors, spot versus process color, and gradients
- Create layout guidelines and use color swatches for consistency
- Streamline text formatting by using styles and treat text as a graphic element
- Design for the Web with hyperlinks, multimedia elements, and Flash files
- See how InDesign CS4 works seamlessly with other applications in the Adobe Creative Suite
- Discover why good design is part science and part art and learn to manipulate, organize, and align design objects
- Take advantage of tips for cropping and positioning graphics
- Prepare for printing or other output with enhanced preflighting tools
InDesign CS4 For Dummies also offers great advice for designing pages that do their job perfectly. Start creating today!
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InDesign CS4 For Dummies - Galen Gruman
Introduction
What is Adobe InDesign, and what can it do for you? In its more than a decade in existence, InDesign has become the most powerful publishing application, one that lets you work the way you want to work. You can use InDesign as a free-form but manual approach to layout, or as a structured but easily revised approach. The fact that you can choose which way to work is important for both novice and experienced users because there is no single, correct way to lay out pages. Sometimes (for example, if your project is a one-time publication, such as an ad), creating a layout from scratch — almost as if you were doing it by hand on paper — is the best approach. And sometimes using a highly formatted template that you can modify as needed is the way to go: You don’t need to reinvent the wheel for documents that have a structured and repeatable format, such as books and magazines.
InDesign can handle sophisticated tasks, such as glossy magazines and high-impact ads, but its structured approach to publishing also makes it a good choice for newspapers, newsletters, and books. InDesign is also a good choice for corporate publishing tasks, such as proposals and annual reports. In all cases, you can design for printing on paper or electronic distribution as Adobe Acrobat Portable Document Format (PDF) files. Plug-in software from other vendors adds extra capabilities.
Plus, you can use InDesign as the starting point for Web and Flash documents. These electronic documents can include interactive features, such as page transitions, hyperlinks, and buttons to play sounds or a movie.
About This Book
After you get the hang of it, InDesign is quite easy to use. At the same time, it’s a powerful publishing program with a strong following among the ranks of professional publishers — and the latest InDesign CS4 version is certain to reinforce that position. Part of its success is due to the fact that its interface is like that of its sister applications, Adobe Illustrator and Adobe Photoshop, which are also components of the Adobe Creative Suite.
If you’re just getting started with InDesign, welcome! I hope you’ll find the information in these pages to be helpful in getting you started.
Conventions Used in This Book
This book covers InDesign on both Macintosh and Windows. Because the application is almost identical on both platforms, I point out platform- specific information only when it’s different — and that’s very rare. I’ve used Macintosh screen shots throughout; Windows screen shots are usually identical, except for the dialog boxes to open, save, and export files — these are arranged differently on Macs and PCs (for all programs, not just InDesign), but the relevant options to InDesign are the same. If you’re a Windows user, a quick look at Adobe’s documentation, which shows Windows screens, can show you how the interfaces are nearly identical. So don’t worry about them.
Here are some other conventions used in this book:
Menu commands: They’re listed like this: Window⇒Pages. That means go to the Window menu and choose the Pages option from it. In almost every case, the menu command sequences are the same for Mac and Windows users; in a very few cases, they differ (such as the Preferences menu option and the Configure Plug-ins menu option), so I note these differences where they exist by putting the Mac menu sequence first and then the Windows one.
newfeature.eps InDesign CS4 has an annoying new feature of hiding menu options from you. The goal is to be less intimidating, but it also means that if you don’t know what InDesign can do, you won’t find out by looking at the menus. Fortunately, you can tell InDesign to show you all the menus all the time so that no features are hidden. Here’s how: Choose Window⇒Workspace⇒Show Full Menus. This book assumes you’ve turned the menus all on.
Key combinations: If you’re supposed to press several keys together, I indicate that by placing a plus sign (+) between them. Thus, Shift+Ô+A means press and hold the Shift and Ô keys and then press A. After you’ve pressed the A key, let go of all the keys. I also use the plus sign to join keys to mouse movements. For example, Alt+drag means to hold the Alt key when dragging the mouse.
Note that the Macintosh sequence comes first, followed by the Windows equivalent.
Pointer: The small graphic icon that moves on the screen as you move your mouse is a pointer (also called a cursor). The pointer takes on different shapes depending on the tool you select, the current location of the mouse, and the function you are performing.
Click: This means to quickly press and release the mouse button once. Many Mac mice have only one button, but some have two or more. All PC mice have at least two buttons. If you have a multibutton mouse, click the leftmost button when I say to click the mouse.
Double-click: This tells you to quickly press and release the mouse button twice. On some multibutton mice, one of the buttons can function as a double-click. (You click it once, but the computer acts as if you clicked twice.) If your mouse has this feature, use it; it saves strain on your hand.
Right-click: A feature first implemented on Windows, but present on Macs since the late 1990s, this means to click the right-hand mouse button. If your Mac has only one button, hold the Control key when clicking the mouse button to do the equivalent of right-clicking in programs that support it. Mac OS X automatically assigns the right-hand button on a multibutton mouse to the Control+click combination; if your mouse came with its own System Preference, you can often further customize the button actions.
Dragging: Dragging is used for moving and sizing items in an InDesign document. To drag an item, position the mouse pointer on the item, press and hold down the mouse button, and then slide the mouse across a flat surface.
What You’re Not to Read
TechnicalStuff.eps If you see any text in this book that has this icon next to it, feel free to skip right over to the next paragraph. This icon alerts you to geeky information that you don’t need to know to use InDesign. I just couldn’t help giving you a little extra-credit information in case you were a budding geek like me.
Foolish Assumptions
Although this book has information that any level of layout artist or production editor needs to know to use InDesign, this book is primarily for those of you who are fairly new to the field, or who are just becoming familiar with the program. I try to take the mystery out of InDesign and give you guidance on how to create a bunch of different types of documents.
I don’t assume that you’ve ever used InDesign (or any publishing program). But I do assume that you have a basic knowledge of Macintosh or Windows — enough to work with files and applications. And I assume that you have basic familiarity with layout design, such as knowing what pages, margins, and fonts are. But I don’t expect you to be an expert in any of these areas — nor do you have to be!
How This Book Is Organized
This book contains eight parts. I also include some bonus content on the InDesignCentral Web site (www.InDesignCentral.com).
Part I: Before You Begin
Designing a document is a combination of science and art. The science is in setting up the structure of the page: How many places will hold text, and how many will hold graphics? How wide will the margins be? Where will the page numbers appear? You get the idea. The art is in coming up with creative ways of filling the structure to please your eyes and the eyes of the people who will be looking at your document.
In this part, I tell you how to navigate your way around InDesign using the program’s menus, dialog boxes, panels, and panes. I also explain how to customize the preferences to your needs.
Part II: Document Essentials
Good publishing technique is about more than just getting the words down on paper. It’s also about opening, saving, adding, deleting, numbering, and setting layout guidelines for documents. This part shows you how to do all that and a lot more, including tips on setting up master pages that you can use over and over again. You also find out how to create color swatches for easy reuse in your documents.
Part III: Object Essentials
This part of the book shows you how to work with objects: the lines, text frames, graphics frames, and other odds and ends that make up a publication. You also discover how to apply some really neat special effects to them.
Part IV: Text Essentials
When you think about it, text is a big deal when it comes to publishing documents. After all, how many people would want to read a book with nothing but pictures? In this part, I show you how to create and manipulate text, in more ways than you can even imagine.
Part V: Graphics Essentials
Very few people would want to read a book with nothing but text, so this part is where I show you how to handle graphics in InDesign — both importing them from the outside and creating your own within InDesign.
Part VI: Getting Down to Business
InDesign is really good at handling the many kinds of documents that tend to be used in businesses, such as manuals, annual reports, and catalogs. This part shows you how to create tables, handle footnotes, create indexes, manage page numbering across multiple chapters in a book, and use text variables to make InDesign update text as needed based on the document’s current context.
Part VII: Printing and Multimedia Essentials
Whether you’re printing a publication or simply creating a PDF file for readers to download from a Web site, you still need to understand the basics of outputting an InDesign document. This part is where I show you how to set up your output files, manage color, and work with service bureaus. You also find out about creating multimedia documents — those with movies, sound, hyperlinks, and buttons — for distribution as PDF files, Flash files, and Web pages.
Part VIII: The Part of Tens
This part of the book is like the chips in the chocolate chip cookies; you can eat the cookies without them, but you’d be missing a really good part. It’s a part that shows you some important resources that can help you make the most of InDesign.
Icons Used in This Book
So that you can pick out parts that you really need to pay attention to (or, depending on your taste, to avoid), I use some symbols, or icons, in this book.
newfeature.eps When you see this icon, it means I am pointing out a feature that’s new to InDesign CS4.
Tip.eps If you see this icon, it means that I’m mentioning some really nifty point or idea that you may want to keep in mind as you use the program.
Remember.eps This icon lets you know something you’ll want to keep in mind. If you forget it later, that’s fine, but if you remember it, it will make your InDesign life a little easier.
Warning(bomb).eps If you skip all the other icons, pay attention to this one. Why? Because ignoring it can cause something really, really bad or embarrassing to happen, like when you were sitting in your second-grade classroom waiting for the teacher to call on you to answer a question, and you noticed that you still had your pajama shirt on. I don’t want that to happen to you!
TechnicalStuff.eps This icon tells you that I am about to pontificate on some remote technical bit of information that may help explain a feature in InDesign. The technical info will definitely make you sound impressive if you memorize it and recite it to your friends.
Where to Go from Here
If you’re a complete beginner, I suggest you read the book’s parts in the order I present them. If you haven’t used InDesign before but you have used other layout programs, do read Part I first to get in the InDesign frame of mind and then explore other parts in any order you want. If you have used InDesign before, peruse them in any order you want, to see what’s changed.
As you gain comfort with InDesign, you’ll be surprised how much you can do with it. And when you’re ready to discover more, take advantage of the wealth of resources out there to go the next level. The InDesignCentral Web site (www.InDesignCentral.com) can help you do that.
Part I
Before You Begin
388488-pp0101.epsIn this part . . .
You have your copy of InDesign, and you’d like some basic information on how to get started, right? Well, you’ve come to the right place. This part helps you sail smoothly through InDesign and gives you a general idea of what InDesign can do. I explain the layout approaches you can take, as well as how to set up InDesign to work the way you work.
Along the way, you find out how to navigate the plethora of panels, menus, tools, and shortcuts that can seem overwhelming at first, but which soon become second nature as you gain experience using the program. Welcome aboard!
Chapter 1
Understanding InDesign Ingredients
In This Chapter
Getting acquainted with the InDesign approach
Figuring out global versus local control
Getting up to speed on the InDesign vocabulary
Exploring the document window
Surveying the top tools
Becoming familiar with tools and panels
Discovering what’s in the menus
Starting to use a new software application is not unlike meeting a new friend for the first time. You take a long look at the person, maybe ask a few questions, and begin the process of becoming acquainted. (If you’re not new to InDesign but are new to the CS4 version, it’s like seeing a friend you haven’t seen in a while — you observe any changes and catch up on what’s happened in the meantime.)
Just as it’s worthwhile to find out the likes and dislikes of a new friend, it’s also worth your time to wrap your head around InDesign’s unique style and approaches. When you do so, you’ll find it much easier to start using InDesign to get work done.
This chapter explains where to look in InDesign for the features and capabilities you need to master. (For a quick look at what’s new to version CS4, check out Chapter 25.) I introduce you to the process that InDesign assumes you use when laying out documents, explain some of the terms you’ll encounter throughout the book, describe the unique interface elements in the document window, survey the most commonly used tools, and explain how InDesign packages much of its functionality through an interface element called a panel.
newfeature.eps InDesign CS4 has an annoying new feature of hiding menu options from you. The goal is to be less intimidating, but it also means if you don’t know what InDesign can do, you won’t find out by looking at the menus. Fortunately, you can tell InDesign to show you all the menus all the time, so no features are hidden. Here’s how: Choose Window⇒Workspace⇒Show Full Menus. This book assumes that you’ve turned the menus all on.
Understanding Global and Local Control
The power of desktop publishing in general, and InDesign in particular, is that it lets you automate time-consuming layout and typesetting tasks while at the same time letting you customize each step of the process according to your needs.
What does that mean in practice? That you can use global controls to establish general settings for layout elements, and then use local controls to modify those elements to meet specific requirements. The key to using global and local tools effectively is to know when each is appropriate.
Global tools include
General preferences and application preferences (see Chapter 2)
Master pages and libraries (see Chapter 5)
Character and paragraph styles (see Chapter 13)
Table and cell styles (see Chapter 19)
Object styles (see Chapter 9)
Sections and page numbers (see Chapter 4)
Color definitions (see Chapter 6)
Hyphenation and justification (see Chapter 14)
Styles and master pages are the two main global settings that you can expect to override locally throughout a document. You shouldn’t be surprised to make such changes often because although the layout and typographic functions that styles and master pages automate are the fundamental components of any document’s look, they don’t always work for all the specific content within a publication. (If they did, who’d need human designers?!)
Local tools include
Frame tools (see Part III, as well as Chapter 16)
Character and paragraph tools (see Chapters 14 and 15)
Graphics tools (see Part V)
Keep your bearings straight
A powerful but confusing capability in InDesign is something called a control point. InDesign lets you work with objects from nine different reference points — any of the four corners, the middle of any of the four sides, or the center — such as when positioning the object precisely or rotating the object. You choose the active reference point, or control point, in the Control panel or Transform panel, using the grid of nine points arranged in a square.
By default, InDesign uses the central reference point as the control point, which is great for rotating an object, but can lead to confusion when you enter in the X and Y coordinates to place it precisely. That’s because most people use the upper-left corner of an object when specifying its coordinates, not the center of the object. Be sure to change the control point to the upper-left reference point whenever entering X and Y coordinates in the Control or Transform panels.
How do you change the control point? That’s easy: Just click the desired reference point in that preview grid. The control point will be black, whereas the other reference points will be white.
Choosing the right tools for the job
Depending on what you’re trying to do with InDesign at any given moment, you may or may not immediately know which tool to use. If, for example, you maintain fairly precise layout standards throughout a document, using master pages is the way to keep your work in order. Using styles is the best solution if you want to apply standard character and paragraph formatting throughout a document. When you work with one-of-a-kind documents, on the other hand, designing master pages and styles doesn’t make much sense — it’s easier just to format elements as you create them.
For example, you can create drop caps (large initial letters set into a paragraph of type, such as the drop cap that starts each chapter in this book) as a character option in the Character panel, or you can create a paragraph style (formatting that you can apply to whole paragraphs, ensuring that the same formatting is applied each time) that contains the drop-cap settings and then apply that style to the paragraph containing the drop cap. Which method you choose depends on the complexity of your document and how often you need to perform the action. The more often you find yourself taking a set of steps, the more often you should use a global tool (like character and paragraph styles) to accomplish the task.
Fortunately, you don’t need to choose between global and local tools while you’re in the middle of designing a document. You can always create styles from existing local formatting later. You can also add elements to a master page if you start to notice that you need them to appear on every page.
Specifying measurement values
Another situation in which you can choose between local or global controls is specifying measurement values. Regardless of the default measurement unit you set (that is, the measurement unit that appears in all dialog boxes and panels), you can use any unit when entering measurements in an InDesign dialog box. For example, if the default measurement is picas, but you’re new to publishing and are more comfortable working in inches, go ahead and enter measurements in inches.
InDesign accepts any of the following codes for measurement units. (Chapter 2 explains how to change the default measurements.) Note that the x in the following items indicates where you specify the value, such as 2i for 2 inches. It doesn’t matter whether you put a space between the value and the code: Typing 2inch and typing 2 inch are the same as far as InDesign is concerned:
xi or x inch or x" (for inches)
xp (for picas)
xpt or 0px (for points)
xc (for ciceros, a European newspaper measurement
xag (for agates, an American newspaper measurement)
xcm (for centimeters)
xmm (for millimeters)
Tip.eps You can enter fractional picas in two ways: in decimal format (as in 8.5p) and in picas and points (as in 8p6). Either of these settings results in a measurement of 81⁄2 picas. (A pica contains12 points.)
What to do when you make a mistake
InDesign is a very forgiving program. If you make a mistake, change your mind, or work yourself into a complete mess, you don’t have to remain in your predicament or save your work. InDesign offers several escape routes. You can
Undo your last action by choosing Edit⇒Undo (Ô+Z or Ctrl+Z). (You can’t undo some actions, particularly actions such as scrolling that don’t affect any items or the underlying document structure.) You can undo multiple actions in the reverse order in which they were done by repeatedly choosing Edit⇒Undo (Ô+Z or Ctrl+Z); each time you undo, the previous action is undone.
Redo an action you’ve undone by choosing Edit⇒Redo (Shift+Ô+Z or Ctrl+Shift+Z). Alternatively, choosing Undo and Redo is a handy way of seeing a before/after view of a particular change. As with undo, you can redo multiple undone actions in the reverse of the order in which they were undone.
Mastering Basic InDesign Vocabulary
All industries have their jargon to describe unique approaches, tools, attributes, and specifications. Publishing is no different. Its vocabulary includes pica, kerning, crop, and color model. But because programs like InDesign bring a once-specialized capability to the masses, the terms are sometimes used incorrectly. Sometimes, they’re replaced with general terms to make nonprofessional users feel less threatened, but that substitution ends up confusing professional printers, people who work in service bureaus, and Internet service providers. Throughout this book, I define other publishing terms as they come up.
In addition to using publishing-industry vocabulary, InDesign comes with its own specific terminology, much of it adopted from other Adobe products. Terms to know include the following:
Frame: The container for an object. A frame can hold text, a graphic, or a color fill.
Link: The connection to a graphics or text file that you import, or place, into an InDesign document. The link contains the file’s location and its last modification date and time. A link can reference any graphics or text file that you’ve imported into a layout. InDesign can notify you when a source text or graphics file has changed so that you can choose whether to update the version in your layout.
Package: The collection of all files needed to deliver a layout for printing.
PDF: The Adobe Portable Document Format, which has become the standard for sharing electronic documents. No matter what kind of computer it’s viewed on (Windows, Macintosh, Palm, or Unix), a PDF document displays the original document’s typography, graphics representation, and layout. With InDesign, you can place PDF files as if they were graphics, and you can also export its InDesign pages to PDF format.
Plug-in: A piece of software that loads into, and becomes part of, InDesign to add capabilities to the program.
Stroke: The outline of an object (whether a graphic, line, or individual text characters) or frame.
Thread: The connections between text frames that let a story flow from one frame to another.
Discovering the Document Window
In InDesign, you spend lots of time working in document windows — the containers
for your documents. Each document, regardless of its size, is contained within its own document window.
The best way to get familiar with the InDesign document window is by opening a blank document. Simply choosing File⇒New⇒Document (Ô+N or Ctrl+N) and clicking OK opens a new document window. Don’t worry about the settings for now — just explore.
Figure 1-1 shows all the standard elements of a new document window. I won’t bore you by covering interface elements that are standard to all programs. Instead, the rest of this section focuses on InDesign-specific elements.
Figure 1-1: The document window is where you work on documents.
388488-fg0101.epsTechnicalStuff.eps The Version Cue pop-up menu lets you see the current status of a document in a shared workgroup setup. You can ignore this expert feature. The new Preflight pop-up menu helps deal with any issues that can affect printing, as Chapter 23 explains. And the new Search menu lets you look for files on your computer and in Adobe Bridge.
Rulers
Document windows display a horizontal ruler across the top and a vertical ruler down the left side. As shown in Figure 1-1, the horizontal ruler measures from the top-left corner of the page across the entire spread, and the vertical ruler measures from the top to the bottom of the current page. These rulers are handy for judging the size and placement of objects on a page. Even experienced designers often use the rulers while they experiment with a design.
Both rulers display increments in picas unless you change the measurement system for each ruler in the Units & Increments pane of the Preferences dialog box. Choose InDesign⇒Preferences⇒Units & Increments (Ô+K) or Edit⇒Preferences⇒Units & Increments (Ctrl+K) to open the Preferences dialog box. Your choices include inches, picas, points, decimal inches, ciceros, agates, millimeters, and centimeters.
Tip.eps If you change the ruler measurement system when no documents are open, the rulers in all new documents will use the measurement system you selected. If a document is open when you make the change, the rulers are changed only in that document.
TechnicalStuff.eps You can also create your own measurement system by choosing Custom. Most people should ignore this option, but sometimes it can make sense, such as setting the ruler to match the line spacing, so that you can measure number of lines in your ruler.
If your computer has a small monitor and the rulers start to get in your way, you can hide them by choosing View⇒Hide Rulers (Ô+R or Ctrl+R).
Zero point
The point where the rulers intersect in the upper-left corner of the page is called the zero point. (Some people call it the ruler origin.) The zero point is the starting place for all horizontal and vertical measurements.
If you need to place items in relation to another spot on the page (for example, from the center of a spread rather than from the left-hand page), you can move the zero point by clicking and dragging it to a new location. Notice that the X: and Y: values in the Control panel update as you drag the zero point so that you can place it precisely.
If you change the zero point, it changes for all pages or spreads in the document. You can reset the zero point to the upper-left corner of the left-most page by double-clicking the intersection of the rulers in the upper-left corner.
TechnicalStuff.eps If you move the zero point, all the objects on the page display new X: and Y: values even though they haven’t actually moved. Objects above or to the left of the zero point will show negative X: and Y: values, and the X: and Y: values of other objects will not relate to their actual position on the page or spread.
You can lock the zero point, making it more difficult to accidentally change it. Control+click or right-click the ruler origin and choose Lock Zero Point from the menu that appears. (The Unlock Zero Point command is right there as well, so you can just as easily unlock it.) Locking the zero point is a good idea because it will remind anyone working on your document that you prefer that they not fiddle with the zero point.
Pasteboard
The white area that surrounds the page is called the pasteboard. It’s a workspace for temporarily storing objects. The pasteboard above and below each page or spread is an inch deep. The pasteboard at both left and right of a page or spread is just as wide as the page. For example, a spread composed of two 8-inch-wide pages has 8 inches of pasteboard to the left and 8 inches of pasteboard to the right, plus 1 inch of pasteboard above and 1 inch below.
Tip.eps You can make the height of the pasteboard above and below pages something other than the default of 1 inch. To do so, open the Guides & Pasteboard pane of the Preferences dialog box and choose a new value for the Minimum Vertical Offset field. (Choose InDesign⇒Preferences⇒Guides & Pasteboard [Ô+K] or Edit⇒Preferences⇒Guides & Pasteboard [Ctrl+K] to open the Preferences dialog box.)
Application frame and bar
newfeature.eps InDesign CS4 introduces the application frame. Windows users will already know what an application frame is, though it never had a name: All the elements of InDesign — its panels, document windows, and so on — were confined into a window with a gray background. By contrast, on a Mac, all these elements floated freely, so folders, icons and other applications could be visible underneath
InDesign’s elements — and that confused some users.
With the application frame, Mac users can now put all the InDesign elements in their own container so that they don’t float freely and other applications don’t peek through. You show the application frame by choosing Window⇒Application Frame — doing so makes InDesign for Mac behave like InDesign for Windows. (By default, the application frame is turned off in InDesign for Mac.)
Conversely, Windows users can choose Window⇒Application Frame to hide the application frame so that InDesign for Windows looks like InDesign for Mac. (By default, the application frame is turned on in InDesign for Windows.)
Remember.eps The Application Frame menu command is a toggle, hiding the application frame if it’s visible and showing it if it’s hidden. You see a check mark next to the menu option if the application frame is visible. (InDesign uses the same toggling indicator in other menus.)
newfeature.eps Above the Control panel is the new application bar, which offers easy access to other Adobe applications, such as Bridge, and access to controls over various view options. It appears by default if the application frame is enabled. When the application frame is hidden, you can show or hide the application bar by choosing Window⇒Application Bar.
The application bar has several handy elements. From left to right:
The first element is the set of quick-access buttons to Bridge and other Adobe software.
The second element is the Zoom Level field and pop-up menu, which replaces the Zoom pop-up menu that used to be at the bottom of the document window.
The third element is the View Options pop-up menu, which lets you hide and show frames boundaries, hidden characters, grids, and other such visual aids from one handy location. These options previously existed but only in a variety of scattered menu options (where they also remain).
The fourth element, the Screen Mode pop-up menu, duplicates the Screen Mode feature at the bottom of the Tools panel (see Chapter 2).
newfeature.eps The fifth element, the new Arrange Documents pop-up menu, gives you fast access to InDesign CS4’s new controls over how document windows are arranged (covered later in this chapter).
The sixth element, the Workspaces pop-up menu, gives you quick access to the workspaces you’ve defined (as described in the Working with Panels, Docks, and Workspaces
section, later in this chapter).
At the far right is the Search menu, which you can use to find files on your computer or via the Adobe Bridge program.
Pages and guides
Pages, which you can see on-screen surrounded by black outlines, reflect the page size you set up in the New Document dialog box (File⇒New⇒Document [Ô+N or Ctrl+N]). If in your document window it looks like two or more pages are touching, you’re looking at a spread.
InDesign uses nonprinting guides, lines that show you the position of margins and that help you position objects on the page. Margins are the spaces at the outside of the page, whereas columns are vertical spaces where text is supposed to go by default. Magenta lines across the top and bottom of each page show the document’s top and bottom margins. Violet lines show left and right columns (for single-page documents) or inside and outside columns (for spreads).
newfeature.eps InDesign CS4 introduces a new set of guides, called smart guides, covered in Chapter 10.
You can change the location of margin and column guides by choosing Layout⇒Margins and Columns. You can create additional guides — such as to help you visually align objects — by holding down your mouse button on the horizontal or vertical ruler and then dragging a guide into the position you want.
Page controls
If you feel like flipping through pages of the document you’re creating, InDesign makes it easy with page-turning buttons and the Page field and pop-up menu. Controls for entering prefixes for the page numbers of sections, and for indicating absolute page numbers in a document that contains multiple sections, are also handy. (An absolute page number indicates a page’s position in the document, such as +1 for the first page, +2 for the second page, and so on.)
At the bottom left of the document windows is a combined Page page-number field and pop-up menu encased by two sets of arrows. These arrows are page-turning buttons that take you to, from left to right, the first page, the previous page, the next page, and the last page. Just click an arrow to get where you want to go.
You can also jump directly to a specific document page or master page in several ways:
Highlight the current number in the page number field (by selecting it with your cursor), enter a new page number or master-page name, and press Return or Enter.
Use the Go to Page dialog box (Ô+J or Ctrl+J), enter a new page number or a master-page name, and press Return or Enter.
Choose the desired page from the Page pop-up menu.
You can also use the Pages panel to navigate your document, as Chapter 4 explains.
Opening Multiple Document Windows
If you like to work on more than one project at once, you’ve come to the right program. InDesign lets you open several documents at once. It also lets you open multiple windows simultaneously for individual documents. A large monitor (or having multiple monitors connected) makes this multiwindow feature even more useful. By opening multiple windows, you can
Display two (or more) different pages or spreads at once. You still have to work on the documents one at a time, but no navigation is required — you have only to click within the appropriate window.
Display multiple magnifications of the same page. For example, you can work on a detail at high magnification in one window and display the entire page — and see the results of your detail work — at actual size in another window.
Display a master page in one window and a document page based on that master page in another window. When you change the master page, the change is reflected in the window in which the associated document page is displayed.
newfeature.eps Document windows are now by default accessed through a set of tabs below the Control panel, rather than as a series of cascaded windows as in previous versions of InDesign.
When multiple windows are open, you activate a window by clicking on a window’s title tab or anywhere within its window. Also, the names of all open documents are displayed at the bottom of the Window menu. Choosing a document name from the Window menu brings that document to the front. If multiple windows are open for a particular document, each window is displayed (they’re displayed in the order in which you created them) in the Window menu.
To show multiple windows on-screen at once, choose Window⇒Arrange⇒Tile. When you choose the Tile command, all open windows are resized and displayed side by side. Or use one of the new window-layout options in the new Arrange Documents pop-up menu’s options (in the application bar). How they display will depend on the option you chose. Either way, note that when you resize any individual document window, the others will be resized accordingly so that they don’t overlap.
To put all these tiled windows back into