(Optional) To create links in placed files, click
Type in the Preferences dialog box and select Create Links When
Placing Text And Spreadsheet Files.
Selecting this option creates a link to the placed file.
You can use the Links panel to update, relink, or remove links to
text files. However, if you format linked text in InDesign, the
formatting may not be preserved when you update the link. If this
option isn’t selected, imported text and spreadsheet files are embedded
(not linked).
Do one of the following:
To create a new frame for the placed text,
make sure that no insertion point is present and that no text or
frames are selected.
To add text to a frame, use the Type tool to
select text or place the insertion point.
To replace the contents of an existing frame, use
a selection tool to select the frame. If the frame is threaded,
a loaded text cursor appears.
If you accidentally
replace a text file or graphic using this method, choose Edit > Undo
Replace, and then click or drag to create a text frame.
Choose File > Place.
Select Replace Selected Item if you want the imported
file to replace the contents of a selected frame, to replace selected
text, or to be added to the text frame at the insertion point. Deselect
this option to flow the imported file into a new frame.
Select Show Import Options, and then double-click the
file you want to import.
Set import options, and then click OK.
If you haven’t already designated an existing frame to
receive text, the pointer becomes a loaded text icon, ready to flow
text wherever you click or drag.
If
you receive an alert that the requested filter wasn’t found, you
may be trying to place a file from a different word-processing application
or from an earlier version of Microsoft® Word, such as Word 6. Open
the file in its original application and save it as RTF, which preserves
most formatting.
If the imported Microsoft Excel document
displays red dots in cells, adjust cell size or text attributes
so that overset content becomes visible. You can also place the
file as unformatted tabbed text, and then convert the tabbed text
to a table.
If
you select Show Import Options when placing a Word file
or an RTF file, you can choose from these options:
Table Of Contents Text
Imports the table of contents as part of the text in the story.
These entries are imported as text only.
Index Text
Imports the index as part of the text in the story. These
entries are imported as text only.
Footnotes
Imports Word footnotes. Footnotes and references are preserved, but
renumbered based on the document’s footnote settings.
Endnotes
Imports endnotes as part of the text at the end of the story.
Use Typographer’s Quotes
Ensures that imported text includes left and right quotation
marks (“ ”) and apostrophes (’) instead
of straight quotation marks (" ") and apostrophes (').
Remove Styles And Formatting From Text And Tables
Removes formatting, such as typeface, type color, and type
style, from the imported text, including text in tables. Paragraph
styles and inline graphics aren’t imported if this option is selected.
Preserve Local Overrides
When you choose to remove styles and formatting from text
and tables, you can select Preserve Local Overrides to maintain character
formatting, such as bold and italics, that is applied to part of
a paragraph. Deselect this option to remove all formatting.
Convert Tables To
When you choose to remove styles and formatting from text and
tables, you can convert tables to either basic, unformatted tables
or unformatted, tab-delimited text.
If you want to import
unformatted text and formatted tables, import the text without formatting,
and then paste the tables from Word into InDesign.
Preserve Styles And Formatting From Text And Tables
Preserves the Word document’s formatting in the InDesign
or InCopy document. You can use the other options in the Formatting
section to determine how styles and formatting are preserved.
Manual Page Breaks
Determines how page breaks from the Word file are formatted
in InDesign or InCopy. Select Preserve Page Breaks to use the same page
breaks used in Word, or select Convert To Column Breaks or No Breaks.
Import Inline Graphics
Preserves inline graphics from the Word document in InDesign.
Import Unused Styles
Imports all styles from the Word document, even if the styles
aren’t applied to text.
Convert Bullets & Numbers To Text
Imports bullets and numbers as actual characters, preserving
the look of the paragraph. However, in numbered lists, the numbers
are not automatically updated when the list items are changed.
Track Changes
Selecting this option causes highlighting and strikeout to appear
when you edit the imported text in InCopy while Track Changes is
turned on; deselecting this option causes all the imported text
to be highlighted as a single addition. Track Changes can be viewed
in InCopy, not InDesign.
Import Styles Automatically
Imports styles from the Word document into the InDesign or
InCopy document. If a yellow warning triangle appears next to Style Name
Conflicts, then one or more paragraph or character style from the
Word document has the same name as an InDesign style.
To
determine how these style name conflicts are resolved, select an
option from the Paragraph Style Conflicts and Character Style Conflicts
menu. Choosing Use InDesign Style Definition causes the imported
style text to be formatted based on the InDesign style. Choosing
Redefine InDesign Style causes the imported style text to be formatted
based on the Word style, and changes existing InDesign text formatted
with that style. Choosing Auto Rename causes the imported Word styles
to be renamed. For example, if InDesign and Word have a Subheading
style, the imported Word style is renamed Subheading_wrd_1 when Auto
Rename is selected.
Note: InDesign converts paragraph and character
styles but not bulleted and numbered list styles.
Customize Style Import
Lets you use the Style Mapping dialog box to select which
InDesign style should be used for each Word style in the imported document.
Save Preset
Stores the current Word Import Options for later reuse. Specify
the import options, click Save Preset, type the name of the preset,
and click OK. The next time you import a Word style, you
can select the preset you created from the Preset menu. Click Set
As Default if you want the selected preset to be used as the default
for future imports of Word documents.
If
you select Show Import Options when placing a text file, you can
choose from these options:
Character Set
Specifies the
computer language character set, such as ANSI, Unicode, or Windows
CE, that was used to create the text file. The default selection
is the character set that corresponds to the default language of
InDesign or InCopy.
Platform
Specifies whether the file was created in Windows or Mac OS.
Set Dictionary To
Specifies the dictionary to be used by the imported text.
Extra Carriage Returns
Specifies how extra paragraph returns are imported. Choose
Remove At End Of Every Line or Remove Between Paragraphs.
Replace
Replaces the specified number of spaces with a tab.
Use Typographer’s Quotes
Ensures that imported text includes left and right quotation
marks (“ ”) and apostrophes (’) instead
of straight quotation marks (" ") and apostrophes (').
You
can choose from these options when importing an Excel file:
Sheet
Specifies the worksheet you want to import.
View
Specifies whether to import any stored custom or personal
views, or to ignore the views.
Cell Range
Specifies the range of cells, using a colon (:) to designate
the range (such as A1:G15). If there are named ranges within the
worksheet, these names appear in the Cell Range menu.
Import Hidden Cells Not Saved in View
Includes any cells formatted as hidden cells in the Excel
spreadsheet.
Table
Specifies how the spreadsheet information appears in the
document.
Formatted Table
InDesign tries to preserve the
same formatting used in Excel, although the formatting of text within
each cell may not be preserved. If the spreadsheet is linked rather
than embedded, updating the link will override any formatting applied
to the table in InDesign.
Unformatted Table
The table is imported without any formatting from the spreadsheet,
and InDesign formatting is used even if
you update a linked table. When this option is selected, you can
apply a table style to the imported table.
Unformatted Tabbed Text
The table is imported as tab-delimited text, which you can
then convert to a table in InDesign or InCopy.
Formatted Only Once
InDesign preserves the same formatting used in Excel during
the initial import. Whenever you update the link to the table, any formatting
changes made to the spreadsheet are ignored in the linked table.
This option isn’t available in InCopy.
Table Style
Applies the table style you specify to the imported document.
This option is available only if Unformatted Table is selected.
Cell Alignment
Specifies the cell alignment for the imported document.
Include Inline Graphics
Preserves inline graphics from the Excel document in InDesign.
Number Of Decimal Places To Include
Specifies the number of decimal places of spreadsheet figures.
Use Typographer’s Quotes
Ensures that imported text includes left and right quotation
marks (“ ”) and apostrophes (’) instead
of straight quotation marks (" ") and apostrophes (').
You
can import (or export) a text file capable of taking advantage of
InDesign’s formatting capabilities by using the tagged text format.
Tagged-text files are text files containing information describing
the formatting you want InDesign to apply. Properly tagged text
can describe almost anything that can appear in an InDesign story,
including all paragraph-level attributes, character-level attributes,
and special characters.
For information on specifying tags,
see the Tagged Text PDF document on the InDesign CS3 DVD.
The
following options are available when you import a tagged-text file
and select Show Import Options in the Place dialog box.
Use Typographer’s Quotes
Ensures that imported text includes left and right quotation
marks (“ ”) and apostrophes (’) instead
of straight quotation marks (" ") and apostrophes (').
Remove Text Formatting
Removes formatting, such as typeface, type color, and type
style, from the imported text.
Resolve Text Style Conflicts Using
Specifies which character or paragraph style to apply when
there is a conflict between the style in the tagged-text
file and the style in the InDesign document. Select Publication
Definition to use the definition that already exists for that style
in the InDesign document. Select Tagged File Definition to use the style
as defined in the tagged text. This option creates another style
name, with “copy” appended to it in the Style panel.
Show List Of Problem Tags Before Place
Displays a list of unrecognized tags. If a list
appears, you can choose to cancel or continue the import.
If you continue, the file may not look as expected.
Comments are no longer accepted for InDesign CS3. InDesign CS4 is the current version. To
discuss InDesign CS3, please use the Adobe forum.
Comments
No screen name
said on
Feb 10, 2008
at
8:10 AM :
Is there a way to designate the top row of my Excel table as a header row, so that when I import the unformatted table into InDesign, and apply a Table Style to it on the way in, that it will automatically apply the header row style, along with the body row styles? (Or do I need to manually convert the top row to a header row after placing it?)
Bob - Adobe Writer
said on
Feb 11, 2008
at
3:18 PM :
I think you need to manually convert it.
No screen name
said on
Oct 25, 2008
at
10:25 AM :
Hi
We are tagging Index items in MSword and we have templates built to style the type there also. Here's our problem when we flow the test into InDD the body of the text is fine.
But when we go to "Create Index" we are getting strange characters, for example, when it should be an mdash we are getting an ó symbol.
Comments
Comments are no longer accepted for InDesign CS3. InDesign CS4 is the current version. To discuss InDesign CS3, please use the Adobe forum.