You can edit text in InDesign either on the layout page or in the story editor window. Writing and editing in a story editor window allows the entire story to appear in the typeface, size, and spacing that you specify in Preferences, without layout or formatting distractions.
Each story appears in a different story editor window. All the text in the story appears in the story editor, including overset text. You can open several story editor windows simultaneously, including multiple instances of the same story. A vertical depth ruler indicates how much text is filling the frame, and a line indicates where text is overset.
When you edit a story, changes are reflected in the layout window. Open stories are listed in the Window menu. You cannot create a new story in a story editor window.

Open the Story Editor
To open another instance of the same
story editor window, make the story editor active, and choose Window >
Arrange > New Window.
Return to the layout window
In Story Editor, do one of the following:Choose Edit > Edit In Layout. When you use this method, the layout view displays the same text selection or insertion-point location as last appeared in the story editor, and the story window remains open but moves behind the layout window.
Click in the layout window. The story window remains open but moves behind the layout window.
Close the story editor window.
Choose the document name from the bottom of the Window menu.
Show or hide Story Editor itemsYou can show or hide the style name column and the depth ruler, and you can expand or collapse footnotes. These settings affect all open story editor windows, as well as all subsequently opened windows.
Story Editor preferences|
Attribute |
Icon |
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Table |
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Inline objects |
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XML tags |
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Variables |
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Hyperlink sources |
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Hyperlink anchors |
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Footnotes |
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Index markers |
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Text from inline frames does not appear in the parent story editor window, but it can appear in its own story editor window. Table text does not appear in story editor windows.
I am frustrated that you don't describe what overset text is when it is found in
the story Editor. I am not working in a table. I am just working on a full page
and the text won't show on the layout page. It stops right where overset text
is indicated as starting. But there isn't enough explanation about overset text.
I can't seem to get it to show.
Bob - Adobe Writer
said on
Mar 10, 2008
at
9:02 AM :
Whenever a text frame holds more text than can fit in a frame, a red plus sign (+) appears in the lower right corner. This remaining unseen text is called overset text. I'll make a note of including the definition in this topic as well. Thanks for your feedback.No screen name said on Sep 1, 2008 at 3:06 PM :
I'm trying to figure out how to double space text in an Adobe text box in InDesign. When I search here I get information on spacing before and after a paragraph, but nothing about internal line spacing. Where can I find this information?
Bob - Adobe Writer
said on
Sep 1, 2008
at
3:17 PM :
"Double-spacing" is a typing term sometimes used in word processors. In InDesign, you use the Leading feature to change the spacing between lines in a paragraph. For example, if you're using 12-point type, you want the leading value to be 24 points (or more) to create a double-space effect. Search for "change leading."
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