InDesign 2.0: Pasting As Text Only on Windows

Tim Cole has been hassling me to do this for 12 months. Today he found me in a receptive, VB mode, so here it is.

Paste as Text Only (Windows zip downloadable)

Just download, unzip and place the .exe into your InDesign 2.0 Scripts folder.

Instead of using Edit>Paste, select the insertion point or textframe you wish to paste into, and using the Windows>Scripts palette, double click on this script. It will then paste as text only — no formatting, into relevant item.

For MacOS users, Tim has a MacOS version here: Paste as Text Only (MacOS .sit from adobeevangelists.com).

InDesign 2.0: Adding Tab to Table Cells

Stephen Canning from Creative Consultants asked if there was a Windows version of the Add Tab to Cell Contents Script (MacOS .sit from adobeevangelists.com).

I found an hour spare, quickly relearnt Visual Basic, and managed to pop this out:

Add Tab to Beginning of Cell (zip downloadable)

Just download, unzip and place the .exe into your InDesign 2.0 Scripts folder.

Select Table Cells you would like to insert a Tab Character into, then run this by double clicking on the script in the Window>Scripts palette.

InDesign 2.0: Photoshop to InDesign workflow

[1546] InDesign CS LogoVisit the new InDesign Prepress Section: Adobe InDesign: Prepress Techniques

There are a variety of methods for taking a Photoshop file and placing to into InDesign. After over a year of InDesign 2.0 in production use, I thought it opportune to expose another workflow choice taken by these customers. It directly relates to the placement of files from Photoshop into InDesign 2.0 layouts.

Apart from supporting the traditional TIFF (.tif) file format, InDesign also permits the placement of JPEG (.jpeg, .jpe, .jpg), Macintosh PICT, GIF, Portable Network Graphics (PNG) and other bitmap-style formats.

The most commonly touted method is to save an Adobe Photoshop .psd file, and place this into InDesign 2.0. Transparency, otherwise known as alpha channel support, is fully supported in InDesign 2.0. What does not work, however, are vector layers. When placed into InDesign 2.0, vector layers including text layers are rasterised at the resolution of the Photoshop file (or transparency flattener, depending on the mechanics of the file).

[1340] 01_transfile.jpg

Example 1: Photoshop image, containing Transparency as shown by the checkerboard pattern.

[1341] 02_transplaced.jpg

Example 2: The same Photoshop image, containing Transparency, placed into InDesign. The transparency is respected.

With Photoshop 6.0, and included in Photoshop 7.0, Adobe added the ability to save a Photoshop PDF file. Photoshop PDF has many benefits, and also shares many of the features of the Photoshop PSD format.

This format, like the Photoshop PSD format, has the following features

  • Transparency support.
  • Photoshop layers. including text layers, adjustment layers, layer masks etc are saved in the same file

Additionally, Photoshop PDF has the following features that Photoshop PSD does not have:

  • Its PDF. can be displayed in the free Adobe Acrobat Reader
  • Vector layers. keeping text/vector shapes kept as vector shapes for crisp printing and screen viewing)
  • Security. using the security features of Adobe PDF, your images can be locked from viewing/editing by other people.
  • Compression. images can be compressed using ZIP(lossless: no pixels are hurt) or JPEG (lossy: image data is changed)

With InDesign, Adobe has added support for the placement of PDF files without having to resort to “making and EPS” to ensure quality output. InDesign 2.0 also permits the placement of PDF files that contain transparency information – and holds the transparency information.

To save a Photoshop PDF for placement into InDesign, the go to File>Save As.

[1342] 03_pdf.jpg

Example 4: File>Save As. Choosing Photoshop PDF, here I am saving the layers (permitting late stage editing of the text layer if I wish)

[1343] 04_pdf.jpg

Example 5: File>Save As. Choosing Photoshop PDF: a subsequent dialog box permits the saving of Transparency, applying security and in this particular file: retain the vector data as vector.

This Photoshop PDF can be placed into InDesign – the the same as any PDF. When placed into InDesign 2.0, the file looks similar to the following. Notice I am only seeing the Proxy View of the image:

[1344] 05_lrplaced.jpg

[1345] 06_hrplaced.jpg

In the above example, I have turned on “High Quality Display”. The vector quality of the text, and any vector shape layers (including vector clipping groups) are respected; just as they are respected when printing or exporting as PDF or EPS.

Additionally, it is worth noting that the file extensions supported by Photoshop PDF are .pdf and .pdp

[1346] 07_pdf.gif

What is the difference? Nothing, apart from the file extension. The contents are exactly the same. The reason why there are two options is for the Windows platform. On Windows, the extension is used to associate a file with an application. .pdf is associated with Adobe Acrobat. When you double click on a file, this dot extension is used to assist Windows in determining which application to launch to view the file. With InDesign 2.0, when using the contextual menu “Graphics>Edit Original“, this association is also used. As this is a Photoshop PDF, and normally when editing/viewing the file – you would like to show it in Photoshop, an additional extension is permitted: .pdp, or Photoshop PDF.

I would recommend using the .pdp extension when saving a file from Photoshop as a Photoshop PDF. There were changes in InDesign 2.0 and 2.0.1 to support .pdp as equivilent to .pdf.

For MacOS users, the extension for InDesign 2.0 files is .indd

In fact, I would always use Photoshop PDF as the primary format when taking files from Adobe Photoshop to InDesign. There are no downsides: the file size is smaller, vector text and layers are supported and kept as vector.