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Designing the Adobe InDesign Way

You're reading from   Designing the Adobe InDesign Way Explore 100+ recipes for creating stunning layouts with the leading desktop publishing software

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801074438
Length 564 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Andy Gardiner Andy Gardiner
Author Profile Icon Andy Gardiner
Andy Gardiner
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Customizing the InDesign Interface and New Document Settings 2. Chapter 2: Working with Text in InDesign FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Creating and Using Tables 4. Chapter 4: Using the InDesign Frame Tools 5. Chapter 5: Adding Images to Your Documents 6. Chapter 6: Taking Images Further 7. Chapter 7: Creating and Applying Parent Pages 8. Chapter 8: Working with Colors and Gradients 9. Chapter 9: Formatting with Paragraph and Character Styles 10. Chapter 10: Generating and Updating a Table of Contents 11. Chapter 11: Creating Interactivity and PDF Forms 12. Chapter 12: Using and Collaborating with CC Libraries 13. Chapter 13: Preflighting and Outputting 14. Index 15. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix: InDesign Tools Panel at a Glance

Creating automated story jumps

In some types of documents, such as magazines or newspapers, you might have a story that jumps to another page later in the document. In order to make it easy for the reader to continue, they will often have a bit of text under a frame saying Continued on page x. The problem with manually adding directions for these story jumps is they can quickly get out of synchronization with the content. For example, the instructions say Continued on Page 23 but the story has moved to page 25 because somebody added a double-page spread to the document somewhere between the two parts of the story.

In this recipe, we will look at how to create story jumps with numbering that updates automatically when the different parts of the story move to a different page.

Getting ready

To complete this recipe, open InDesign on your system and create a new document with 12 pages, as shown in the Creating a new document recipe in Chapter 1. You should also be comfortable...

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