Adobe InDesign CS3 Bible

The standalone InCopy application looks and works very much like the new InDesign Story Editor. You'll also find a bevy of familiar panes ‚ Notes, Scripts, Swatches, Tags, Tools, and the various text editing panes ‚ in the Window menu. You'll also find the standard Edit and Type menu options to change text attributes and do spell checking. Plus you'll find many of the standard InDesign preferences panes.

What's different? Plenty.

Story views

First, there are three panes in which to view the story. The Story pane is the plainest view, essentially the same as the InDesign Story Editor. Here, you work on text as if you were in a word processor, with applied styles shown at left. Figure F-4 shows this pane. The Layout pane shows the story as it appears in InDesign. The Galley pane is like the Story pane, except that each line breaks as it does in InDesign, so you can see where lines end and whether the last lines in paragraphs have room for more text or whether small text deletions could easily eliminate a short last line during copy fitting.

Figure F-4: Adobe InCopy, with a layout viewed in the Story pane.

Note ‚  

Although this seems counterintuitive, you don't actually work on InCopy story files. You need to open the InDesign file in InCopy. InCopy will then load the InCopy files as needed. The reason that InCopy has all these separate story files is so multiple users can work on the same layout, but on different stories, at the same time. You can open and edit InCopy story files in InCopy, but you won't see the layout or line breaks properly.

Note ‚  

Note the bars that indicate different InCopy stories ‚ you can display and hide stories by clicking the triangles to the left of the story name .

Story checkout, check in, and saving

When you open an InDesign file in InCopy, you need to check out stories to edit them, and check them in to make them available to others, as described in the previous section. To check out stories, go to the story in any of the panes, then choose File ‚ Check Out Story, or press z +Y or Ctrl+Y. You check stories back in by choosing File ‚ Check In Story, or pressing Option+ z +W or Ctrl+Alt+W, or by choosing File ‚ Check In All, or pressing Option+Shift+ z +W or Ctrl+Alt+Shift+W. The Story List pane (Window ‚ Story List) shows which stories are already checked out.

You can also choose File ‚ Cancel Checkout to make a story available to others without saving any changes you made. Choose File ‚ Revert Story instead to undo changes made since the last save but keep the story checked out for your use.

To save a story, you have four options in the File menu:

Revisions tracking

InCopy can track who made what changes to InDesign files. To enable such revisions tracking, choose Changes ‚ Track Changes in Current Story, or press Shift+ z +H or Ctrl+Shift+H. If multiple stories are open, you can choose Changes ‚ Enable Tracking in All Stories.

When reviewing changes, you can move from change to change by choosing Changes ‚ Next Change, or pressing Option+Shift+ z +right arrow or Ctrl+Alt+Shift+_right arrow. You can move backward by choosing Changes ‚ Previous Change, or pressing Option+Shift+ z +left arrow or Ctrl+Alt+Shift+left arrow. You can accept individual changes by choosing Changes ‚ Accept Change, or pressing Option+ z +=, and you can accept all changes by choosing Changes ‚ Accept All Changes, or Option+Shift+ z +=. Likewise, you can reject changes individually by choosing Changes ‚ Reject Change, or pressing Option+ z +- (hyphen) or Ctrl+Alt+- (hyphen), or globally by choosing Changes ‚ Reject All Changes, or pressing Option+Shift+ z +- (hyphen) or Ctrl+Alt+Shift+- (hyphen). When reviewing changes, you can get information on who made the change and when by having the Change Info pane open (Window ‚ Change Info, or Shift+ z +F3 or Ctrl+Shift+F3).

Tip ‚  

You can hide changes as you make them by choosing View ‚ Hide Changes, or pressing z +7 or Ctrl+7. To review changes, you'll need to make changes visible

Note ‚  

You can also use the Change Tracking pane to move among revisions and accept or reject changes. The iconic palette offers the following buttons from left to right: Track Changes in Current Story, Show/Hide Changes, Previous Change, Next Change, Accept Change, Reject Change, Accept All Changes, and Reject All Changes.

Special features

The editing and formatting features are the same as in InDesign, so this appendix does not cover them. Likewise, the Notes features are the same as described earlier in this appendix. But there are some specific InCopy features you should know about:

Refer to Figure F-4 for an illustration of these three panes, as well as the Change Tracking pane.

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