Adobe InDesign CS3 Bible

All InDesign objects ‚ unassigned shapes , text and picture frames , and straight and curved lines ‚ have at least two levels of selection. You can select the object itself, or you can select the rectangular bounding box that encloses the object. (For rectangular objects, the bounding box and the shape are the same.) The tool that you choose ‚ either the Direct Selection tool or the Selection tool ‚ determines what you can do to the object you select:

Here's how to select a frame or line with the Selection tool:

  1. Select the Selection tool by clicking on it or, if the Type tool is not selected, by pressing V.

  2. Move the pointer anywhere within an object, then click and release.

    To select an unassigned shape with no background color , you must click on its edge. If you click within the shape, the object is not selected.

When you release the mouse button, the object you clicked on ‚ or the object's bounding box if it has one ‚ is displayed with a blue outline and eight resizing handles (four on the corners and four on the midpoints of the sides), as shown in Figure 11-1. Figure 11-2 shows the same text frame selected via the Direct Selection tool, with one of the points being dragged to reshape the frame.

Figure 11-1: When you select a frame with the Selection tool, in this case an oval text frame, the bounding box is displayed with eight resizing handles.

Figure 11-2: When you select a frame with the Direct Selection tool, in this case an oval text frame, the frame's control points, or nodes, are displayed. Here, I am moving one of those points. Note how it reshapes ‚ not resizes ‚ the frame.

Tip ‚  

You can also select an object with the Selection tool by clicking and dragging a rectangle. Simply click on an empty portion of the page or pasteboard near the object you want to select and drag out a rectangle that intersects the object (you don't have to enclose the entire object). Clicking and dragging is a handy way to select multiple objects.

Selecting overlapping objects

You'll often have multiple objects overlapping in your layout, with some objects completely obscured by others. So how do you select them? By using the new Select menu option in the Object menu. Figure 11-3 shows the Select submenu and its options.

Figure 11-3: The new Select submenu in the Object menu.

New Feature ‚  

InDesign CS adds the Select submenu, which provides new controls for object selection, to the Object menu.

The first four options let you select another object relative to the currently selected object:

If no objects are selected, InDesign will base its selection on the creation order.

Tip ‚  

You can also access these four selection options by Control+clicking or right-clicking an object and choosing the Select menu from the contextual menu.

The Select submenu has four other options:

Selecting multiple objects

When an object is selected, you can move or modify it. When several objects are selected, you can move or modify all the objects at once, saving you the time and drudgery of selecting and performing the same modification to several objects one at a time. You have several options for selecting multiple objects. You can

Deselecting objects

A selected object will remain selected until you cause it to become deselected, and there are many reasons you might want to deselect an item. For example, you might want to deselect a text frame if you want to see how it looks when displayed without the frame's in and out ports visible. Or you might want to simply "let go" of an object you just finished working on. There are several ways to deselect a selected object. You can

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