This content has been marked as final.
Show 6 replies
-
1. Re: Flowing Text Story from Document A to Document B
[Jongware] Mar 2, 2009 11:54 AM (in response to Bullitt667)No, that's asked too much.
You
i can
drag pages from one document to another, so perhaps you can move the end-of-document break to another page. -
2. Re: Flowing Text Story from Document A to Document B
Bullitt667 Mar 2, 2009 11:59 AM (in response to Bullitt667)That would be a great feature, though. -
3. Re: Flowing Text Story from Document A to Document B
(Kenneth_Benson) Mar 2, 2009 12:46 PM (in response to Bullitt667)> Can I take the story from Document A and make it flow to Document B
Why not just flow the story to the end of Document A and skip Document B
altogether? I put together 300-page documents all the time. I've had
more than a thousand pages in one document with no real problems.
--
Kenneth Benson
Pegasus Type, Inc.
www.pegtype.com -
4. Re: Flowing Text Story from Document A to Document B
Bullitt667 Mar 2, 2009 1:09 PM (in response to Bullitt667)Ken
Old version is 524 pages with 7300 inline grayscale photos and 8 files. I started to do it all in one book, but it takes a fairly long time just to save a 72 page document (average 60 to 85 MB).
Anyway, I've got 8 files that will probably expand by 100 pages total to the 624 neighborhood. I was looking for an easy way to flow new products into the catalog and still keep the file sizes manageable.
I would think it would be hard to work with a file in the neighborhood of 750 MB. -
5. Re: Flowing Text Story from Document A to Document B
(Kenneth_Benson) Mar 2, 2009 6:58 PM (in response to Bullitt667)> I would think it would be hard to work with a file in the neighborhood of 750 MB.
Indeed. I've not got a file here over 41 mb. None of my books has any
more than a few hundred referenced pictures in it, though.
--
Kenneth Benson
Pegasus Type, Inc.
www.pegtype.com -
6. Re: Flowing Text Story from Document A to Document B
P Spier Mar 3, 2009 4:23 AM (in response to Bullitt667)So what happens, under your ideal plan of flowing from one doc to the next, when you make a change in doc one? Does doc two overflow, and so on down the line, until doc last is overset?
Is 72 pages really sacred? Why not just add a couple of pages to any particular document until you find the size is becoming a problem, then split that one into two parts and re-make the book file?
Peter


