First Look: InDesign 4

Characterized as "future technologies," will these features be in this Spring's upcoming fourth release of InDesign, dubbed CS 2.0?

David Blatner reports on InDesignupdate that ad hoc demon­stra­tions from Adobe pro­vid­ed sneak peeks into the future of InDesign, though the soft­ware mak­er was as care­ful as ever not to com­mit to inclu­sion of any fea­tures in the upcom­ing release of InDesign CS 2.0–which Quark VS InDesign pre­dicts will be announced with­in the next 45 days and released inside 90.

Among the new fea­tures are:

  • The abil­i­ty to tog­gle lay­ers and lay­er comps in placed Photoshop PSD files.
  • A revamp to the Microsoft Word import fil­ter that allows map­ping of Word styles to InDesign’s.
  • Anchoring of objects that appear out­side text frames to text loca­tions inside text frames–similar to FrameMaker.
  • Drag-and-drop text.
  • The abil­i­ty to move pages via a new Move Pages dia­log box.
  • And an Apply Next Style fea­ture that appears to be able to apply an entire string of cas­cad­ing style sheets to a whole sto­ry with a sin­gle click.

For more, read David’s post on InDesignupdate.

7 thoughts on “First Look: InDesign 4

  1. Jay S.

    I like the idea Apply Next Style func­tion. It would be a huge boost in pro­duc­tiv­i­ty for those of us in the mag­a­zine and news­pa­per indus­try. Now all they need to do come out with a tool to con­vert Quark 6 to InDesign CS. …we’re waiting…

  2. Samuel John Klein

    Well, lets see…

    The abil­i­ty to tog­gle lay­ers and lay­er comps in placed Photoshop PSD files.

    Parity with Quark’s PSD Import…Adobe’s pay­ing close attention.

    A revamp to the Microsoft Word import fil­ter that allows map­ping of Word styles to InDesign’s.

    Nice. Nice. That will save a step or four­teen, if I think to for­mat my .docs first.

    Anchoring of objects that appear out­side text frames to text loca­tions inside text frames—similar to FrameMaker.

    Alright, I’ll cop. Time to let my igno­rance show. I’ve nev­er used FrameMaker, so I’ve got an hon­est, ques­tion: what is that good for?

    Drag-and-drop text.

    Needed. Have been able to get along with­out it, but nice.

    The abil­i­ty to move pages via a new Move Pages dia­log box.

    Yes. Good move. I’m no dum­my, but I don’t always get along with mov­ing pages on the pages palette. Wait, maybe I am a dum­my. Skip that. B-)

    And an Apply Next Style fea­ture that appears to be able to apply an entire string of cas­cad­ing style sheets to a whole sto­ry with a sin­gle click.

    Almost drool­wor­thy. Bring this on.

  3. Pariah S. Burke

    Jay,

    I had start­ed a reply to this the oth­er day but got called away.

    I like the idea Apply Next Style func­tion. It would be a huge boost in pro­duc­tiv­i­ty for those of us in the mag­a­zine and news­pa­per industry. 

    Ohhhh, yeah.

    I can see it now: One click to get the byline, deck, nut graf, body, sub heads, end mark…

    Now all they need to do come out with a tool to con­vert Quark 6 to InDesign CS. …we’re waiting…

    This is a two-fold prob­lem for Adobe:
    First is a mat­ter of tech­nol­o­gy. The QuarkXPress 6 project file for­mat is pro­pri­etary and kept close to the vest. Since Quark intro­duced the multiple-layout project mod­el, the file for­mats have changed rad­i­cal­ly. Without that file spec, Adobe can’t build an import fil­ter (legal­ly).

    Second, is mar­ket­ing: How far do they sup­port Quark switch­ers? In my hum­ble but very expe­ri­ence opin­ion, I think they need to update the import fil­ter through Quark 6. They can leave XPress 5 alone if nec­es­sary. I think only sev­en peo­ple bought Quark 5, and I’m two of them. :-) Whether they will need to import Quark 7 files depends on how strong a show­ing 7 has in its first quarter.

    My bet is that, if any­one comes out with a Quark 6 import fil­ter for InDesign, it will be ALAP. They have access to both code­bas­es that nei­ther Quark nor Adobe has.

  4. Pariah S. Burke

    Sam,

    Parity with Quark’s PSD Import…Adobe’s pay­ing close attention.

    Indeed, and they’ve one-upped Quark with sup­port for Layer Comps.

    Nice. Nice. That will save a step or four­teen, if I think to for­mat my .docs first.

    The main use for this, I think, will be design depart­ments. Most edi­to­r­i­al and copy writ­ers use Word, often with styles. This will ease the job of the design­er who has to take the sto­ries in Word .DOC for­mat into InD.

    Honestly, I would love to see InCopy gain more ground in edi­to­r­i­al work­flows. It does every­thing a writer needs from Word, but inte­grates so much more ele­gant­ly with InD–not to men­tion mak­ing the cre­ative tasks eas­i­er on the designer.

    Alright, I’ll cop. Time to let my igno­rance show. I’ve nev­er used FrameMaker, so I’ve got an hon­est, ques­tion: what is that good for?

    Think of FrameMaker as InDesign for pro­gram­ming types. Yeah, it’s as ugly and scarey as you’re imagining.

    Most tech­ni­cal man­u­als and many longer, com­pli­cat­ed lay­out books are pro­duced in FrameMaker. It has bet­ter sup­port for math equa­tions, automa­tion, and auto-numbering (includ­ing auto-numbering and track­ing cap­tions, illus­tra­tions, graphs, charts, etc.) than InD, PageMaker, or Quark.

    Now, in any decent lay­out appli­ca­tion you can stick images into text inline–an illus­tra­tion inside the text flow, for exam­ple, so that, if the text flows onto anoth­er page, the image goes with it. In FrameMaker you can actu­al­ly place images out­side the text flow, but anchored with­in it, so a chart appears in the page mar­gin instead of wrap­ping the text, but if that sto­ry flows to anoth­er page, the mar­gin chart goes with it. This is what will be added to InDesign, mean­ing, con­ceiv­ablly, that man­u­al repo­si­tion­ing of images tied to par­tic­u­lar por­tions of copy could be a thing of the past.

    Yes. Good move. I’m no dum­my, but I don’t always get along with mov­ing pages on the pages palette. Wait, maybe I am a dum­my. Skip that. B-)

    I always tell my stu­dents that using InD’s Pages Palette is like a video game: You need good hand-eye coor­di­na­tion to posi­tion the cur­sor in just the right spot…

  5. Chirs

    Why would you want to import into ID? its a waste of time. I like to make mon­ey using my pro­duc­tion app – and that what XPress is – its the best return for your dol­lar. 6.5 rocks, and Quark has changed soup to nuts. 

    ID is slow, out­put is aver­age, and the cou­pld of cool fea­tures its has over XPress, are a dis­trac­tion to the truth.

    XPress is a far supe­ri­or prod­uct; Adobe is a far supe­ri­or mar­ket­ing machine. Don’t buy into the hype. Even get­ting ID for free should clue you in – your going to lose pre­cious dead­line time, and qual­i­ty of output.

  6. Chirs

    Honestly, I would love to see InCopy gain more ground in edi­to­r­i­al work­flows. It does every­thing a writer needs from Word, but inte­grates so much more ele­gant­ly with InD—not to men­tion mak­ing the cre­ative tasks eas­i­er on the designer.”

    What are you tal­ing about? Have you ever worked in Editorial work­flow? Editors and copy­fit­ters do not need to be con­cerned about design – which is why CopyDesk, XPress and Quark Publishing Systems (QPS) are the best solu­tions in any com­bi­na­tion InCopy and ID are ten years behind in this department.

  7. Pariah S. Burke

    Chirs,

    It’s obvi­ous that you are a pas­sion­ate and ded­i­cat­ed sup­port­er of Quark. Good for you! I admire a per­son with passion.

    You should show the world your pas­sion. Put one of our pro-Quark (or anti-InDesign) but­ton links on your web­site. You’ll find quite a selec­tion on the Choose A Side page.

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