April 2003
Intermediate to advanced
448 pages
8h 26m
English
Importing graphics into your InDesign documents can be very similar to the way you work in QuarkXPress, but InDesign also offers some new ways for you to be more creative and efficient when building your pages. For instance, it supports more flexible ways of creating graphic frames and a wider range of import options.
As in QuarkXPress, you can build placeholder frames on your page and import graphics into these frames. Instead of the Get Picture command in QuarkXPress, you use the Place command from the File menu (or press Command-D/Ctrl-D) to select an image to import into the frame. (We discuss the file formats which InDesign supports in the next chapter.)
As we discuss in Chapter ...
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