![]() ![]() Click in the text frame, and then use File > Place. Then click within the frame on the right page. First, click on the linking triangle on the lower right side of the frame on the left page. If using Facing Pages, Link the two frames. If using Facing Pages, draw one on both the left and right pages. The setup for doing that is easy, but if you choose to use Facing Pages in Publisher there is one trick to get started:Ĭreate your document, with a Master Page.ĭraw a Text Frame on the Master Page of the size you want to use for the document. You just click in a text frame, then use File > Place, select the file, and Open it. chapter headings larger than the rest of the text with a nice big gap between the chapter header and the start of the text and the relevant indent at each new paragraph, but with no paragraph line space, typical 'novel' layout. So can anybody point me to a good online tutorial – video or text tutorial – on how to prepare a Text document or Pages document and how to import that to 'flow' the text throughout the book while retaining all the formatting.Īlternatively, as I have to do all the formatting as I only have a PDF of this 100,000 word novel and I have to cut and paste that PDF text into either Text Edit or Pages and format everything anyway, so I suppose I could just cut and paste that text into Affinity Publisher and do all the formatting there if need be – swings and roundabouts really, but I'd like to know the fastest way of getting a text only PDF document cut and paste into Affinity Publisher so I can format all the text i.e. ![]() I also don't have Microsoft Word anymore, I'm using Apple's own Pages (but I have Text Edit too). how to prepare the Word Document and import it into InDesign while retaining all the formatting options, but I don't know how to do this in Affinity Publisher. I have a novel that I want to typeset and I know exactly how the process works in InDesign i.e. ![]() Used InDesign for years but latest Mac OS on my iMac does not support my old CS5 so I bought Affinity Publisher as I'd heard it does the same job as InDesign and after playing with it and watching some YouTube tutorials it seems to be pretty decent. ![]()
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