Adobe 65009333 User Guide - Page 148

Hyperlinks, Hyperlinks panel overview

Page 148 highlights

USING INCOPY CS4 142 Text • Use the arrow keys to navigate among footnotes. • In Galley view or Story view, you can click the footnote icon to expand or collapse footnotes. You can expand or collapse all footnotes by right-clicking (Windows) or Ctrl-clicking (Mac OS) a footnote and choosing Expand All Footnotes or Collapse All Footnotes. • You can select and apply character and paragraph formatting to footnote text. You can also select and change the appearance of the footnote reference number, but the recommended method is using the Document Footnote Options dialog box. • When you cut or copy text that includes the footnote reference number, the footnote text is also added to the clipboard. If you copy the text to a different document, the footnotes in that text use the characteristics of the new document's numbering and layout appearance. • If you accidentally delete the footnote number at the start of the footnote text, you can add it back by placing the insertion point at the beginning of the footnote text, right-clicking (Windows) or Control-clicking (Mac OS), and choosing Insert Special Character > Markers > Footnote Number. • Text wrap has no effect on footnote text. • If you clear overrides and character styles on a paragraph that includes a footnote reference marker, the footnote reference numbers lose the attributes you applied in the Document Footnote Options dialog box. Hyperlinks Hyperlinks panel overview You can create hyperlinks so that when you export to Adobe PDF or SWF in InDesign, a viewer can click a link to jump to other locations in the same document, to other documents, or to websites. Hyperlinks you export to PDF or SWF in InCopy are not active. A source is hyperlinked text or a hyperlinked graphic. A destination is the URL, file, email address, page, text anchor, or shared destination to which a hyperlink jumps. A source can jump to only one destination, but any number of sources can jump to the same destination. Note: If you want the source text to be generated from the destination text, insert a cross-reference instead of adding a hyperlink. See "Cross-references" on page 148. Updated 29 April 2009

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142
USING INCOPY CS4
Text
Use the arrow keys to navigate among footnotes.
In Galley view or Story view, you can click the footnote icon to expand or collapse footnotes. You can expand or
collapse all footnotes by right-clicking (Windows) or Ctrl-clicking (Mac
OS) a footnote and choosing Expand All
Footnotes or Collapse All Footnotes.
You can select and apply character and paragraph formatting to footnote text. You can also select and change the
appearance of the footnote reference number, but the recommended method is using the Document Footnote
Options dialog box.
When you cut or copy text that includes the footnote reference number, the footnote text is also added to the
clipboard. If you copy the text to a different document, the footnotes in that text use the characteristics of the new
document’s numbering and layout appearance.
If you accidentally delete the footnote number at the start of the footnote text, you can add it back by placing the
insertion point at the beginning of the footnote text, right-clicking (Windows) or Control-clicking (Mac
OS), and
choosing Insert Special Character
> Markers
> Footnote Number.
Text wrap has no effect on footnote text.
If you clear overrides and character styles on a paragraph that includes a footnote reference marker, the footnote
reference numbers lose the attributes you applied in the Document Footnote Options dialog box.
Hyperlinks
Hyperlinks panel overview
You can create hyperlinks so that when you export to Adobe PDF or SWF in InDesign, a viewer can click a link to jump
to other locations in the same document, to other documents, or to websites. Hyperlinks you export to PDF or SWF
in InCopy are not active.
A
source
is hyperlinked text or a hyperlinked graphic. A
destination
is the URL, file, email address, page, text anchor,
or shared destination to which a hyperlink jumps. A source can jump to only one destination, but any number of
sources can jump to the same destination.
Note:
If you want the source text to be generated from the destination text, insert a cross-reference instead of adding a
hyperlink. See “
Cross-references
” on page
148.
Updated 29 April 2009