When you place a text or spreadsheet file, you can specify options to determine how the imported text is formatted.
For a video on importing content into InDesign, see www.adobe.com/go/vid0067.
If you haven’t already designated an existing frame to receive text, the pointer becomes a loaded text icon, ready to flow text wherever you click or drag.
If you receive an alert that the requested filter wasn’t found, you may be trying to place a file from a different word-processing application or from an earlier version of Microsoft® Word, such as Word 6. Open the file in its original application and save it as RTF, which preserves most formatting.
If the imported Microsoft Excel document displays red dots in cells, adjust cell size or text attributes so that overset content becomes visible. You can also place the file as unformatted tabbed text, and then convert the tabbed text to a table.
If you select Show Import Options when placing a Word file or an RTF file, you can choose from these options:
If you want to import unformatted text and formatted tables, import the text without formatting, and then paste the tables from Word into InDesign.
To determine how these style name conflicts are resolved, select an option from the Paragraph Style Conflicts and Character Style Conflicts menu. Choosing Use InDesign Style Definition causes the imported style text to be formatted based on the InDesign style. Choosing Redefine InDesign Style causes the imported style text to be formatted based on the Word style, and changes existing InDesign text formatted with that style. Choosing Auto Rename causes the imported Word styles to be renamed. For example, if InDesign and Word have a Subheading style, the imported Word style is renamed Subheading_wrd_1 when Auto Rename is selected.
If you select Show Import Options when placing a text file, you can choose from these options:
You can choose from these options when importing an Excel file:
You can import (or export) a text file capable of taking advantage of InDesign’s formatting capabilities by using the tagged text format. Tagged-text files are text files containing information describing the formatting you want InDesign to apply. Properly tagged text can describe almost anything that can appear in an InDesign story, including all paragraph-level attributes, character-level attributes, and special characters.
For information on specifying tags, see the Tagged Text PDF document on the InDesign CS3 DVD.
The following options are available when you import a tagged-text file and select Show Import Options in the Place dialog box.
You can then select custom presets from the Preset menu in the Import Options dialog box whenever you open a Word or RTF file.