You can edit text in InDesign either on the layout page or in the story editor window. Writing and editing in a story editor window allows the entire story to appear in the typeface, size, and spacing that you specify, without layout or formatting distractions.
Each story appears in a different story editor window. All the text in the story appears in the story editor, including overset text. You can open several story editor windows simultaneously, including multiple instances of the same story. A vertical depth ruler indicates how much text is filling the frame, and a line indicates where text is overset.
When you edit a story, changes are reflected in the layout window. Open stories are listed in the Window menu. You cannot create a new story in a story editor window.
Choose Edit > Edit In Layout. When you use this method, the layout view displays the same text selection or insertion-point location as last appeared in the story editor, and the story window remains open but moves behind the layout window.
Click in the layout window. The story window remains open but moves behind the layout window.
Close the story editor window.
Choose the document name from the bottom of the Window menu.
You can show or hide the style name column and the depth ruler, and you can expand or collapse footnotes. These settings affect all open story editor windows, as well as all subsequently opened windows.
Attribute |
Icon |
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Table |
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Inline objects |
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XML tags |
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Variables |
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Hyperlink sources |
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Hyperlink anchors |
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Footnotes |
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Index markers |
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Ruby |
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Warichu |
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Tate-Chu-Yoko |
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Kenten |
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Text from inline frames does not appear in the parent story editor window, but it can appear in its own story editor window. Table text does not appear in story editor windows.