The one thing I would say is if you’re using software find the experts (like I did :) ) and stay current with whatever you’re using. I just know that I would be gutted to not use InDesign in future work. If I got a new job tomorrow they may be using Quark, or ventura, or Xara or Scribus or whatever, and I think I’d just go into that job and do what was needed using those apps.Īs I said earlier I know the core concepts of page layout and typography, using styles and things like that. I’ve just learned and used what I’ve needed to because the job needed it. I don’t rate one page layout over the other. I basically taught myself InDesign (ok I had a lot of help from the very guys and gals here at InDesign Secrets and from Michael Murphy at ) I begged to get CS3 update and they bought it in.Ĭoming from a Quark background into Ventura then to InDesign I had core concepts already built into my working day. It was around the time that I really needed running heads to be automated and paragraph numbering to be automated that InDesign CS3 came out. It had lots of features that InDesign didn’t have in CS2. In using Ventura I found it really unstable, but other than that it was a good typesetting program. It was in 2005 I left the job to pursue other ventures and I wound up in job that needed technical books converted from Ventura to InDesign. I learned Quark from 2000 – 2005 as it was used both in work and in college (where I went on block-release from work). That’s not my point at all! I just think we can all learn from exploring the alternatives even if we’re all still going to be using InDesign. I definitely don’t want this discussion to devolve into a QX versus ID argument. I know that QuarkXPress, for example, still has plenty of features that InDesign lacks. I’m not being judgemental about any of these. Are you using (I mean for real work, not just playing with) other page-layout programs, such as the open-source Scribus, or Apple Pages? What do you like or don’t like about them? (I haven’t even gotten close to Scribus, after the installation instructions began with “Install the Xcode developer tools…” Gah!).How much are you using QuarkXPress, and why?.If you have used ID2Q, why? What worked and didn’t work? Are you in a bi-layout-platform world, and if so, did you have to later bring the files back to InDesign with Q2ID?.But my friend’s question led me to start asking more questions in my head… questions I wanted to ask you, the InDesignSecrets reader (please respond in the comments below): After having used XPress almost daily from 1988 to 2001, I find that I very rarely get around to launching it these days. I was recently asked by a colleague if I had any experience with Markzware’s ID2Q XTension, which lets you open InDesign files in a little program called QuarkXPress.
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