

Second, there’s a Clear Local Overrides dialog box that shows you what formatting has been applied over and above the paragraph styles and lets you strip it away with a single click. In other words, with one click, it will create italic, bold, and bold-italic styles, then do the find/change to apply them throughout your whole document: First, there is a way to automatically create and apply the basic character styles for you. For example, my Blatner Tools suite of plug-ins from dtptools includes two features that are pretty nifty (if I do say so myself). Fortunately, there are some ways to automate it. Obviously, if you had to do this to 50 stories a day, you’d get tired of the three-step process pretty fast. The result: All the overrides you didn’t want are gone, and all the overrides you did want (italic, bold, etc.) remains! Automating Cleanup It removes all the local formatting, but leaves the character styles. Most users don’t even know this button exists, but it’s awesome.

Here’s a three-step process that you can use to scrub your stories clean in InDesign: And there’s even ways to automate it, which I’ll get to in a minute. They don’t realize that this has just made your (InDesign user) life harder!įortunately, the solution is relatively easy. For example, a lot of Word users like to select all the text and change the font or size to read it more easily. The problem: Someone has applied local formatting (also called local overrides) on top of the paragraph style.
#Shortcat for italic indesgin plus#
#Shortcat for italic indesgin how to#
Okay, it’s time to write up one of the most important “indesign secrets” of all… this is information that literally every InDesign user should know, but very few do: How to remove some of formatting on text, while leaving other formatting.
