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Participating Frequently
January 9, 2014
Question

FM 11 Trial Help

  • January 9, 2014
  • 3 replies
  • 564 views

Hi,

I’ve downloaded the program (FM11 trial), in order to create service manuals.  I have created many portions of them in Word, which are highly effective, however, due to the number of graphics and word graphics added to them, the docuemnts get very large very fast.  I am struggling, as I do not have a tonne of time to invest in learning your product.  Do you have any videos specific to my need?

  1. 1.       Take a word document and convert to framemaker with existing formatting and images from multiple documents.
  2. 2.       Combine into one framemaker document (with images stored separately).
  3. 3.       Add in table of contents/figures/references etc to final document

 

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    3 replies

    Matt-Tech Comm Tools
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    January 10, 2014

    Along with the excellent sources provided for video (some of which are my Captivate demos and recordings of my Adobe webinars), you might try the printed or epub version of my book, which is one of the best references on Frame you're likely to find.

    **It was also edited by Arnis and Jeff, who gave you the video references.


    -Matt

    Matt R. Sullivan
    co-author Publishing Fundamentals: Unstructured FrameMaker 11

    -Matt Sullivan, FrameMaker Course Creator, Author, Trainer, Consultant
    Bob_Niland
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    January 9, 2014

    > ... due to the number of graphics and word graphics added to them, the documents get very large very fast.

    What gets large,
    the working source document or
    the resulting PDF or XML product?

    And why is that size a problem?

    If you use copy-into-document imported objects, I wouldn't expect a Frame document to be appreciably smaller than a .docx. I would expect authoring performance to be snappier than Word.

    What is the graphics format? If raster, what resolution at printing size? If color, any chance it's indexed color?

    Some opportunities may exist for performance and size economies.

    But you're facing a steep learning curve if you're new to Frame. The current state of the documentation is not exactly optimized for customers who don't already know how to use the product.

    Jeff_Coatsworth
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    January 9, 2014

    You do realize you’re NOT talking to Adobe when you post on these forums? This is a user-to-user space. You might have a look at http://blogs.adobe.com/techcomm/ to start.

    brianc1Author
    Participating Frequently
    January 9, 2014

    Yep…just hoping that reps troll the forum……thanks for assuming stupidity however

    Arnis Gubins
    Inspiring
    January 9, 2014

    There are a whole series of videos and other resources covering migrating from Word to FM at:

    http://www.douwriteright.com/