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Participant
April 19, 2024
Answered

Comment indiquer un chemin relatif pour une image dans Indesign ?

  • April 19, 2024
  • 5 replies
  • 526 views

Bonjour,

Je travaille sur Indesign 19.3 et j'aimerais pourvoir indiquer des chemins relatifs pour les images de certains fichiers que je partage avec une autre personne.

Je n'ai pas trouvé le moyen de le faire. 🤔 🤔

Quelqu'un peut-il m'aider ?

Merci et bonne journée

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Steve Werner

If @James Gifford—NitroPress  is correct and you mean sharing a file path with another user, you could store the graphics in a shared Creative Cloud library. Then all those users who share the same library will have access to it.

 

https://helpx.adobe.com/creative-cloud/help/collaboration.html

 

5 replies

BobLevine
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 20, 2024

The only things I can add when sharing via a cloud service like Dropbox or OneDrive is to make sure that cloud only settings for file syncing is turned off so that all files are available locally.

 

If sharing cross-platform it's also very important to avoid the use of illegal characters in file names. 

 

Finally and FWIW, I have never seen an issue where drive mapping was needed in this kind of workflow.

Robert at ID-Tasker
Legend
April 19, 2024

@Sandrine17294784xlqh 

 

You are not saying what platform you are on - PC or Mac - so I'll say how it's best to do it on a PC - you could probably do something similar on Mac platform.

 

If you use syncing service to store / share your files - your file path will most likely will have your "name" somewhere in the middle.

 

On a PC, you can map your folder to some drive letter - and have for example "W:\" instead of "C:\Users\Robinet\OneDrive\Documents".

 

If everyone you will be sharing your files with will do the same - InDesgn will see your files as located at "W:\".

 

It's a workaround - but it's the best option even when working with severs - you can move to a new server - new IP / domain / name - access from different machines - even over VPN - but as long as you map your network location to the same drive letter - you are safe from InDesign reporting missing / requiring update links.

 

rob day
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 19, 2024

When I use Dropbox to collaborate via syncing the linking is automatic—as long as I include the links in the shared folder their Status will be OK because the invited users’ Dropbox folders becomes the root.

 

Here’s an example where I’m syncing between two computers on my network—neither user has to do anything to keep the link Status OK because the path is to the designated root Dropbox folder on every save:

 

User 1:

 

 

User 2:

 

 

 

rob day
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 19, 2024

I haven't found a way to do it.

 

Hi @Sandrine17294784xlqh , you could do it with a file sync’ing service like Dropbox, OneDrive, etc.—Adobe has announced the end of life for its Creative Cloud Files file sync’ing service, so you will have to somehow integrate a CCLibrary, or use a 3rd party service.

 

With my Dropbox account I can right click a folder and invite another user to sync, and when the invitation is accepted the folder contents will sync to that user’s machine and any linked files to an ID file inside of their sync’d folder will be listed as Normal. Other file syncing services generally work the same way.

 

 

Participant
April 29, 2024

Thank's @rob day I'll do that.

James Gifford—NitroPress
Legend
April 19, 2024

The only ways to share a project are to use the same fileset from a shared location, or to package the project and transfer it back and forth.

 

There is, to the best of my knowledge, no way to make any component file locations relative. I'm not even sure simply keeping them in the same folder (e.g. with no path at all) will work for linking. The package/unpack process is needed to keep everything in sync.

Steve Werner
Community Expert
Steve WernerCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
April 19, 2024

If @James Gifford—NitroPress  is correct and you mean sharing a file path with another user, you could store the graphics in a shared Creative Cloud library. Then all those users who share the same library will have access to it.

 

https://helpx.adobe.com/creative-cloud/help/collaboration.html

 

Steve Werner
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 19, 2024

I'm reading your posting in Microsoft Translator because i don't read/speak French so perhaps this is a translation problem.

 

What you you mean by "specify relative paths" for images? Can you please describe or incude a picture of what you're trying to do, please.