Skip to main content
Inspiring
November 5, 2023
Question

Import text from Word and apply InDesign styles

  • November 5, 2023
  • 3 replies
  • 4556 views

How does one apply InDesign paragraph styles to imported Word text so that the style is actually applied? Surely there's an easier way than the several steps i have been going through for years: selecting all and changing the size; find/replace type for every variation of weight.  The text will show the plus sign in the paragraph style menu, which isn't much help. I can see that it's wrong.

3 replies

James Gifford—NitroPress
Legend
November 5, 2023

Besides Barb's spot-on instructions, I (and many of us who do this a lot) fully clean up the Word doc before importing it. Some of Barb's steps, like replacing spot italic and bold with defined character formats, is an example. But deleting all extra white space, making sure every paragraph has an assigned style, replacing all spot formatting with defined character styles.... the cleaner the Word doc is, the better the result on import will be, and you'll have to do lots less fixing up in InDesign.

Barb Binder
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 5, 2023

James: I tell the editors how I want the Word docs prepared and direct them to use styles, but I don't touch the Word files.  I do all the clean-up in InDesign with FindChangeByList scripts.

 

~Barb

~Barb at Rocky Mountain Training
James Gifford—NitroPress
Legend
November 5, 2023

Different strokes, and all that. I can and do apply cleanup in ID, but all things considered, when I get a Word doc, I find it easier and faster to do all the "word processor" cleanup and style assignment in Word, so that the effort in ID is minimized. Some Word flaws — make that "some Word user practices" — are harder to fix once imported. Depends on the skill of the Word author, but again, there, I find that authorial chops and app chops don't seem to overlap much. 🙂

Barb Binder
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 5, 2023

Hi Grundoon Groundhog:

 

I rely on style mapping, which allows me to map Word styles to InDesign styles. This requires that the Word users assign the styles in Word (and the default style names are fine) and then I map them to the InDesign equivalents on import. For example, Word has default styles for Title, Heading 2 and Heading 2 — if the equivalent styles in my InDesign document are Title, Subtitle and Subtitle 2—I just tell in InDesign and the document comes in with the styles already assigned.

 

Then I do a few more things to make sure that everything is correct:

  • I work with the Style Override Highlighter (+) enabled so that I can see where text isn't conforming to its definition,
  • I search for inline formatting like italics and replace with an italics character style (same with bold and small caps)
  • then, I select all and click the Clear Overrides button (¶*) at the bottom of the Paragraph styles panel

 

See https://helpx.adobe.com/indesign/using/map-export-manage-styles.html and https://helpx.adobe.com/indesign/using/paragraph-character-styles.html

 

~Barb 

~Barb at Rocky Mountain Training
Inspiring
November 5, 2023

Alas I can't ask my authors to impose my styles. But The Style Override Highlighter sounds great. Thanks!

Willi Adelberger
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 5, 2023

When you import Word text show the import options. There is a section to replace Word styles with existing InDesign styles. There are often inconsistencies in the Word formatting. At the end select the complete text and from the Paragraph Style Panel Menu select Clear Overrides. 

Inspiring
November 5, 2023

thanks, that seems to have worked.