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keithconover
Inspiring
September 21, 2018
Question

InDesign Performance, Span Columns, Span Footnotes, Balance Columns, Justified Text

  • September 21, 2018
  • 1 reply
  • 845 views

There are many things that affect InDesign performance. The underlying hardware including CPU, GPU, and amount of RAM (including GPU RAM) and the screen resolution are all major influences.

But there are many things that InDesign can do that maybe you shouldn't do unless you want it to slow to a crawl. While there might be some optimization the coders can do, these features just increase the workload on the CPU so much that it's hard to edit anything, at least on a long (20-30+ page) document.

My solution is to turn these things off until it's time to finalize the document. I'm making a list of those things for myself, but thought I would post them here for others to see, and on which to comment. They are:

Span Columns

Span Footnotes

Justified Text

Balance Columns

Taking them in reverse order, Balance columns makes a big hit on performance. and full-justified text slows down performance a bit. Span footnotes and span columns also make a big hit on performance. Turn them all on, and even on a fast machine with lots of RAM, editing is almost impossible.

My solution: make up a document with changes to these things to make it easier to edit, and that I then need to put back in at the end. You can turn off Balance Columns by editing Text Box properties on your master pages. You can tweak all the others by appropriate Paragraph Style changes. You can reverse these once you're done editing, though things move around and you might have to do a bit more (very, very slow) editing.

I think the only solution will be faster machines, with maybe a bit of help from code optimization. It's simply math, the more calculations you have to make that are dependent on other things, the longer it takes for the CPU to figure things out.

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1 reply

keithconover
Inspiring
February 20, 2019

InDesign gets faster with each update. But having headings with Span Columns really slows it down. Here is a simple solution. I have a H1 heading style that spans two columns. In the Paragraph Styles Panel, I right-clicked the H1 style, Duplicated it, and renamed it H1-no-span-columns. I then did a search and change with Attributes set to Paragraph Style: H1 to H1-no-span-columns. Voilà: I can now edit with great speed, and all I have to do to have my final output the way I want is to do a search and change from H1-no-span-columns back to H1. Easy. Fast. Simple.

keithconover
Inspiring
December 2, 2021

Since I originally posted the above, InDesign's performance has improved, and those workarounds above are less necessary.

 

I found that with the latest update of InDesign I have to copy all of the text and graphics of my 200-page documents with Share for Review set into a new document. That's because editing them causes lockups and recurrent need to reboot with chkdsk /f /r (Windows). As above, I had set footnotes to not span columns. However, the default for new documents has them spanning columns.

 

I was wondering if anyone had any preferences for spanning footnotes across columns, either from an aesthetic or performance perspective?