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Inspiring
April 29, 2018
Question

Pen tool placement of anchor points not accurate.

  • April 29, 2018
  • 4 replies
  • 8412 views

Hello, everyone.

I am experiencing a problem with the pen tool in Adobe InDesign. In case the information is relevant I am using Adobe InDesign CS6.

As I try to create an outline on my Notebook the pen tool fails to place the anchor points where I place them. They are reasonably off and seem to have a mind of their own. I am tracing an object placed on a layer below that I have locked. When I do this using my desktop it seems to work fine (the anchor points are placed precisely where I want them) but on my notebook the experience is different.

I couldn't find settings or preferences for the pen tool as I have found for the pencil tool by double clicking on the pencil tool button.

Is there some setting or preference I should adjust to correct the behavior of the pen tool ?

Thank you in advance.

4 replies

Participant
April 3, 2024
Participant
April 17, 2020

I hope OP solved this problem since it's been years, but posting my answer in case anyone else needs it. Turning off smart grid and snap to grid didn't work for me. Once I changed the units to picas, then this problem went away. Preferences > units then change horizontal and vertical measurements to picas. Hope this helps someone else! I didn't see it written anywhere else.

Frans v.d. Geest
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 29, 2018

Any ‘magnetic’ (document) grid maybe that is on?

Inspiring
April 29, 2018

Frans van der Geest (ACP),

Thank you for your reply and help.

How do I turn magnetic (document) grids off ?

Bill Silbert
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 29, 2018

Try resetting your InDesign preferences.

To do so:

For Macintosh Users: With InDesign closed Launch a Finder Window in column view and click on your home folder. With the Option Key pressed choose Library from the Finder Go Menu. Within the Library folder find the folder called Preferences and within it find the following two files and delete them: “Adobe InDesign” and “com.adobe.InDesign.plist”. When InDesign is next launched it will create new preference files and the program will be restored to its defaults.

For Windows Users: You can try the quick way of resetting on a PC which is to hold down Ctrl + Alt + Shift when launching InDesign and respond affirmatively when asked if you want to reset. There have been some recent reports that the window asking if you want to reset is not popping up but that the prefs are being reset anyway. If this works great but if it doesn’t you may have to manually delete them.

To do so:

On Windows 7 and above the preference files are hidden. To find them go to the Control Panel and open Folder Options and then click the View tab. Then select “Show hidden files and folders” or “Show hidden files, folders or drive options” in Advanced Settings. Then delete (or rename) the folder at the end of this path: C:\Users\<USER>\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\InDesign\<Version #>\<Language>. Make sure that InDesign is closed when you do this. When you relaunch the program it will create  new preference files and the program will be at its default settings.

The advantage of manually deleting preference files is that after you’ve reset up the program (make sure that no document window is open) to your liking, you can create copies of your personalized “mint” preference files (make sure that you quit the program before copying them—that finalizes your customization) and use them in the future to replace any corrupt versions you may need to delete.

Inspiring
April 29, 2018

Bill Silbert,

Thank you for your help and detailed reply.

I tried what you recommended but it hasn't fixed the problems. The pen tool's behavior remains quite inaccurate when I try to draw a path and position anchor points.

Can you think of anything else that may be causing this behavior ?

Bill Silbert
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 30, 2018

I was not able to reproduce your problem with the Snap to Document Grid which was suggested. Nor did any of the other Snap commands.

I would suggest trashing your InDesign cache files (which is not the same as deleting preferences). This can help with interface problems but is possibly a stretch for solving this problem but it may be worth a try.

To do so:

For Macintosh Users: With InDesign closed launch a Finder Window in column view and click on your home folder. With the Option Key pressed choose Library from the Finder Go Menu. Within the Library folder find the “Caches” folder. Within the Caches folder find and delete the entire file “Adobe InDesign”. I find that deleting the cache file completely leads to a lasting change. 

For Windows Users: On Windows 7 and above the caches files are hidden. To find them go to the Control Panel and open Folder Options and then click the View tab. Then select “Show hidden files and folders” or “Show hidden files, folders or drive options” in Advanced Settings. Then delete (or rename) the folder at the end of this path: C:\Users\[User Name]\AppData\Local\Adobe\InDesign\Version [#]\<Language>\Cache.

If that does not work then try uninstalling the program and then reinstalling it.

To do so:

Open the creative cloud desktop app and click on the “V” next to the name of the app in the Apps section (in this case, InDesign) and in the pull-down menu that appears choose “Uninstall”. Before reinstalling use the Creative Cloud Cleaner tool Use the Creative Cloud Cleaner Tool to solve installation problems . Then reinstall through the desktop app as well.