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Last table row hidden

Explorer ,
Mar 12, 2018 Mar 12, 2018

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When adding text in the cell directly above, the last row in my table disappears, and I'm not sure how to get it to appear.  The content is there, it just gets pushed below...

Before:

After:

Where does it go?

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LEGEND , Mar 13, 2018 Mar 13, 2018

As other's have suggested, you appear to have a table in a text frame within an anchored frame. Adding the additional content pushes the content below past the text frames boundary and thus is no longer visible. If that mid-section of the page with the tables is supposed to be a fixed size, then all you can do is adjust your table content to fit.

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Community Expert ,
Mar 12, 2018 Mar 12, 2018

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One frequent cause for this is that the next page is a Disconnected page. Select the text frame on the current page, right-click for Properties and make sure

  • Autoconnect is set
    Repeat for next page.
  • There are other possibilities, not easy to discern without seeing the whole page with all metadata. Putting the table in a text frame in an Anchored Frame would also result in run-out-of-sight.

    One thing that does not appear to do it is setting two many rows to
    Row Format > Keep With

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    Community Expert ,
    Mar 13, 2018 Mar 13, 2018

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    A whole page screen shot would be helpful. And I see two dotted lines on the right side: is the table inside a frame?

    ~Barb

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    Explorer ,
    Mar 13, 2018 Mar 13, 2018

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    I see this often when one of our contributors copy/pastes a table from Word without the proper follow-up formatting. To correct it, I just convert the table to text and convert it back to a table to strip all unwanted table formatting that was pulled over from Word.

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    Explorer ,
    Mar 13, 2018 Mar 13, 2018

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    If you haven't done many table conversions before, make sure to unstraddle before you do it to preserve the paragraph returns and total number of cells.

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    Explorer ,
    Mar 13, 2018 Mar 13, 2018

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    I'm copying content from a word doc converted to frame, but not table elements, so that shouldn't matter.  It's a large document with multiple columns.  I'm currently entering content into the coulmns, and I'm trying to fit a table with symbols into the column.  The columns have sections separated by frames; the table is not at the bottom of it's section.  I extend the anchored frame down to give the table some room to add more content, but the last row gets pushed down behind something.  Even when I add a new row, I can highlight it, but I can't see the row.  There's nothing below the table in the column that would be cutting it off, so I wasn't sure what it's hiding behind.  The highlighted part of the document is the spot I'm at:

    The highlighted row below is what disappears.  The cursor is where I'm pasting information.  When pasted

    I've managed a way around it for now, but I'd thought I'd follow up cause I'm baffled.  Thank you so much to each of you for your timely responses!

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    LEGEND ,
    Mar 13, 2018 Mar 13, 2018

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    As other's have suggested, you appear to have a table in a text frame within an anchored frame. Adding the additional content pushes the content below past the text frames boundary and thus is no longer visible. If that mid-section of the page with the tables is supposed to be a fixed size, then all you can do is adjust your table content to fit.

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    Community Expert ,
    Mar 13, 2018 Mar 13, 2018

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    Hi MR89 :

    Glad you got past this for now.

    Just a couple of thoughts:

    1. The benefit of anchored frames is that you can direct how they move with content editing. Tables have the same controls—for most situations, you really don't need to add tables to frames.
    2. Text content can also go directly into the primary flow unless you are dealing with sidebars or other multi-story documents.

    ~Barb

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