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Is there a way to set InDesign to automatically save a document every 15 minutes (or some other time period) while it's being worked on? When we used Quark we had that option, but see nothing like it in InDesign.
I'd ask over in the scripting forum to see if it's possible to set up a script that would run automatically on file open and save a copy periodically, or perhaps better, one that would run on file close. InDesign Scripting
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InDesign has an autorecovery feature that records every change and writes it to a recovery file. In the case of an imporper shutdown, ID will automatically attempt to open the recovery file when you restart the application, and is usually successful unless something has corrupted the data it contains (this does happen, but the feature is extremely robust). If succesful you generazlly will not lose more than a few minutes work, if any.
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Scott is correct.. there is NO working autosave, and cant find a plugin to do it...
In my experience 90% crashing documents (and there LOADS of those in InDesign, very flawed) are NOT RECOVERED.
This has persisted at least since earliest versions of CC and long before.
Hours of work are easily lost if you are immersed enough to forget to save manually.
It is REPREHENSIBLE that Adobe is 10 years behind in such a simple software task. AND THEY DONT CARE!!!!
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If you experience crashing documents on a regular basis it's much more likely a local system problem (i.e. something on your own computer) than a problem with InDesign itself, though the latest release seems to have a few more bugs than normal. Your assertion that this has been going on since long before CC leads me to think the problem is on your system as there is no history of InDesign instability similar to your description.
Other than with documents known to crash other users systems (opened for testing and diagnosis), I don't believe I see more than one crash per year here, and I would say that is pretty typical.
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One crash a year is truely remarkable. THe more complex documents are the more prone they are to crashing. Complicated tables with tricking text formating in side them used to crash InDesign documents in ~2016 for me quite a bit. I recall one time there was a bug that complicated tables triggered and the file would start canablising itself as you worked on it, you'd go back to a page and see something wrong and fix it wondering how you could have done that without noticing then something else on aother page would be out. I wouldn't ahve beleived it (thinking more likely a poltergeist!) if Adobe engineers hadn't confirmed to me it was a known bug. They waited a couple of days of me ringing them and talking to engineers mind you before admitting it was a known and unsolvable bug. I had already tried multiple Macs and was instructed to regress to the previous years version of InDesign which fixed the problem — but if I remember corectly also removed a major feature I was using heavily in the 40 or so page report with lots of tables and figures.
So yeah crashing every day sounds like a local issue (limtted memory due to too many applications open and too many memory swaps causing INDD to hemorage?) but crashing once a year sounds like heaven — (Quark Express level reliablity!).
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>> THe more complex documents are the more prone they are to crashing.
That's of course true, but in my experience most of the reports of this sort of crash are traceable to poor work habits. All documents build up "crud" -- old change data no longer usable, primarily -- every time they are saved and closed. Over time on a complex project that can lead to serious file bloat.
The more stuff in the file, the more opportunity for a bit to be mis-written due to a disk or memory glitch. Crashed documents frequently seem to be those that have been re-saved over and over, or completely overwritten (the next issue of a periodical) multiple times.
Doing a Save As forces a rewrite of the file and removes the old change data. I do that every time I close a file after editing, generally adding a versioning number as well so I have an easy backup chain. Periodicals should be built on templates so every issue is just one generation from the original. Very long documents should be broken into logical pieces.
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I do not recall ever losing a document due to a crash.
I'm not minimizing your experience but I agree with Peter; there's something wrong locally if you're not seeing a recovery. I do see more crashes with recent releases but the recovery always works.
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Auto recovery is very good when it gets triggered in my limitted experince (I do way less DTP than i used to prior to 2017), I can't recall it not recovering a document to be in a state that it was within a couple of minutes prior to crash.
Problem is it doesn't always trigger, or when the rcovering document retriggers a crash. That not recovering issue is one I've had again today. Although I think the document might have got saved like I orginially thought it had, but then suspected it hadn't before the crash, it's not as bad as I initially thought it was. I'd say auto-recover should work >90% of the time for me.
Finally Illustraor got crash recovery too, because that has turned into a fallover friend too.
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InDesign keeps a "near real time version" mirror copy of all open files.
You will not close a file without being prompted to Save if changes have been made and if InDesign or the OS crashes, the mirror copy will open upon InDesign's next launch.
It works well, but could be a few edits short.
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BUT if someone mistakenly responds "no" when asked if they want to save, is there any version saved automatically? Guessing there's no way to set InDesign to do a regularly scheduled auto save as we did in Quark.
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Nope
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Guessing there's no way to set InDesign to do a regularly scheduled auto save as we did in Quark.
An autosave strategy could easily be scripted via a startup script (scripts in the Scripts>startup scripts folder automatically run at launch), so it would be worth asking in the scripting forum if something already exists. The script referenced in #9 listens for a save and makes a backup copy, so it isn't a timed autosave.
How complex the script would be depends on what you are trying to do. A simple startup script could save the active document at a timed interval, like this AppleScript, which would save the front document every 60 seconds:
-------------------------
tell application "Adobe InDesign CC 2014"
repeat
tell active document
save
delay 60
end tell
end repeat
end tell
-------------------------
The obvious downside of this simple script is, you might not always want to save—it will effectively disable the revert command. A more robust script could use save a copy to copy iterations into the same directory, but then you would have worry about available disk space, how many iterations get saved, are they all left in the directory on quit, etc.
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As already mentioned; there's nothing to set. InDesign's auto-recovery seems like old hat now that I've enjoyed its benefits for years, but it's better at butt-saving than any other recovery feature I've ever seen.
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Agreed, the auto-recovery feature is great for power outages or improper shutdown. Had someone on my staff 'goof' and lost yesterday's work prompting me to research what we previously had in Quark. Thanks for the input everyone.
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I'd ask over in the scripting forum to see if it's possible to set up a script that would run automatically on file open and save a copy periodically, or perhaps better, one that would run on file close. InDesign Scripting
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Oh....great idea!!! Thanks!
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Here's a thread that discusses this and the script solution:
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This thread is not FALSE!!!! You will lose hours and hours of work if you wait between saves. Just happened to me and abode has no support. This is for the adobe inDesign 11.0.1.105.
Total unacceptable that a backup file is not made!! It is the 21st century.
-Scott
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I just lost about 1 hour of work due to a power outage! That may not seem like a huge loss but it is very discouraging. Especially considering that I've been asking Adobe to add this really simple and highly useful addition to ALL their products for YEARS!
I remember in the 1990's, Word Perfect would also save documents after x number of keystrokes. A brilliant addition that saved countless people from grief.
I know there are a number of Adobe apologists (whom I still respect) who don't understand the need for a flexible auto-backup but that is only because you haven't suffered. Believe me, when it happens to you, I predict that you will change your tune.
Now, my work-around has always been to have the discipline to backup on a regular basis... using filename versioning (i.e. document_1.00, document_1.01, etc.) that way, even with the low possibility of file corruption, it will have several versions to choose from. Additionally, my working folders are also sync'd to the cloud with Dropbox's excellent sync tool. The only problem is that I must actually remember to save on a regular basis! This time I forgot!
Wow... just noticed that EVEN THIS FORUM AUTOSAVES... just looking in the lower left-corner, I see, "Your content was last auto-saved at 12:03 "... perhaps Adobe should consult with the web team that created this forum.
Anyway, enough wasting time... I need to recreate an InDesign document!
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Buy yourself a UPS (Uninterruptible Power Source), better known as a battery backup. There is no excuse not to have one considering how inexpensive they are. You'll never go down in a power failure.
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Peter, I am not going to yell at you out of respect and the fact that you have helped me many times.
But damn it, please stop defending Adobe for a feature that would be extremely useful for all eventualities. Sure, buy a UPS... then what happens when you have an InDesign crash? Or what happens in the event of some unusual computer failure? Even a hard drive failure (it happens!) could prevent loss if Adobe is regularly backing up to a different drive. (The happy face should help to indicate that I'm not yelling.)
Every other application I use, on a daily basis, offers some form of redundancy... i.e. Madcap Flare, of course my Google Apps and other SAAS tools, my Techsmith apps (Camtasia and Snagit), Oracle tools, Microsoft's products, and a few of my Opensource programs like Notepad ++.
No, it seems to be just Adobe, that can be bothered to add a simple and reasonable feature that could potentially save much grief to many people.
Peter Spier wrote:
Buy yourself a UPS (Uninterruptible Power Source), better known as a battery backup. There is no excuse not to have one considering how inexpensive they are. You'll never go down in a power failure.
I know what I UPS is... I use them throughout my home... even on my home security. They are inexpensive and "life-saving" when there is a power outage.
But I am at work. It is quite unreasonable to buy a UPS for every workstation in my company... Though I may just buy one for myself (a $70 investment)... it's not the point. Like I already stated, power is just one of many points of failure. A UPS won't protect my InDesign work against a hardware failure.
Why are we even arguing about this? I can't imagine why you think this is an unreasonable option.
Respect,
Shawn
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Shawn,
I'm not saying you don't have a point about auto-recovery. I have seen cases where auto-recovery fails, and even current corruption of an open file, but they're rare. I've never felt a need for auto-save, though because I've basically used your new saving strategy for years. A UPS big enough to run a typical workstation and a flat-screen monitor for the few minutes it takes to save and shut down safely can be had for a lot less than $70, and a unit that will run a dozen workstations can probably be found, though it will most likely cost more than multiple smaller units (I bought the backup power that ran the cash registers at a local grocery store that went out of business for the company I worked for once).
If everyone in your office loses an hour of work every time the power goes of, how long do you think it will take to pay for power backup in lost productivity? Your boss should be happy to buy you a UPS if you show him the upside. No, it won't save you from non-power-loss issues, but losing power simply isn't an excuse for losing your work.
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How would you like the feature to work?
In addition to the current autorecovery, allow the end-user to configure, at regular intervals, the ability to save an open document to a selected location (i.e. a specific volume/folder or to a cloud location - i.e. Adobe's storage cloud).
You are describing comprehensive, incremental backup software like Retrospect and that would not be a trivial addon. You have to consider file sizes with apps like Photoshop and InDesign. I routinely have multiple 1GB+ PS files open at the same time—InDesign files can be 100s of MB each. In that case, timed incremental backups would fill a large drive in no time, or think of the bandwith problems moving 100MB copies to a cloud server.
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Even in a power failure you would typically lose nothing more than a minute or two of work with a file recovery when you re-open InDesign and I’ll echo Peter’s recommendation. A UPS is a vital piece of equipment. I’ve had one for about 18 years and only replaced the batteries in it twice.
I find the auto recovery better than any auto save I’ve ever seen in any application.
And no, I’m not an apologist; just pointing out the facts. With the autorecovery mechanism there’s simply no reason for an auto save. Even that wouldn’t be fool proof.
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I find the auto recovery better than any auto save I’ve ever seen in any application.
And no, I’m not an apologist; just pointing out the facts. With the autorecovery mechanism there’s simply no reason for an auto save. Even that wouldn’t be fool proof.
No reason?
Good luck with autorecovery when your hard drive fails. Okay, that's an outlier situation but still, I am baffled at your statement because I can name a dozen application that do a much better job of protecting one's work against stupid and/or unintentional faults.
If Adobe's autorecovery is so great that please help me to understand why it failed so very miserably for me...this time and a few other times? Perhaps I didn't configure it? I checked the recovery folders, searched for any temporary files and nothing existed that was related to the lost content.
My autorecovery folder is:
C:\Users\shawn\AppData\Local\Adobe\InDesign\Version 11.0\en_US\Caches\InDesign Recovery
...and not a single file had today's date stamp. Ridiculous considering that had worked on the document for over an hour. After some experimenting, it appears as though it doesn't begin saving to this folder until your first document save operation. Maybe that's it?
The document I was working on began at around 10:46 AM and abruptly ended at 11:58 AM... as you can see, there are no records of anything until my first save today, at 1:21 PM.