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Hi everyone.
When my cursor is in the current text box, it looks like this.
At this point, my current target of action, sel, is the current text box.
var doc = app.activeDocument;
var item = doc.selection[0];
var items;
alert(item.constructor.name);
if (
("InsertionPoint" == item.constructor.name
|| "Character" == item.constructor.name
|| "Text" == item.constructor.name
|| "Word" == item.constructor.name
|| "Paragraph" == item.constructor.name)
&& "Table" != item.parent.parent.constructor.name
) {
items = item.parentTextFrames;
sel = items;
alert(items);If I select all content in the current article,
Now, I want my selection target (sel) to be every text Frame of this article.
To be more precise, my target is the text box containing the selected text.
For example, if an article has 10 text boxes and I select content from boxes 3 through 6, then my target objects are Frame3, Frame4, Frame5, and Frame6.
How can I represent this with code?
Thank you.
Hi @dublove I don't understand you exactly. Does this help?
var doc = app.activeDocument;
var text = doc.selection[0];
var textFrames = [];
if (text && text.hasOwnProperty('parentTextFrames'))
textFrames = text.parentTextFrames;
alert('You have selected text spanning ' + textFrames.length + ' text frames.');
If I've selected all text in the entire article,
Hi @dublove , You can check if the selection’s length matches the stories lenght like this:
var s = app.activeDocument.selection[0]
if (s.hasOwnProperty('parentTextFrames')) {
if (s.insertionPoints.length === s.parent.insertionPoints.length) {
alert("All text is selected")
} else {
alert("All text is not selected")
}
}
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Hi @dublove I don't understand you exactly. Does this help?
var doc = app.activeDocument;
var text = doc.selection[0];
var textFrames = [];
if (text && text.hasOwnProperty('parentTextFrames'))
textFrames = text.parentTextFrames;
alert('You have selected text spanning ' + textFrames.length + ' text frames.');
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If I've selected all text in the entire article,
Hi @dublove , You can check if the selection’s length matches the stories lenght like this:
var s = app.activeDocument.selection[0]
if (s.hasOwnProperty('parentTextFrames')) {
if (s.insertionPoints.length === s.parent.insertionPoints.length) {
alert("All text is selected")
} else {
alert("All text is not selected")
}
}
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item.parentTextFrames is an array—here if I get the array’s length the result is 2 because the selection is contained by 2 text frames:
var doc = app.activeDocument;
var item = doc.selection[0];
var items;
if (
("InsertionPoint" == item.constructor.name
|| "Character" == item.constructor.name
|| "Text" == item.constructor.name
|| "Word" == item.constructor.name
|| "Paragraph" == item.constructor.name)
&& "Table" != item.parent.parent.constructor.name
){
items = item.parentTextFrames;
alert(items.length);
}
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I'm still confused @dublove. The code I posted *exactly* does what your re-worded post asks for. Did you try it? It gives you the `textFrames` array which has all the text frames you ask for. Isn't that right?
- Mark
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Sorry @m1b
I didn't notice it at first , I forget to test when I get busy.
This is fantastic.
Compact and efficient.
Thank you very much.
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When the cursor is inside a table, multiple scenarios are possible. This check seems less accurate.
var item=doc.selcection[0];
if(“Table” == item.parent.parent.constructor.name)
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The hasOwnProperty('parentTextFrames') method that @m1b and I'm using is shorter and probably works better to test if the selection is text.
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So if the curser is inside a table, what do you want the script to return? The text frame that contains the CELL of the selected text or insertion point? Or every text frame that contains the whole table?
We must be VERY specific, because the code will be different.
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I've shifted my approach.
My function now only accepts objects.
Previously, I only needed to check the selection status and convert the selection area into an object target.
There are three scenarios:
Cursor in text.
Cursor in table.
Selected image (white arrow pair and black arrow).
Plus geometric shapes.
Your original getTextFrames implementation sometimes included unexpected cases, complicating matters.
Meanwhile, getTables occasionally seemed to omit elements, failing to capture everything.
I've reverted to the most basic validation approach.
For instance, with text boxes, it only returns the parent text box.
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It is difficult because you do not carefully list all your cases for us.
getTextFrames deliberately tries to get every possible text frame from the input. If you want something else you must be very specific.
If getTables fails for some tables I would love to have a test document showing it, so I can improve the function.
Anyway a very basic implementation is fine, if you understand it's limitations. I think you are learning a lot from this process. Keep it up!
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I'm reposting this question to clarify the structure.
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