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I had problem saving down CS4 to Cs3 before. (it need to export etc, and then you need plug ins to open Cs3, which did not work at all) now I have same problem in CS5. I thought Adobe might fix this problem this time... I am wondering if theres any easy way to save CS5 file to CS4..? (Just like you save file down to previous version in Illustrator) Please someone help?
You have to use File>Export and choose InDesign Markup Language (IDML) and then open that file in CS4.
YOu should update both CS5 and CS4 before you continue for any possible updates.
I wish InDesign files could be opened or saved back to any versoin of InDesign too, but sadly Adobe don't allow it.
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Eugene,
Would you be willing to pay good, hard cash, for a program that can convert a file from CS5 to CS3?
If so, how much? (Well ... a fair minimum price. Or a maximum, really.)
If so, would you expect:
(a) an exact conversion of the actual state of the '5 document into '3? (That means 'freezing' all current line breaks; re-threading column-spanning and multi-column paragraphs into separate text frames; removing text that's been hidden using conditions; converting applied GREP styles to locally applied attributes. I have no idea of what to do with rotated, scaled, and/or resized pages, though.)
(b) a dialog, where you can select what you want to preserve, and what not.
(c) a document you can work with.
(Please select one )
I have been investigating what would be needed to write such a program. It sounds feasible, but it also sounds like a lot of work before it even does anything at all, and a lot of headache (I'm anticipating numerous complaints in the ilk of "why can't it backsave from CS6 to 2.0").
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Certainly it's inconvenient, but I wouldn't say bonkers. I admit that I can be pretty addle-brained at times, so I might make mistakes and use features that aren't supported (especially since I don't ever seem to remember when things were added without opeing an older version to see if they are there), and unless you open the file in the previous version after backsaving you won't really see the damage.
Keep in mind, too, that the text engine usually changes in some major or minor way (it was major between CS3 and CS4, and clearly major again for CS5 withthe addition of span/split columns) that can affect the way text is composed and is likely to affect line endings which in turn can have an impact on paragraph line counts and page ends which might cause a chapter run a page long or short and affect everything after (I saw that happen yesterday in the file I was playing with for Eugene). I'd rather know I'm looking at exactly the same thing on my screen as my client is seeing on theirs.
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if your trying to save files from 2015 to 2014 , file, and package
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For those people who don't understand why this is an issue.
Welcome to the real world.
We are not all massive companies, some of us are freelancers (in fact, I'd imagine a majority of indesign userbase are freelancers). We work with other freelancers, other design houses, tweaking, assisting, collaborating. So now i've upgraded to CS5.5 I can no longer work in a team with those on lower versions. No, they cannot afford to upgrade. And no, they're not prepared to continually interrupt their work flows by some very flakey imports of idml pages - these are buggy at best. It's a risk they don't need to take and clients are looking elsewhere/ I've invested another thousand a bit pounds and am now losing business. Many thanks Adobe.
There is no reason why indesign files can't be saved as CS5 and CS4, if some features are incompatible, then these are lost, but seriously - what standard significant changes have happened between 5 and 5.5 - no other piece of software in existence can't save back at least one software version. I'm now losing work because I dared to upgrade the software and cut off all team members who can't afford the upgrade. It should be made VERY clear on the product pages that indesign cs5.5 cannot save native files compatible with cs5. Let's see what that does to the upgrade figures.
This is very, very, very bad Adobe. One question I had this morning was "do you run Quark?" - and yes, I do - maybe it's time to ditch indesign, I see that the latest version of Quark happily saves back two versions, also PDF export is less problematic - especially with transparency.
The extra features in cs5.5 are not worth losing work over. That cs5.5 can't talk to cs5 is an example of the worst of Adobe. I'm thinking of returning the software as not fit for purpose.
This is crazy.
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Hi - of course I agree with you about this, as I posted this in the first place. But I got around it, somehow: The Norwegian support group, situated in Sweden, had a solution: You can return your ID5 (if it's not too old), buy a multi-user version for one person (!), and then downgrade it to ID4 (impossible with single user packages). It is a little hassle, but the girl at Adobe actually war extremely helpful. So now I have 4 and 5, and everything worked out quite well - after a truckload of trouble, that is 😉
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You can have save as an IDML file..
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Hello Jenni, I have tha same problem thanks for share this interesting question. i can got some reviews from the answers.
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In exporting a file to IDML, does something change/ gets lost in traslation from the original indesign file? Like missing words, reformatted texts etc? I work with a client who has CS6 (I have 5.5) hence we agreed that every time he updates our files to save it in IDML so I can access them as well. But now he claims that after exporting to PDF (after the IDML), some stuff didn't reflect in the PDFs. Is that possible?
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In InDesign CC or CS6, choose File > Save As.
Choose InDesign Markup (IDML) as the type (Windows) or format (Mac OS).
Click Save.
You can now open the IDML file in CS5.5, CS5, or CS4 and save it as an InDesign document.
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