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Participating Frequently
January 22, 2024
Question

Indesign, edit images using GIMP instead of PS

  • January 22, 2024
  • 7 replies
  • 3745 views

I've been all around the Inet on this. The answer seems pretty standard: it's an OS thing, set the default handler for the file ext. OK, I did that. Only Indesign still insists that I have to install PS to edit the image. 

 

I am double clicking on an image in one of the clip libraries, and it says Install PS. If I use the edit menu and go to edit with and pick GIMP, it *still* pops up a dlg saying I must install PS. 

Placing an image from the library into a new document and alt-d-click on inserted image produces the same result. 

 

Running on Windows 10, i9 processor, with Indesign 19.1 x64. 

 

I haven't seen this scenario described anywhere else. 

Any suggestions?

 

Thanks

-- Phil

This topic has been closed for replies.

7 replies

Peter Spier
Adobe Expert
January 30, 2024

I've had another thought...

You say you reinstalled InDesign and Photoshop. Did you install the CC Desktop App first and use it to install the others? That's the correct install method, and failure to do that can make for all kinds of problems.

Mike Witherell
Adobe Expert
January 29, 2024

Have you tried setting filetype associations in Adobe Bridge?

Mike Witherell
rob day
Adobe Expert
January 27, 2024

Hi @Phil at Waldport Tech , Have you tried opening your Links panel (Window>Links), selecting the link you want to edit, and choosing Edit With from the panel‘s flyout menu?

 

Participating Frequently
January 29, 2024

Yes, I have tried that. Edit With, edit original. doesn't matter. Doesn't *seem* to matter what I do. InDesign refuses to play this game. BTW: I have installed Photoshop, at least by way of further diagnosing the problem, and it still says I must install Photoshop to edit this "item." Whether I d-click on something in the CC library, or in a document, or off of the links fly-out... 

 

I went into Windows default apps, and into right click on an image in file explorer and choose a "new default" program for all image types. So, editing an image from file explorer brings up what I want it to (PS at the moment), but not from InDesign.

 

So, I'm out of ideas. 

Any further suggestions?

rob day
Adobe Expert
January 29, 2024

Can you share the gimp file?

Participating Frequently
January 27, 2024

Further Data: I installed Photoshop... and it STILL says I must install Photoshop to edit this image. So, clearly something is VERY WRONG here. 

 

Summarizing: I can't double click an image in CC Library or on the document to edit it. Comes up saying "must install Photoshop." Photoshop has been installed, still says so. I don't really want to  learn PS at this time, got enough going on learning InDesign. I don't need the editing feature that badly, but it would save a lot of time, which (saving time) is why I'm moving to InDesign in the first place. A professional program rather than the amateur stuff from Microsoft. 

 

I am open to all suggestions here! Help!!

James Gifford—NitroPress
Brainiac
January 23, 2024

Well, not surprisingly, the Creative Cloud apps and 'bridgeware' are pretty Adobe-centric. I am not sure the hooks and crooks exist to substitute other apps as the default handlers from within the app/app set.

 

That said, if GIMP is properly installed, and appears as a an option in the Edit With list, clicking it should hand off the edit to that tool. I'd say any failure to do so is at the OS/Default App assignment level and not within InDesign's operation. (That is, ID is following the OS command as do nearly all apps that offer 'open with' or 'edit with' options, but it's not set up correctly.)

 

If GIMP doesn't appear in the with list, or even if it does, you might do a full manual find (in Edit With | Other...) right to the GIMP executable to see if that completes the assignment/OS call to the right program.

 

And I have to echo Peter. Unless you're extremely committed to GIMP, it seems like installing the, er, real tool you already have is the better solution. (I'm not knocking GIMP... but it's no Photoshop. 🙂 )

Participating Frequently
January 23, 2024

By the way, the "edit with" list does show GIMP as "default".
(GNU Image Manipulation Program 2.1 (default)" )

 

Make no difference. "To edit this image you must install Photoshop." 

Rishabh_Tiwari
Community Manager
Community Manager
March 1, 2024

Phil, you've been asked very specific questions several times, and most of your answers are "sideways" to what's actually asked — some general comment or just moving on to some other action. We're not asking general questions in trying to help, we're asking very specifically what version, setting, process, etc. — and when you don't fly off the handle, you respond, "Nope, checked that, it's okay" or some other almost content-free thing. There's no way to proceed usefully without specific answers.

 

This is a user-to-user forum, of volunteers, and you'd be hard-pressed to find any equivalent level of help anywhere, even from Adobe Technical Support (who tend to be very methodical and tedious, out of necessity).

 

If you can't/won't answer simple questions like "what version of Photoshop are you actually installing?" then even we can't help you. So maybe you're better off getting angry at some other product's support users. Best of luck with GIMP and so forth.


Hi Phill,

 

I am following up on this request. Did the suggestions shared above help or you still need assistance? Please Double-check the file association for the images and let us know if this helps or if you need further assistance.  

Thanks

Rishabh

Mike Witherell
Adobe Expert
January 23, 2024

What is a clip library? Do you mean CC Libraries?

Mike Witherell
Participating Frequently
January 23, 2024

I'm old school. Been in this business a long time. Clip Art Library was the term. Calling it CC Library to me is just marketing (actually, good marketing in this case, I have to admit, and I don't like marketing in general 🙂 ). All the same, I should have used the correct term. My apologies. 

Peter Spier
Adobe Expert
January 22, 2024

You don't say what version of InDesign you have or if you have a Creative Cloud, subscription, but if you do, why not go ahead and install Photoshop?

Participating Frequently
January 23, 2024

It does say what version of InDesign: 19.1 x64. 

 

I don't want yet another massive learning curve. I already know how to use GIMP. I have had it up to the eyebrows and beyond with Publisher (don't have any hair left to pull out) and am braving the not-quite-inifinite learning curve of InDesign. I don't want a 2nd one with PS also. 

 

I'm in a production situation and need to keep the production moving. Time on learning how to use the tool(s) has to be minimal. 

 

Anyway... I still continue to see (effectively) "it should work" only I can't get past "you need to install Photoshop" no matter what I do. 

 

The edit with shows three options, one of which is GIMP. Yet no matter what i do, there's that dialog. 

 

One of the reasons I switched to InDesign is to be able to have user settings and user options. You know, a user-friendly environment, which MSFT seems to have forgotten as a concept. 

 

I'll keep looking around for answers. 

-- Phil

James Gifford—NitroPress
Brainiac
January 23, 2024

Well... you make your choices for your reasons. Good enough. But as someone so old-school I think I still have some sheets of blueline board in the files, I've found it productive to not lock myself to outdated or low-powered tools. Publisher was never a professional tool, although like Word and Excel there were pro approaches to using it. Whether InDesign has the specific features you expected or not, it's not even in the same universe as far as capabilities and modernity. (It also has many, many customization and adaptability features; you may simply be looking from the wrong perspective.)

 

Short form, here, is that ID is complicated, yes, but worth investing time into learning. And as for GIMP... it is and always was a free Photoshop clone; now that you have the real thing, which absolutely nothing else compares to, you might find a few hours learning a somewhat different interface and terminology well worth the time. Whereas I can only think that hours spent trying to integrate GIMP into the Adobe set is, just perhaps, time not as well invested.

 

This isn't a Ford-vs-Chevy thing, after all. It's more like KIA-vs-Lamborghini. TIme spent learning the industry-standard, arguably best tools in the game is not going to be idle effort that's obsoleted by next week's toys.