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A client is experimenting (or I'm experimenting on behalf of a client) on generating multiple versions of a document from a single source InDesign book. We have gone through a proof-of-concept, and they are convinced that conditional tags will produce the effect they're after. Originally, they specified 12 different tags (4 audiences, 3 levels of reader). All went surprisingly well. They were happy.
Now they have approached me to do a substantially larger document with 32 different tags. And they may want many more tags in the future in this single-source document to produce different flavors of output.
Many.
Setting aside for a moment that there may be another way to accomplish the end result (multiple output document versions sourced from a single document text maintained in one place), the questions are:
Someone will undoubtedly tell me to experiment and get back to the forum, and I will end up doing just that... but if anyone knows (or suspects) up front, it would save a lot of time and frustration and result in a happier client not to go down a doomed path.
Thanks.
-jw
Hi,
If you talk about "Conditions", I'm just creating 10,000 conditions in a doc!
.........................................
Just For Fun! [of course, not manually, with just 1 click! … I'm too lazy!]
Best,
Michel, for FRIdNGE
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Hi,
If you talk about "Conditions", I'm just creating 10,000 conditions in a doc!
.........................................
Just For Fun! [of course, not manually, with just 1 click! … I'm too lazy!]
Best,
Michel, for FRIdNGE
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Well, you've certainly answered the question of whether 10,000 conditions can be created, so THAT's not a maximum. Thanks. Whether 10,000 (or 100) conditions are usable is another question, and I'll have to find that out the hard way.
Thanks.
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