Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I also just realized how much I would love to have a relative link option in InDesign. I've learned to deal with the packaging idea, but it kind of unorganizes my files... Here's my scenario:
I have a custom media kit I make for many clients, based on a template. There are many many elements involved so I have subfolders under my assets folder (which is my name for links) for each section. If I package it, all subfolders are lost and all links are stuck in one folder, making it very hard to navigate to what I need to change. If I could drag the file and assets subfolder to the new clients name, keeping my subfolder organized, it would be much easier to just open the files in the new location, change them, and have inDesign update the links. As it stands now, if I did that, inDesign would still pull from the original folder and I would have to relink everything to the new folder.
It's not a matter of packaging not being able to solve the problem, the issue is that I find it much more of a hassle and much more time consuming that way, when relative links just seem more intuitive in this case. Not to mention, it takes a lot more time to open the doc, package, and find the new place, rather than the simple drag and drop idea.
I think having the option to have links be relative or absolute would help me out GREATLY. I am sure there are others in my position.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Indesign CS4 has a 'Relink to Folder' option in the Link palete flyout menu. The problem with this is tha t it does not search subfolders.
This would solve the problem by selecting 'Relink to Folder' you would be able to select the parent folder even the whole drive/server and Indesign would find it where ever you placed it. As long as you chose a folder in the higherarchy above the image you want to link.
But in my tests Indesign will only find the links if you point it directly to the folder that contains the missing links.
I have a problem, where our catalog was out sourced, and now I want to relink it to our huge image library that is organized as follows: server/alphabetically1/comapny/alphabetically2/product (e.g images/C/Canon/P/Canon Powershot G10.eps).
To relink my files I need to relink them individually to the 'alphabetical2' folders.
Maybe someone knows how to write a script for this?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I'm amazed that, this many years later, this simple feature request still hasn't been addressed. It isn't terribly confusing. "Relative" and "Absolute" are just two different methods for locating a referenced resource. More specifically, the difference is simply in where ID begins looking for the resource. Although they are both so simple, it would be easy to impliment the feature as a per-document (or even per-link) option.
Example:
This document:
/archive/project/document.indd
Contains a link to this resource:
/archive/project/images/photo.psd
Imagine that we save the entire contents of the project folder on a network drive (or check it into a versioning system, or whatever), and the location on that computer becomes:
/main/project/
Absolute:
When ID opens document.indd and encounters the link, it sees this information: /archive/project/images/photo.psd and it begins searching for photo.psd from the root. So it asks "Is there a folder in / named archive?". If it can't find the folder so it begins a sort of convoluted process of searching in other places (read previous posts to learn more about how). Suffice it to say that ID's process will fail to locate photo.psd due to the fact that the project/ folder is located in a folder named something other than archive/.
Relative:
If ID would implement relative linking, it would see the information ../images/photo.psd when it encounters the link and begin searching from the folder where document.indd currently resides. So it begins looking in the project/ folder and, it doesn't care what the name of the parent folders are.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hello Every One,
I am I reading this right. If all the images ( images just for now ) are stored at the same folder level as the document, or within sub folders at the same level as the document ID fails to find these images when the folder containing the document is moved to a new volume?
P.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi P,
Yes, this is true. InDesign is not capable of creating or automatically following relative links. When you store the resources for your indd file in the way you mentioned and move the indd file and those resources to a new location (while maintaining their locations relative to each other), InDesign will not be able to automatically locate those resources when the indd file is opened from the new location. It will prompt you aksing if you want it to "fix" "broken" links. If you confirm that dialog, it will alter the document's links and create a new revision of the file simply because you opened it.
It get's very frustrating in a team environment where InDesign documents are under revision control.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hello,
I did a quick test.
I created a folder in my documents folder, copied a png file into it, created a document in that folder and placed the png file. Closed the document and copied it to my pen drive and opened it from the pen drive. The link palette showed that the image path was still to my documents folder. I closed the document and renamed the folder in my documents folder and reopened the document from the pen drive, the path to the image was now showing the pen drive.
Is that not what you want to happen?
I did my test test on Mac CS4.
P.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Link paths are absolute. ID looks FIRST to the path listed, and if the file is found it will be used (which is why making a copy of a project without using the Package command is dangerous if the old files are left alone). IF, and only if, the listed path is no longer valid, ID will begin to search ofr the links in the same folder where the .indd file is located, and in subfolders.
When you package, you make copies of everything, including both the ID file and the links, and the links in the copyied file are reset to point to the Links folder in the package.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Ahh, I think I might have missed the point.
You actually do not want ID to update the path in the document but still resolve it. ( closer? )
Is there a way of editing a path to an image? An interesting test would be to change the path to be "./truncated file path". "." being the where the document is stored.
P.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
After you moved the indd file to the pen drive and opened it, did InDesign prompt you about missing links? If so, did you choose to fix them? To me, it sounds like you "fixed" the link and that is what changed it. I'm on CS5.5 in Windows 7, but I don't think this behavior has changed at all between any of the last major versions. I'll try the same test later and report back.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
No, I wasn't prompted.
I think Peter has answered this. I think I would package my stuff before archiving it or passing it onto some one else.
P.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Yes, you can edit the links by relinking them or by allowing InDesign to "fix" the links.
Packaging is a really useful tool that I use sometimes when sending my indd project to people outside my team, but packaging isn't practical in a revision controlled environment as a standard means of collaboration. I don't want to duplicate all my linked resources just to maintain links. In my opinion, that defeats the purpose of a link in the first place. If I was going to package the project everytime I wanted it to be editable from a different location, then it would be more practical to do away with linking altogether and simply embed the resources in the indd file.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
It's not amazing. Adobe is a monopoly. With a captive market, there is little incentive for Adobe to listen to their customers.
I just made a folder containing an Indesign document as well as place graphics. I only just now learned this folder isn't portable. ðŸ˜
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Toad41 wrote:
I just made a folder containing an Indesign document as well as place graphics. I only just now learned this folder isn't portable. ðŸ˜
If the links are in the same folder as the .indd file, or a subfolder, they will be found. That's how packaging works.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Another vote for relative paths for Indesign hyperlinks.
I need to distribute a final PDF on CD-ROM that links to all sorts of files (Word docs, images, other PDF's, Excel files, etc...). If InDesign had relative links when I export to a PDF, I could put the CD on any computer and the links would work fine. Now I have to relink every link in Acrobat everytime there is an edit, no matter how simple. What a waste of valuable time.