• Global community
    • Language:
      • Deutsch
      • English
      • Español
      • Français
      • Português
  • 日本語コミュニティ
    Dedicated community for Japanese speakers
  • 한국 커뮤니티
    Dedicated community for Korean speakers
Exit
0

Retrospectivly adding automation on a Price List to update

New Here ,
Dec 15, 2021 Dec 15, 2021

Copy link to clipboard

Copied

I have taken on a project that was already in place, essentially it is a range of 4 price lists which equate to a PDF Printed Guide Product handbook.

 

Each page has a table of product codes and tech detail along with a LIST PRICE column.  There is no automation on this and from my understanding the person involved with this in the past would go into each individual cell and update the price manually, which has lead to some human error in the past.

 

What I was wondering, is there any way to take the date from the current price list and create some automation into excel to allow for future updates and the current one I am working on to be completed quickly without errors.

 

Thanks in advance

TOPICS
How to , Import and export , InCopy workflow

Views

245

Translate

Translate

Report

Report
Community guidelines
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more
community guidelines

correct answers 2 Correct answers

Community Expert , Dec 15, 2021 Dec 15, 2021

It takes a little lovin', but you can set up links to Excel spreadsheets that will make your periodic updating much easier.

 

InDesign's help files will walk you through the process, but this link from Redokun — provided as a public service, no purchase necessary — explains it as clearly and as simply as anything I've found up to this point.

 

Like any automation process, it takes significant extra work to do it right the first time. You want to experiment and test this independently of any docu

...

Votes

Translate

Translate
Community Expert , Dec 16, 2021 Dec 16, 2021

If you'll allow me to say this, please don't take it on yourself. It's not so much that you're missing a step as it is that you haven't signed on to a general philosophy: Massage your content in the native format you want to place, but do your formatting and styling within InDesign.

 

MS Excel has all kinds of formatting tools to make spreadsheets appear clearly onscreen and print out attractively for presentation. As you've discovered, that formatting doesn't come across cleanly into InDesign,

...

Votes

Translate

Translate
Community Expert ,
Dec 15, 2021 Dec 15, 2021

Copy link to clipboard

Copied

It takes a little lovin', but you can set up links to Excel spreadsheets that will make your periodic updating much easier.

 

InDesign's help files will walk you through the process, but this link from Redokun — provided as a public service, no purchase necessary — explains it as clearly and as simply as anything I've found up to this point.

 

Like any automation process, it takes significant extra work to do it right the first time. You want to experiment and test this independently of any document production process you currently have. But once you've got things the way you want them, like will be much easier — and production will be much faster — for each subsequent production cycle.

 

A couple of things to remember:

 

Thing One: Your live link updates in real time. If you need to keep an archive of your periodic reports/documents, you want to work from a template to populate/create each iteration, then unlink the table for your InDesign document as you finish each issue of your report/document. Save separate issues for your archives and always create a fresh report/document from the template. Never reuse a previous issue. I've taught two clients how to do this who forgot to take this critical step and obliterated their previous records each time they re-opened their archived documents. With adequate backups, remedial fixes could be made in both instances. Expensively. Without those backups, they'd have been flat out of luck.

 

Thing Two: Formatting of your InDesign tables is critical. Not just for streamlining/automating initial production, but for accounting for additions/deletions as well as changes you import from your Excel spreadsheet(s). This is not a set and forget process, but doing it correctly will make dealing with rolling changes easy with a minimum of muss and fuss.

 

Hope this helps,

 

Randy

Votes

Translate

Translate

Report

Report
Community guidelines
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more
community guidelines
New Here ,
Dec 16, 2021 Dec 16, 2021

Copy link to clipboard

Copied

Randy thanks so much, this was just what I needed, I have now got the tables saved on a excel document with individual tabs and it works perfectly.

 

With regards to the formatting of the tables, how do I go about this, we have specific colours we use on the price lists (Pantone - Coroporate colours) I have set this up in Excel but when linking to the indesign file it strips this out and formats it using a different font and no colours.  I am probably just missing a step.

Votes

Translate

Translate

Report

Report
Community guidelines
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more
community guidelines
Community Expert ,
Dec 16, 2021 Dec 16, 2021

Copy link to clipboard

Copied

LATEST

If you'll allow me to say this, please don't take it on yourself. It's not so much that you're missing a step as it is that you haven't signed on to a general philosophy: Massage your content in the native format you want to place, but do your formatting and styling within InDesign.

 

MS Excel has all kinds of formatting tools to make spreadsheets appear clearly onscreen and print out attractively for presentation. As you've discovered, that formatting doesn't come across cleanly into InDesign, for a number of reasons. Fortunately, InDesign also has strong, comprehensive tools for formatting tables, and powerful capabilities to save and apply table styles to you can quickly and efficiently re-apply your preferred styling attributes anywhere within InDesign where you need them.

 

You can learn a lot more about formatting tables within InDesign through this link, and how to create and apply cell and table styles through this one. It'll take a little fiddling and experimenting, but with some practice you'll easily be able to arrange it to be the way you want it, then be able to apply it anywhere you want it.

 

Pantone color, though, is a bit of a sticky wicket. Or more precisely, is about to be. Adobe at the moment has several Pantone color libraries incorporated in its Creative Cloud applications, ready at your command. That's about to change, as Pantone is updating its own free and paid plug-in offerings for Creative Cloud and Adobe will soon get rid of its built-in Pantone tables.

 

So I'd suggest if you want to specify your corporate Pantone colors in your documents, you want to do it now. Since the easiest way to define your table and cell styles is to design and refine them within a separate custom document, you want to do that and place your custom Pantone swatches into that custom document. You do that like so:

 

  • Create your new, custom table designing document. If it's not already open within InDesign, open your Swatches panel by selecting the Window>Color>Swatches menu command, or using the keyboard shortcut F5. At the upper-right of the panel you'll see three small horizontal lines, known informally as the sandwich menu. Click on that, and select the New Color Swatch command.
  • 1c.jpgWhen you get the New Color Swatch dialog box, you will see the default Color Mode: setting of CMYK or RGB in the options box and the default Color Type: of Process selected in that edit box. When you click on the Color Mode: options box you'll see a number of color book models listed, including 10 different (but not comprehensive) Pantone color models. For the purpose of this example, we're going to get the colors for Pepsi soda advertising, and click on the PANTONE+ Solid Coated in the options box.
  • If you're an old hand at working with your Pantone spot colors, you can dial in the spot color number you need in the PANTONE edit box. For what I'll call Pepsi Red 'til the day I die, we would enter 186. You'll notice that the options box below jumps to show PANTONE 186C highlighted, with two icons to the right; the first is a gray box with the white dot in the middle shows it's a spot color, and the four color squares in the second box, for what little it's worth, indicate that it's based on a CMYK process color build. let's click the Add button to the upper-right of the dialog box to put that in our color swatches, then type 287 in the PANTONE edit box to add Pepsi Blue to the swatches panel. Since that's all we need for this exercise, let's click the OK button to return to the New Color Swatch dialog box.
  • The dialog box shows the two swatches we created, Pantone 186 C Pepsi Red, and Pantone 287 C Pepsi Blue, are added to the swatches list. For commercial spot color printing, that's all we need. Any color composite proofing printer will automatically translate that into CMYK output, and we'll be able to specify spot color separations when the job goes out for press.

 

2c.jpg

We can use these new colors anywhere in our custom table design document by selecting the element we want to apply color to and then selecting the appropriate color in the Swatches panel. Easy Peasy.

 

Can I ask a favor of you? Could you please select answer(s) that helped you here as Correct Answer(s) at the bottom of those post(s)? That alerts moderators to archive this and make it appear in the Related conversations section below for others who post questions about similar issues.

 

And anytime you have a question about or problem with Adobe applications, please feel free to come back to these forums and sound the alarm. There are lots of smart folks here who may be able to help.

 

Good luck,

 

Randy

Votes

Translate

Translate

Report

Report
Community guidelines
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more
community guidelines
Community Expert ,
Dec 15, 2021 Dec 15, 2021

Copy link to clipboard

Copied

Attached is my general workflow for tables.

David Creamer: Community Expert (ACI and ACE 1995-2023)

Votes

Translate

Translate

Report

Report
Community guidelines
Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more
community guidelines