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Good Morning.
I need help with footnotes.
I have a job that requires the use of two types of notes. One type corresponds to traditional footnotes and a second type where other references are placed but independent of the first type.
Is there any way to create a second continuous note system as the first type?
I put a picture to illustrate what I want.
Thank you
1 Correct answer
The only way I can see to accomplish this is tediously, via cross-references. InDesign currently only supports one type of footnote in document.
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The only way I can see to accomplish this is tediously, via cross-references. InDesign currently only supports one type of footnote in document.
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will the new version of InDesign CC 2018 have the tool I'm looking to solve the problem of a second set of notes on the same page?
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Hi,
Try exploring the new endnotes feature... set the scope as story and the placement option as "place cursor" from the document endnote option to create the endnote frame.
-Aman
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thank you
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Aman -- That's not really an option as endnotes are placed in a separate frame at the end of the story or document.
Peter
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Hi,
One type corresponds to traditional footnotes and a second type where other references are placed but independent of the first type.
Well it can be somewhat achieved using Endnotes in story scope and placed right at the end of the story(somewhat like side notes?). Something like this...
I do agree its just a workaround:). Type 2 notes in a new frame but, as needed its a "second continuous note system" that navigates just as fine as Footnotes.
What is your take on it?
-Aman
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Hadn't realised that you can thread an endnote story to a new frame. So you can indeed masquerade endnotes as footnotes by running them as a separate story in frames at the foot of the pages. That's how we did footnotes before InDesign had them, pre-CS. So using endnotes or cross-referenced auto-numbered paragraphs comes down to the same thing.
P.
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Exactly!
https://forums.adobe.com/people/Peter+Kahrel wrote
So using endnotes or cross-referenced auto-numbered paragraphs comes down to the same thing.
P.
Not really. Endnote as a feature overcomes many shortcomings of using cross-references as endnotes: few of them being... maintaining correct chronological order of endnotes, two-way navigation, scope change ability, and functions provided by "Document endnote options"
-Aman
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Well, that's not entirely true or not entirely applicable:
> maintaining correct chronological order of endnotes
cross-references give you that, don't they?
> two-way navigation
cross-references give you that, too (not in a PDF, but we're not talking PDF). In the Cross-references panel you can jump from source to destination. Or is that not what you mean?
> scope change ability
Scope aplies to footnotes in only one way: the foot of the page.
> and functions provided by "Document endnote options"
Not sure what you mean by this.
The main advantage of using endnotes for footnotes over cross-referenced numbered paragraphs is that you don't use InDesign's cross-references, which speeds up things in book jobs.
Anyway, using endnotes for this purpose makes perfect sense -- thanks for the suggestion.
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Hi,
https://forums.adobe.com/people/Peter+Kahrel wrote
> maintaining correct chronological order of endnotes
cross-references give you that, don't they?
With cross references consider cases like: wherein the endnote number "2" comes before "1" in source text.
and cases where the reference goes missing:
With endnotes as a feature such incorrect numbering of endnotes is avoided without any manual work.
Peter Kahrel> two-way navigation
cross-references give you that, too (not in a PDF, but we're not talking PDF). In the Cross-references panel you can jump from source to destination. Or is that not what you mean?
In exported formats like PDF. Talking generally.
> scope change ability
Scope aplies to footnotes in only one way: the foot of the page.
When comparing endnotes vs cross references as endnotes.
Peter Kahrel > and functions provided by "Document endnote options"
Not sure what you mean by this.
When comparing endnotes vs cross references as endnotes.The ease with which text acting as endnotes can be formatted and ability to easily set prefix/suffixes for endnote markers.
Anyway, using endnotes for this purpose makes perfect sense -- thanks for the suggestion.
Welcome.
-Aman
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> and cases where the reference goes missing
Yes, cross-references can be feeble and fragile.
> With cross references consider cases like: wherein the endnote number "2" comes before "1" in source text.
Not sure how you would accomplish that. I've never seen cross-references behave like that.
> When comparing endnotes vs cross references as endnotes. The ease with which text acting as endnotes can be formatted and ability to easily set prefix/suffixes for endnote markers.
This is ironic. I've put in requests (many moons ago) for the ability to add pre- and suffixes in character styles, exactly as you can in footnote and endnote references and/or numbers, and in text variables. But Adobe never imagined that that might be useful. Good old WordPerfect had that ability, and it was widely used -- understandibly, because it's a very useful feature. Anyway, your comment here shows that it is a useful feature genrally!
Peter
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Hi,
The screenshot is absolutely not clear for me! …
Could you post a best readable one with 2 pages? Thanks!
(^:)

