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Hi and thanks for your help. My question: Often, when I apply an object effect like outer glow or feather to one object, that effect then gets turned on globally so every object I create after that automatically has the effect applied. It doesn't do it every time, and I can't figure out what I'm doing differently (if anything) to make the effect turn on globally. I've had this issue the whole time I've been using InDesign, since maybe CS4. I'm definitely not picking the effect without any object selected, so it's not that I'm accidentally turning it on at a global level myself.
Anyone else have this issue and know why it happens or how to prevent it?
Thanks,
Elena
Regardless, it does sound like you're certain the problem is in InDesign.
Barb asked if you were choosing FX options from the other locations (other than the Properties panel) in InDesign, such as the Object menu, the Control panel, or the Effects panel itself. All of these can be active the same time as the Properties panel.
You told Barb,
...
ElenaLeeMing wrote
Yes, I use those panels, but again the FX option is only available if there's an object already selected, so would it even be possible to set
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Apologies for the bluntness but are you sure this isn't happening as a result of you activating an effect with nothing selected? I appreciate you said that you have already ruled this out.
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Yes
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Hi Elana:
I'd say it's one of two things:
Since you are ruling out the first one, explore the second. Let us know what you uncover.
~Barb
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Hi, Barb - If those are the only two options, I'm going to need some help figuring out what I'm accidentally doing that's activating the effect at the document level.
1. The reason I'm convinced I'm not accidentally setting a document default with nothing selected is that that would require me to--without having anything selected--go into Object Effects, pick my effect, set all my settings, click OK and go back to my document and see that the original object I'd intended to add the effect to hadn't changed. Which would mean going back and making all those selections for a second time with the object selected. And this would have to happen several times a week. I feel like I would notice if that were happening.
2. I never use Object Styles...so, if I never open the panel, is there a keystroke or other selection that I might unknowingly be making that would set a style (or update the Basic style) without opening the panel?
Elena
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Also, I'd add to this that ever since the last major update I almost always apply object effects using the FX option (under Appearance) in the vertical dock, and that Appearance menu is only available if you have something selected. This just means it would be extra difficult for me to be applying object effects with nothing selected.
Ideas?
Elena
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Hi Elana:
Do you use the Control panel or the new Properties panel? Effects are available on both:
Inadvertent shortcuts could be the culprit, but the only default shortcut is for a drop shadow. Do you have other shortcuts defined?
\
If we can rule out all of these, the next step is to delete the preferences/cache.
~Barb
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Hi Barb - Yes, I use those panels, but again the FX option is only available if there's an object already selected, so would it even be possible to set an effect as a document default from there?
And no, no custom shortcuts set for effects.
What's the process for deleting the preferences/cache?
Thanks,
Elena
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The Options > Effects solution solved the problem for me. Thanks, Barb!
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This problem is easy to fix.
Let's say, for example, you create a blue rectangle and apply a drop shadow. Then the next time you draw a rectangle it too is blue with a drop shadow? And you want a white rectangle with no drop shadow. Sound familiar?
Click the rectangle once while it's still in the Tools panel. Then set the Fill to Paper (White) and open the Effects panel and turn off the Drop Shadow effect.
Now click away to another tool. The next time you click and draw a rectangle your object will have a white fill and no drop shadow.
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Hi, Scott - Thanks for your reply. Your scenario sounds somewhat familiar....but why is the second object picking up all the attributes of the first object in the first place?
Elena
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The second object automatically "remembering" and picking up the settings applied to the first object is the default behavior of Illustrator, not InDesign. So if it's happening in InDesign, something is glitchy.
Is it possible that you are actually referring to what's happening in Illustrator? For example, this screen shot is from Illustrator.
There you have the same Properties panel, with the same action you describe; the "fx" option doesn't appear under Appearance unless you select an object first. (Which is also what happens in InDesign.)
This has happened to ALL of us at one time or another, so if it's the case, don't be embarrassed. 😉 If not, sorry, had to bring it up (for lurkers in the future, if nothing else.)
AM
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Regardless, it does sound like you're certain the problem is in InDesign.
Barb asked if you were choosing FX options from the other locations (other than the Properties panel) in InDesign, such as the Object menu, the Control panel, or the Effects panel itself. All of these can be active the same time as the Properties panel.
You told Barb,
ElenaLeeMing wrote
Yes, I use those panels, but again the FX option is only available if there's an object already selected, so would it even be possible to set an effect as a document default from there?
Yes, it would be possible. Unlike in the Properties panel, the FX option is always available in those other locations, even though you don't have an object selected. So choosing something there, even with nothing selected, could inadvertently set the defaults for that tool (the Frame tool, for example) if that's the active tool.
The fix is:
Now try again. Use the tool to create a shape. It should use the defaults you reset.
FASTER: Instead of steps 3 and 4, another solution is with nothing selected but the tool active, open the Object Styles panel (Window > Styles > Object Styles) and Option/Alt-click on the default style to clear out overrides, indicated by the plus symbol. That will reset the tool to the "factory defaults".
AM
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Thanks, A-M. I think you've nailed it.
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Hi, AnneMarie - Yes, as you mentioned, I'm sure this is in InDesign, where I spend 90% of my design time every day.
In response to this comment:
"Yes, it would be possible. Unlike in the Properties panel, the FX option is always available in those other locations, even though you don't have an object selected. So choosing something there, even with nothing selected, could inadvertently set the defaults for that tool (the Frame tool, for example) if that's the active tool."
Sorry, I misread and mis-answered that question from Barb about the Object/Control/Effects panels. I generally don't use those separate panels since it's more streamlined (and more foolproof) to use the dynamic Properties panel on the vertical dock for the exact reason that it feeds you what you need only when you need it and you don't have to have separate panels floating in your workspace. So to confirm, yes I only choose the effects from the Properties panel, when the object is already selected.
I know how to turn off the effect after it's set itself as the new default, but that doesn't explain how to prevent it from happening in the first place (and as I mentioned, it's happening several times a week).
So that still leaves the mystery of why it's happening at all. You mentioned that if it's happening in InDesign, as opposed to Illustrator, then something is glitchy. Is that the whole explanation? A glitch?
Elena
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Yes, "glitch" is the technical term. 😉
If you're positive it's not user error, then it's some sort of corruption in your preferences, or with the file itself.
Does it happen in all the files you create?
Does it happen if you log on as a test user to your computer?
Does it happen if you rebuild preferences?
That would help diagnose the source of the problem.
AM
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Thanks AnneMarie. I was having the same issue and opening the Object Styles fixed it for me. I don't recall ever opening and setting up a style, but the + on the "Basic Graphic Frame" proved it had been modified. I trashed that, saved, and am back to normal.