Hassan Chamas wrote:

> 
> Let me be more specific. I am new to Framemaker but I am taking the time to 
> learn
> it. Im looking to clarify the uses of  Pods.
> 
> I have read that Pods are frequently used dialog boxes that have an interface
> designed to simplify your work.
> 
> When I look at the panel and pods, whats the advantage of making it "easier" 
> to use
> Pods when i have panels ? I know I don't have much experience, but I tried to 
> learn
> more on the Internet and all I see is moving pods/panels around to make your
> workspace easier. Also, is their any efficiency  to using Pods rather then 
> panels ? I
> guess what Im looking for are Framers who have experience and can give me 
> their
> insight on their own experience and to get motivated to use them.

To answer your question: Pods give an overview of all markers/variables/text 
insets/conditions in a document. Panels allow you to edit one 
marker/variable/text inset/condition at a time. 


I'm afraid you've touched on a sore subject for many long-time Frame users. In 
Frame versions 1-8, pods didn't exist. All we had were panels. These were 
straightforward to use: Park them on your second monitor and refer to them as 
needed. Drag them anywhere you like and they would stay put. 

The panels had some disadvantages. They were not resizable, so in some panels, 
critical information could only be accessed by lots of scrolling. They also 
lacked information. For example, we had a Markers panel, but that only showed 
information on the currently selected marker. 

So Adobe came up with a new interface in Frame 9 to address these problems. The 
panels became resizable, and could now be stacked into tabbed panels. 
Pods were added to e.g. give an overview of all markers in a document. 

Unfortunately, the way Adobe created this new interface was not without 
problems. First, they threw out the old (Windows standard) user interface, and 
replaced it with an "Adobe standard" UI. In the Windows UI, every dialog box is 
an independent window. In the Adobe UI, all these boxes are attracted to each 
other, and desperately want to clump together in great big unwieldy masses, 
preferably overlapping the document you're working on. In the old interface, 
you could easily stack several documents, having them partially overlap. Very 
handy for comparing documents, moving text from one document to another etc. 
Try that in Frame 9, and you'll be tearing your hair out. 

The new pods give useful information. Unfortunately FrameMaker is really eager 
to keep the information in the pods up-to-date, and as a result some operations 
(like opening all documents in a book) slow to a crawl as FrameMaker updates 
the pod for every document it touches. 

Also new is the concept of workspaces. Basically they allow you to change the 
layout of the program for different operations. Open some dialogs and close 
others, place them in different locations, that sort of thing. Interesting 
idea, but you have to be very careful not to lose the changes you made. 


Harro de Jong
Triview
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