At 14:39 -0400 8/6/06, Schoen, Brady wrote:

>What I have is a "Parts Drawing" on the left, and the "Parts Listing" on the
>right for each brand. The entire page is specific to each brand, not just a
>word or the drawing, the entire page. What I did was put all 8 decal pages
>(1 Drawing page and 1 parts listing page for each brand x 4
>brands)consecutively in the book. I then highlighted everything on the pages
>and tagged everything I wanted shown for each brand as a different tag. What
>happens is when I hide 3 tags and show the 1 I want in the book, it leaves a
>blank page for all the other brands decal pages that are now hidden. If I
>delete the extra pages, I can't get it to show the other three tagged items
>again. Any ideas?

Brady - all the ideas presented here already would handle some or all of your 
issues if used correctly. However, from your description above, I wonder 
whether the variant information is not - or can be made not - part of the flow 
of the remainder of the document(s), *and* that entires page's contents are 
variant? If this is the case, possibly your simplest approach to conditional 
tags, which should get round the blank page issue you mention, is to place all 
the variant page content within an anchored frame, and conditionalize that. 
Turing off the tag will then conceal the entire frame's contents - rather than 
conditionalizing it item by item.

If you try this, be aware that FrameMaker allows you to conditionalize *both* 
an anchored frame [i.e. its anchor] *and* the paragraph/text in which it lies. 
The results of not displaying the tagged material will differ: in one case only 
the frame will disappear, in the other its enclosing text/paragraph will also 
disappear. You probably want to tag the paragraph that encloses the anchored 
frame.
-- 
Steve

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