Gregory,
Thank you for the help!
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [scribus] Templates vs. master pages vs. (page styles)?
From: Gregory Pittman <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Date: 2020-09-16 04:23+0300
HI David,
I'll try to answer what I can interspersed with your questions.
On 9/16/20 9:01 AM, David Gessel wrote:
Dear Scribus list:
I'd like to be able to define a page format - optimally multiple - that I can
pre-design and assign to a document and then apply as editable. I think I've
exhausted the obvious mechanisms, I apologize for the enumeration of the
obvious but to save back and forth:
It seems master pages are specifically intended for non-editable elements, what might be called
"background" or "header and footer" (in less flexible environments). This is
wonderful and useful, but not what I'm looking for.
It seems Templates are used to define entire document designs, absent content. This is
also great for fixed length, pre-designed documents. A powerful feature, to be sure, but
also not quite what I'm looking for in that I can't define a single page template, then
create a new document and "add page" and have that template applied. Indeed,
it seems the only way to apply the template is to copy paste the template structure to
the next page, a somewhat plausible work flow if one carefully keeps a content free copy
to the side.
If I look through the interface, where I would expect to find it would be in the Style Manager under "Page
Styles," if such a thing existed. I would expect construction of page styles to be similar to construction of and
management of "master pages." I'd think it might include something like a mechanism for specifying "next
page style" and or "next page even/next page odd" and auto-connect like-named text flows, auto-adding
pages as text frames are filled.
From what you're saying, I would suggest copying a page (Page > Copy) with its
layout (which you can place where you want), then changing its content as needed.
You're right, Master Pages are generally for fixed content. Another option you have
is to copy a page from some external document. (Page > Import) What you could have
then, would potentially be some documents with a particular layout, content or
perhaps no content, to use for that purpose. Maybe even a general purpose document
that has different layouts on different pages as a resource.
Yes, that's a sensible work around - just keep importing the "Page Style" (s)
as needed. Thanks!
As an aside, for the convenience of combined content creator/page designers, I've found "Next Paragraph
Tag" or "Next Style" definitions helpful as might be found when defining a "paragraph
style."
Is there a way to define the Column and Text Distance in a paragraph style?
Column and Text Distances are features of text frames not of a Paragraph Style.
Here again, you might have a text frame, with or without content, having the
settings you want copied to another location and the content edited/added.
Ah, that makes sense - and there's no "text frame" style - I wasn't thinking
and saw it in the Text Properties window along between Paragraph Effects and Optical
Margins, both of which are in the Paragraph Styles options.
I do like the "Style Manger" and it seems to be evolving well. The Table,
Cell, and Line styles seem like placeholders for future work in this direction which will
be very welcome.
Greg
___
Scribus Mailing List: [email protected]
Edit your options or unsubscribe:
http://lists.scribus.net/mailman/listinfo/scribus
See also:
http://wiki.scribus.net
http://forums.scribus.net
___
Scribus Mailing List: [email protected]
Edit your options or unsubscribe:
http://lists.scribus.net/mailman/listinfo/scribus
See also:
http://wiki.scribus.net
http://forums.scribus.net