On 9 Dec 2014 at 11:07, john.x.pos...@us.hsbc.com wrote:
Can someone send me a image of what an uncrippled Acrobat 10 menu bar
looks like?
The one that has File Edit View ...etc.
Hi John,
I do not have Acrobat 10, but 11 and there I was also disappointed about the menu.
Compared to
I have to agree.
I despise the new setup - you are forced to use your mouse way too much.
Alison
Alison Craig | Technical Documentation Lead
Ultrasonix | 130-4311 Viking Way | Richmond, BC V6V 2K9 |
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OK...I have some time...let me go into greater detail. If there are holes
in my explanation, attribute it to confidentiality.
I have 5 main Lines of Business (LOBs) documented and arranged in Books;
will call them Book 2, Book 3, Book 4, Book 5, and Book 6. I also have a
Book 1, which contains
Classification: UNCLASSIFIED
Caveats: FOUO
I'm getting back to unstructured FrameMaker 10 (after two years of having to
use MS Word). So apologies if I don't use some of the correct terms or if I'm
misunderstanding some of FrameMaker's capabilities!
I'm doing the planning work for converting a
It sounds like you are on the right track, using a single file to create
variables and then importing them. Too bad you can't install third party
software, because I think the only way to make this easier would be to
use the inexpensive BookVars plugin:
Maeli Zacchetti wrote:
On previous projects I’ve used ~20 part name variables (created in a master
file, then applied to each *.fm file through a book update) and then inserted
that part’s variable any time I need to use the part name. For this project
with
100+ parts it seems like that
At 08:58 a.m. 11/12/2014, Zacchetti, Maeli E CIV USARMY ECBC (US) wrote:
Content-Language: en-US
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
boundary=_000_4FB2192B95EC4D4C8FBF126461A6557FA4C9B496ucolhpkmeasfcsd_
Classification: UNCLASSIFIED
Caveats: FOUO
Im getting back to unstructured
Use the Character Tool to see if your font provides true fractions.
If not, find a font that looks like yours that does, and then create a character definition that uses that font.
Then just apply the character tag to the correct character.
Grant
On December 9, 2014 at 10:03