Hello Alison,
Since anything can happen in a FrameMaker file that is out there in use, I
always document my templates by writing a style guide in that template going
through all the various tags, and other settings that make up a FrameMaker
file. By keeping that information in the template you
Unfortunately, due to the security precautions that our company takes, third
party apps can take months to be approved - it they are approved at all.
I do have the Silicon Prairie tools, so I'll have to explore them in depth.
I only took a quick glance and didn't see what I was looking for - I
Just an additional comment on my earlier Format List from squidds.de
post: I'm using an older version of FM, so haven't bought this utility
for a while. But I seem to recall that, since I last purchased, they
changed their license from a one-time purchase to requiring an upgrade
with every FM
There is a utility that I like a lot for this. Squidds.de makes a
Finalyser plugin that contains a whole bunch of utilities.. One is
Format List. It prints out what you want and, unlike the Silicon Prairie
Software plugin, puts all the paragraph properties into a single table.
This makes it
SiliconPrairieSoftware has Paragraph Tools and Character Tools which
produces separate files listing the styles.
Dennis
--
Dennis Hays
Quantum Mechanic
+1 518.779.2322
On Thursday, Dec 14, 2023 at 8:58 AM, Thomas Bain
<[1]tom.b...@icloud.com> wrote:
Alison -
Alison - Others may have a better solution, but, if you save a Frame file as
a .mif, the definitions are within. For example, here's part of a paragraph
tag definition:
...
...
> # end of PgfFont
...
> # end of TabStop
...
> # end of Pgf
I agree with Alison. I also use a FRAME > PDF > WORD option so personnel can
edit the docs. They prefer to use something other than the comment capabilities
of Acrobat. Usually, the conversion is relatively good, but I find many issues
when scientific/mathematical symbols are used. It can get