InDesign's Save, Save As, and Save a Copy
commands let you save documents and templates using InDesign's native
file format. The Export command (choose File => Export or Ctrl+E) opens the Export dialog box, from which you can save
documents and some individual document elements such as stories and
graphics in several other formats. And InDesign has separate menu
commands for exporting Web and e-book documents.
1. Export formats for whole documents
To export entire documents, InDesign provides the
following options (accessed from the Export dialog box unless otherwise
indicated):
InDesign Markup (IDML) format:
This format lets InDesign CS5 save files readable by InDesign CS4 and
some specialty publishing programs. (It will also be readable by the
next version of InDesign — presumably to be called InDesign CS6.) The
trick is to export, not save as, files to the InDesign Markup format.
IDML files have the file name extension .idml.
Production formats:
You can save the document as an EPS or a PDF file for use by prepress
tools and service bureaus or for import into other applications as a
graphic. You get the choice of exporting individual pages and page
ranges, not just the whole document. Choose the Adobe PDF (Print) or EPS
options in the Format pop-up menu (Mac) Save as Type pop-up menu
(Windows) in the Export dialog box.
Online and interactive formats:
You can save the document in XML format for use in online
database-oriented content-management systems by choosing the XML option
in the Format pop-up menu (Mac) or Save as Type pop-up menu (Windows) in
the Export dialog box. InDesign can also export interactive PDF files
(retaining video, audio, and actions), as well as export Flash Player
presentation files (SWF) and Flash project files (FLA).
You can also export your document to the Web's structured HTML format (XHTML) by choosing File => Export For =>
Dreamweaver. (Despite the menu option's name, any Web browser and most
creation tools can work with these exported files.) Finally, you can
export to the Digital Editions e-book format meant for Web-based
distribution of rich-media documents by choosing File => Export For => EPUB.
NOTE
The menu option for exporting to XHTML has changed to File => Export For => Dreamweaver, and the menu option for exporting to and the Digital Editions e-book format has changed to File => Export For =>
EPUB. Also, the ability to export print PDF files versus interactive
PDF files is new to InDesign CS5. Finally, gone is the ability to export
to InDesign Interchange (INX) format for use by InDesign CS3.
2. Export formats for document elements
You can also export pieces of your document, such as
text files and graphics. Be sure to select the objects (use the Type
tool for text and the Direct Selection tool for graphics) and then
choose the appropriate options from the Export dialog box (choose File => Export or Ctrl+E):
Word-processing formats:
If you place the text cursor into a story, you can export its text
(select a range of text if you want to export only that selection) into
one of three formats: RTF (Rich Text Format) for import into word
processors with only basic formatting retained and Text Only for import
into word processors that don't support RTF (no formatting is retained).
You can also export selected stories to the InCopy Document format, for
use in that add-on program ; exported stories appear in the Assignments panel.
InDesign Tagged Text format:
Whether you select text using the Type tool, you can save the story in
the InDesign Tagged Text format (for editing in a word processor and
later reimporting into InDesign with all InDesign formatting retained).
InDesign Markup (IDML) format:
This new format is meant to allow document xchange with the CS4 and
next (CS6?) versions of InDesign and InCopy; developers can also use it
to open InDesign files in applications they create.
JPEG format:
You can export individual or multiple graphics as well as entire pages
and layouts to the JPEG image format by choosing the JPEG option in the
Export dialog box. You can also export text frames, which convert the
exported text to an uneditable image.
Animation formats:
You can export InDesign pages and documents as Flash Player
presentations (SWF files) or Flash Pro projects (FLA files) for further
work in Adobe Flash Professional.
Buzzword format: You can export InDesign text to the Adobe Buzzword subscription-based online editing tool.
Document snippets:
You can also export selected elements to a snippet file by choosing
InDesign Snippets from the Export dialog box. Or simply drag the
elements out of your document in the Mac Finder or Windows Explorer; you
import snippets by dragging the snippet file (which has the file name
extension .idms) into your document from the desktop or a folder.
NOTE
New to InDesign CS5 is the ability to export documents for use with the Buzzword service.
2.1. Working with exported tagged text files
The InDesign Tagged Text format is a powerful
capability that few people use. It exports your current story's text as a
text-only (ASCII) file that any text editor or word processor can open.
It uses embedded codes to indicate formatting, so you can edit the text
elsewhere without fear of losing that formatting. This format supports
all the formatting you do in InDesign — such as fonts, kerning, or style
tags — as well as making it easy for you to automate the layout of
database-derived documents such as catalogs.
If you learn the codes, you can actually specify
InDesign formatting in another program (such as exporting from a
database). Most people don't use the InDesign Tagged Text capability
because the coding can be tortuous. And if you use it to create files
for import into InDesign, you'll find that you can't use both Tagged
Text codes and your word processor's formatting, so you must code
everything with tagged text and save the document as a text-only (ASCII)
file.
The best way to understand the Tagged Text format is
to export some of your own documents to it, and open the resulting file
in a word processor to see how InDesign coded the file. A warning: The
Tagged Text format can be complex, especially because most codes have
two forms: a short (abbreviated) form and a long (verbose) form; you
choose which InDesign form exports from the Export dialog box in
InDesign (choose File => Export or Ctrl+E, and then choose Adobe InDesign Tagged Text as the file
format). Note that a Tagged Text file is simply an ASCII text file, so
it has the file name extension .txt and uses the standard text-only file
icon in Windows and on the Mac.
Here's an example of verbose coding (because the code
is so long, I had to add line breaks; slightly indented lines are
actually part of the same code segment):
<ASCII-WIN>
<DefineParaStyle:Normal=<Nextstyle:Normal><cTypeface:Regular>
<cSize:10.000000><pHyphenationLadderLimit:0><pHyphenation:0>
<pHyphenationZone:18.000000><cFont:Times New Roman>
<cColorTint:100.000000>>
<DefineCharStyle:Default Paragraph Font=<Nextstyle:Default Paragraph
Font>>
<DefineCharStyle:Hyperlink=<BasedOn:Default Paragraph Font>
<Nextstyle:Hyperlink><cColor:Blue><cTypeface:Regular>
<cSize:10.000000><cHorizontalScale:1.000000><cBaselineShift:0.000000>
<cCase:Normal><cStrokeColor:><cUnderline:1><cFont:Times New Roman>
<cPosition:Normal><cStrikethru:0><cColorTint:100.000000>>
<ColorTable:=<Black:COLOR:CMYK:Process:0.000000,0.000000,0.000000,
1.000000><Blue:COLOR:RGB:Process:0.000000,0.000000,1.000000>>
<ParaStyle:Normal><pHyphenation:1><CharStyle:Default Paragraph Font>
<CharStyle:><CharStyle:Hyperlink>www.adobe.com<CharStyle:>
<CharStyle:Default Paragraph Font>. <CharStyle:><pHyphenation:>
Here is the same text with abbreviated tags:
<ASCII-WIN>
<dps:Normal=<Nextstyle:Normal><ct:Regular><cs:10.000000><phll:0>
<ph:0><phz:18.000000><cf:Times New Roman><cct:100.000000>>
<dcs:Default Paragraph Font=<Nextstyle:Default Paragraph Font>>
<dcs:Hyperlink=<BasedOn:Default Paragraph Font><Nextstyle:Hyperlink>
<cc:Blue><ct:Regular><cs:10.000000><chs:1.000000><cbs:0.000000>
<ccase:Normal><csc:><cu:1><cf:Times New Roman><cp:Normal><cstrike:0>
<cct:100.000000>>
<ctable:=<Black:COLOR:CMYK:Process:0.000000,0.000000,0.000000,1.000000>
<Blue:COLOR:RGB:Process:0.000000,0.000000,1.000000>>
<pstyle:Normal><ph:1><cstyle:Default Paragraph Font> <cstyle:>
<cstyle:Hyperlink>www.adobe.com<cstyle:><cstyle:Default Paragraph
Font>. <cstyle:><ph:>
What does all that coding mean? It's for a one-page
document with one frame that has simply one line of text: This is a
hyperlink to www.adobe.com. The text is black, except for the Web address, which is in blue underline.
As you can see, there's a lot to Tagged Text codes. InDesign comes with a complete list of codes in a PDF file called Tagged Text.pdf that you can find in the Tagged Text folder within the Adobe Technical Info folder on the InDesign installation disc.
In practical terms, you may not mind editing Tagged
Text slightly or leaving the tags in a file when you alter the file's
text; but you're not likely to forgo the friendly formatting available
in your word processor and in InDesign to apply Tagged Text coding to
everything in your text files.
2.2. Exporting files as JPEG graphics
The process for exporting to JPEG is simple: Select the objects to export, choose File =>
Export, choose JPEG in the Export dialog box's Format pop-up menu (Mac)
or Save as Type pop-up menu (Windows), and click Save to get the Export
JPEG dialog box (shown in Figure 1).
In the Export area of the Export JPEG dialog box, you
choose whether to export the selected graphics, entire pages and page
ranges, or the entire document.
NOTE
If you select multiple objects and choose Selection, they are combined into one graphic in the exported file.
You also can control quality, format, and resolution settings.
In the Image area, you have the following options:
The Quality pop-up menu lets you control the
image quality, with choices of Low, Medium, High, and Maximum. Note that
the higher the quality, the less the JPEG image can be compressed.
The
Format Method pop-up menu controls how the JPEG image appears in a
browser. The default Baseline option displays the entire image at one
time, whereas the Progressive option has it build up line by line — a
good option for very large files so that viewers can tell something is
happening as the image loads.
The
Resolution field lets you specify the output resolution in pixels per
inch (ppi); 72 ppi is appropriate for the Web, assuming that the image
will be used at the same size, but you should pick a value of 300 for
images to be published at the same size in print.
The
Color Space pop-up menu lets you choose how InDesign exports colors in
the JPEG image: RGB, CMYK, or Gray. (RGB is the color model used for
on-screen display, and CMYK is the color model used for professional
printing)
In the Options area, you have the following choices:
The Embed Color Profile option, if selected, embeds the InDesign document's color profile into the JPEG image so other programs can more accurately duplicate the color you intend.
The Anti-alias option, if selected, smoothes boundaries within your image, such as the edges of lines.
The Use Document Bleed Settings option, if selected, includes the document's bleed area as part of the exported image.
The
Simulate Overprint option, if selected, adjusts the colors of objects
that overlap each other in InDesign to look more like they would if
printed. This option should be selected if you are creating previews of
complex documents that have lots of overlapping colors, because it more
accurately reproduces the print intent.
Click Export when done setting these options.
NOTE
The Color Space pop-up menu and all four options in the Options area of the Export JPEG dialog box are new to InDesign CS5.