Datasheet

16
Part I: Before You Begin
Pasteboard
The white area that surrounds the page is called the pasteboard. It’s a work-
space for temporarily storing objects. The pasteboard above and below each
page or spread is an inch deep. The pasteboard at both left and right of a
page or spread is just as wide as the page. For example, a spread composed
of two 8-inch-wide pages has 8 inches of pasteboard to the left and 8 inches
of pasteboard to the right, plus 1 inch of pasteboard above and 1 inch below.
You can set your own preferred height and width of the pasteboard. To
do so, open the Guides & Pasteboard pane of the Preferences dialog box
and choose a new value for the Horizontal Margins and/or Vertical Margins
field. (Choose InDesignPreferencesGuides & Pasteboard [Ô+K] or
EditPreferencesGuides & Pasteboard [Ctrl+K] to open the Preferences
dialog box.)
Application frame and bar
With the application frame, Mac users can put all the InDesign elements
in their own container so that they don’t float freely and other applica-
tions don’t peek through. You show the application frame by choosing
WindowApplication Frame — doing so makes InDesign for Mac behave
like InDesign for Windows. (By default, the application frame is turned off in
InDesign for Mac.)
Conversely, Windows users can choose WindowApplication Frame to hide
the application frame so that InDesign for Windows looks like InDesign for
Mac. (By default, the application frame is turned on in InDesign for Windows.)
The Application Frame menu command is a toggle, hiding the application
frame if it’s visible and showing it if it’s hidden. You see a check mark next to
the menu option if the application frame is visible. (InDesign uses the same
toggling indicator in other menus.)
Above the Control panel is the application bar, which offers easy access to
other Adobe applications, such as Bridge, and access to controls over vari-
ous view options. It appears by default if the application frame is enabled.
When the application frame is hidden, you can show or hide the application
bar by choosing WindowApplication Bar.
The application bar has several handy elements. From left to right:
The first element is the set of quick-access buttons to Bridge and other
Adobe software.
The second element is the Zoom Level field and pop-up menu.
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