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Affinity Publisher in Adobe Indesign


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As far as I can tell IDD will not recognise the affinity PDF either through the open or the place command.  Saving as PSD will also not work.  But then why would you want to work in Affinity and then transfer to IDD?  

Microsoft - Like entering your home and opening the stainless steel kitchen door, with a Popup: 'Do you really want to open this door'? Then looking for the dishwasher and finding it stored in the living room where you have to download a water supply from the app store, then you have to buy microsoft compliant soap, remove the carpet only to be told that it is glued to the floor.. Don't forget to make multiple copies of your front door key and post them to all who demand access to all the doors inside your home including the windows and outside shed.

Apple - Like entering your home and opening the oak framed Kitchen door and finding the dishwasher right in front you ready to be switched on, soap supplied, and water that comes through a water softener.  Ah the front door key is yours and it only needs to open the front door.

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For the life of me I cannot think why anybody who has a computer and the chance to learn Publisher would want to use it to go back to that cash-gobbling Adobe product.   But then, nobody asked me.  


24" iMAC Apple M1 chip, 8-core CPU, 8-core GPU, 16 GB unified memory, 1 TB SSD storage, Ventura 13.6.  Photo, Publisher, Designer 1.10.5, and 2.3.
MacBook Pro 13" 2020, Apple M1 chip, 16GB unified memory, 256GB  SSD storage
,  Ventura 13.6.   Publisher, Photo, Designer 1.10.5, and 2.1.1.  
 iPad Pro 12.9 2020 (4th Gen. IOS 16.6.1); Apple pencil.  
Wired and bluetooth mice and keyboards.9_9

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4 hours ago, Chris26 said:

As far as I can tell IDD will not recognise the affinity PDF either through the open or the place command.  Saving as PSD will also not work.  But then why would you want to work in Affinity and then transfer to IDD?  

49 minutes ago, jmwellborn said:

For the life of me I cannot think why anybody who has a computer and the chance to learn Publisher would want to use it to go back to that cash-gobbling Adobe product.   But then, nobody asked me.  

I love so much to work on Affinity Publisher but for my studies have I have to give a .indd file. It's still the standard. 

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11 hours ago, thomasbellili said:

I love so much to work on Affinity Publisher but for my studies have I have to give a .indd file. It's still the standard. 

To my knowledge there is no way to open a native APub file in InDesign. You can place a PDF that was created in APub in an InDesign document of the same size but you cannot edit the content of the placed PDF (just tried in CS6).

You could save this InDesign document in its .indd format and give it away but I doubt that would be accepted :)

I think the best way would be to work in InDesign for your studies and to use APub for everything else. Often we have to use certain tools that are given to us in a certain situation. And it is also good to know different tools.

d.

Affinity Designer 1 & 2   |   Affinity Photo 1 & 2   |   Affinity Publisher 1 & 2
Affinity Designer 2 for iPad   |   Affinity Photo 2 for iPad   |   Affinity Publisher 2 for iPad

Windows 11 64-bit - Core i7 - 16GB - Intel HD Graphics 4600 & NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960M
iPad pro 9.7" + Apple Pencil

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3 hours ago, dominik said:

To my knowledge there is no way to open a native APub file in InDesign. You can place a PDF that was created in APub in an InDesign document of the same size but you cannot edit the content of the placed PDF (just tried in CS6).

You could save this InDesign document in its .indd format and give it away but I doubt that would be accepted :)

I think the best way would be to work in InDesign for your studies and to use APub for everything else. Often we have to use certain tools that are given to us in a certain situation. And it is also good to know different tools.

d.

Thank you for your reply ! This is unfortunate. I would have thought a PDF could do it.

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As dominik wrote, if a client asked me to turn over ID files at the end of a project, I would use ID to create their work.

If I was taking classes and an ID file was required to turn the classroom work in, I would use ID to create that work—unless I got clearance to use something other than ID for the class work. I have heard of some classes where the instructors have approved such things up front.

RECOSOFT makes PDF2ID. As far as I know, their plug-in is the only means of moving a PDF into ID format and one needs to understand that there can be from little to a lot of work once PDF2ID has converted a PDF for use in ID.

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18 hours ago, thomasbellili said:

I love so much to work on Affinity Publisher but for my studies have I have to give a .indd file. It's still the standard. 

When will those responsible finally realize that InDesign is NOT a standard?!
The standard format is PDF - NOT Indd. How I create a PDF is up to me. Any good application that creates an error-free PDF is welcome.

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5 minutes ago, Michail said:

When will those responsible finally realize that InDesign is NOT a standard?!
The standard format is PDF - NOT Indd. How I create a PDF is up to me. Any good application that creates an error-free PDF is welcome.

Classroom work for layout is usually judged by the result in the native application—PDFs can hide a bunch of errors in how one constructed a file. PDFs are only a standard for print, not how one got there.

Like it or not, whatever layout application is permitted for classroom work is the standard for the class. But in the real world, ID is the most used application for layout and by whatever measure makes it the standard. Some schools do use different layout applications and some allow a variety. But if the class requisite is ID, then nothing else would be acceptable to check the course work.

If I was teaching a class on final output for print, I would list acceptable applications for creating those final PDFs and I would check each one for the creator string and would flat out reject PDFs not made with those acceptable applications if the student did not seek an exception. If a student could not follow those instructions then they at least fail that part of the class. If a student cannot follow class instructions, that indicates how well they can follow instructions in the real world, which is part of what they are learning in class.

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