GaryLearnTech Posted August 26, 2024 Posted August 26, 2024 Hi @Furry I've not done much with Publisher recently, but have used inline graphics quite a lot in the past. I would occasionally apply the text wrap to the text frame by accident, rather than to the graphic. I wonder if that's what's happened to you? Easy to check - ensure your graphic is definitely selected and then double-check the text wrap setting again… If that doesn't explain it, sharing your document - or a small extract containing an example of the problem - might be required to get to the bottom of this. Quote —— Gary —— Photo/Designer/Publisher: Affinity Store, v2.5.n release (and, since I have the space, the last v1 versions too). Mac mini (M1, 2020), 16GB/2TB, macOS Sequoia iPad Pro (M4) 13", 1TB, Apple Pencil Pro, iPadOS 18.2 MacBook Pro (Intel), macOS Sequoia Windows 10 via VMware Fusion
Furry Posted August 28, 2024 Posted August 28, 2024 Thanks for your reply, GaryLT. For some reason I did not get the usual update and so only discovered your reply when I came back to post a further message. I have to report, however, that it is not a case of selecting the text frame rather than the graphic frame. I produce a weekly news sheet and it aways has a number of illustrations which I try always to anchor to the text so that they will move when I add further text on pages before them. Suddenly, however, when I set the Text Wrap to "Jump", "Square" or "Tight" (depending on the size and shape of the graphic), cut the graphic, insert the Frame Text Tool into the text where I want the graphic to be anchored and paste, the graphic becomes an inline graphic, which is NOT what I want. As I said in my earlier post, I suspect that I have accidentally triggered a command somewhere that neutralises the setting in the Terxt Wrap dialog. But that doesn't make sense to me. Why would there ever be such a command? Depending on any further replies in this thread, I will work on producing a sample document that I can post for others to examine. For copyright reasons, it wouod not be a good idea for me to post the actual document. Quote Main machine is 2024 24" iMac running Sequoia 15.2 with 8GB of RAM. Also have 2022 12" Macbook Air also running Sequoia 15.2, also with 8GB of RAM. On the side I have a 2019 27" iMac running Mojave 10.14.6 because that is the last OS that lets me run Adobe software without getting dragged into the subscription spiderweb.
Furry Posted September 22, 2024 Posted September 22, 2024 Well, nobody pointed it out to me (suggesting this thread is buried too deep for peope to read) but I have discovered the two litte buttons in the topmost horizontal toolbar that appear when you have a graphic selected. One (which looks like a map pin), is labeled "float with text" and the other (which looks like a graphic in the middle of text), is labeled "Inline in text". Pretty obvious. realy. So here is me with red on my face! JeroenC 1 Quote Main machine is 2024 24" iMac running Sequoia 15.2 with 8GB of RAM. Also have 2022 12" Macbook Air also running Sequoia 15.2, also with 8GB of RAM. On the side I have a 2019 27" iMac running Mojave 10.14.6 because that is the last OS that lets me run Adobe software without getting dragged into the subscription spiderweb.
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