
[February 20, 2006] The following video tip shows you how to use the bulleted lists feature to automatically insert different icons in front of selected paragraphs. About the tip Imagine having to manually place little phone symbols at the start of a line of text containing a phone number, or an envelop symbol in front of an address line. Even with the use of the next style feature in InDesign, this would require the insertion of a separate symbol preceding the text. Using the bulleted lists feature available in InDesign CS2 (and CS with Pagemaker plug-in pack installed) will ease the pain of having to do this manually. It becomes even more powerful if you combine it with nested styles as briefly reviewed in tip www.youtube.com
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4 Comments to “Adobe InDesign CS2 – Bulleted list and icon insertion”
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@DamajaCJ I never shy away from my accent. I grew up in the Netherlands, US and Caribbean, and live in Australia… of course my English accent will display a mixture of all … it is what makes me such a special person :-)
@hudgemedia AFAIK, Cari is a professional (see subs page: “Adobe Certified Instructor, providing training and support services …throughout Australia and New Zealand”). Professionals should be able to use constructive criticism more than flattery. I could have been ‘nicer’ (& probably was in a bad mood that day) but ultimately I meant that for an international audience the accent could be an obstacle to great content. All good ‘presenters’ have to give attention to accent & enunciation.
@DamajaCJ
C’mon man. Were you just in a bad mood when you sat down to comment on this? What relevance is the accent? Please, when people take the time to teach and get no monetary compensation for creating something and posting to YouTube, … please have some appreciation for these people – especially ones that are concise! Your comment reads as a very abrasive cut down.
No need to comment like this ever again. Refrain from contributing to YouTube in that way, friend.
where is ur accent from? it’s quite bizarre – like a mix of West Australian, Dutch, Swedish, South African… all VERY strong and different in tone!
I’m sorry to say it’s so strong and odd/unpredictable, I think many that understand English would find it hard to follow and certainly very distracting.