![]() ![]() While the PDF2ID plug-in works well overall, don’t expect seamless translations-even for simple PDFs. There are a couple of features I’d like to see in the next version (in addition to even more accurate translation): Paragraph and character styles named by the typeface and type size to help identify where the styles were used and the ability to install the plug-in in different versions of InDesign on the same computer (currently, the plug-in removes any previous install, even of the same version). It’s well worth the extra $100 for those in the printing business. The Professional version adds the option of color spaces other than RGB, converting images to CMYK-TIFF, and multiple-processor conversion. Other useful features include the ability to save presets of the conversion settings, and the PDF inspector, which gives general information about the PDF before conversion. The Typeface library is a repository of saved font substitutions, which can be referenced for future documents-a big time saver when dealing with standard Windows-to-Mac fonts or Type1-to-OpenType conversions. It appears that the text linking is limited to single pages, as it didn’t link across spreads. Frames linking does exactly what the name implies-it tries to intelligently link the frames based on similar type styles. Two important new features are frames linking and the Typeface library. For just the second version of the PDF2ID plug-in, it has a nice list of new features. Professional includes all the Standard features, plus three unique features. ![]() ![]() PDF2ID now comes in two versions: Professional and Standard. CONVERT PDFs INTO EDITABLE INDESIGN FILES ![]()
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