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Le Sides, Side Towards Spine, Side
Away From Spine, and Largest Area.
While QuarkXPress limits you to
owing text around objects placed
above the text box, text wrap in
InDesign aects text frames above
and below an object. However, if
you prefer InDesign to limit its text
wrap behavior, open the Preferences
dialog box, choose the Composition
pane, and select the Text Wrap Only
Aects Text Beneath option.
Character, Paragraph, Table,
and Object styles
Character and paragraph styles are
great time-savers for text-intensive
publications like newspapers, books,
You can choose File > Open in
InDesign to open documents and
templates created with QuarkXPress
or QuarkXPress Passport .–..
When you open a QuarkXPress le
in InDesign, a new, untitled docu-
ment is created. InDesign converts
the original le information to native
InDesign information. Most objects,
styles, and colors are translated prop-
erly, but text may reow dierently,
so proof the results carefully.
Before converting a QuarkXPress
document, you should store all
imported picture les in a single
folder, relink all pictures in the Pic-
tures tab of the Usage dialog box
(Utilities > Usage > Picture), and
then use File > Save As to save a
clean version of the document in
QuarkXPress. is ensures that all
links are preserved.
If your QuarkXPress document does
not convert, check the original le
and remove any objects that require
an XTension; then save and try to
convert the document again.
QuarkXPress .x, .x, .x, and .x les
are stored in a proprietary format
that InDesign cannot directly open.
However, a third-party developer
called Markzware (www.markzware.
com) oers a conversion utility called
QID that can convert these les.
Opening a QuarkXPress document
may be ecient in the short run,
but it is oen better to re-create the
document, making use of the unique
features of InDesign, such as based-
on master pages, nested styles, and
object styles. Another option is to
export the QuarkXPress le as a 
and place each page of the  inside
the InDesign document as a graphic.
magazines, and catalogs. InDesign
also includes object styles, which you
can apply to any InDesign object,
and table styles and cell styles, which
make document-wide changes to
table and cell formatting quickly and
painlessly.
However, note that character styles
are handled dierently in InDesign
than in QuarkXPress. You can dene
a character style in InDesign to be
as specic as you want. For example,
your character style could be dened
to apply only italic, ignoring any
other formatting already applied to
the text. You could then apply that
same “italic” character style to text
set in dierent fonts and sizes, and it
would always make it italic—except
in the case where a font doesnt have
an italic style. (InDesign will never
apply a “fake” italic to text.)
Note that in general you should not
format an entire paragraph with a
single character style. Instead, use a
paragraph style, which applies both
paragraph and character formatting
to the selected text.
Character styles also allow for some
of the most powerful text format-
ting features in InDesign, including
nested styles,  styles, and drop
cap styles. For more information, see
“Nested Styles” on page 42.
Opening QuarkXPress les
Opening QuarkXPress les 17
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