Appears there is nothing in the InDesign preflight profile to flag this type of situation.
Weirdest thing I have seen from a client is an indesign file placed in another indesign file. Thankfully everything worked alright, but I wonder what would happen if the placed indesign file was missing links or fonts. Down the rabbit hole I would go!
I place INDDs in INDDs all the time. Packaging includes all the fonts and links from the placed INDD... if packaging is necessary (exported PDFs are better for most of my purposes).
Embedding or pasting images into InDesign is another matter altogether. The inclusion of the ability to even do that is an oversight!
What do you gain by this? Maybe there is a good reason, but I have never had a need to drop an Indesign file in another Indesign file. If I am going to combine jobs I make PDF's and go from there.
I am anal about packaging files, once the first proof goes out I package and go from there.
It saves making a new PDF each time you update a document that goes into another document.What do you gain by this?
Yep - I place indd into Indd often as well. It's safe as houses. There's heaps of warnings if you mis-link a graphic or font from original document. I use it when I have to manually setup an imposed file, which I can't impose directly on a rip for whatever reason. Then if I have to make a change at all in the original, it simply updates across all my self imposed documents. It's really no different than placing an eps pr ai file into an Indd file.
I'd never heard of copying and pasting a .jpg into Indesign, but just tried it. Now that, makes me shudder. Definitely not how to go about things.
How do does your client build swatches?
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