![]() Now, each two page spread will pick up the non printing spread number and repeat it on both left and right side. Enter the text variable in the text frame Go to master page and create text frame where you want the page number to appear on left and right pages.ħ. Select ?running header (paragraph style)? as typeį. Define a text variable as a running header.Ĭ. Enter the number of the spread in the text box on each spread.ĥ. It will show on the page but will not printĤ. Create a text frame on the left page of each two page spread on this layer with this style. Create a new, unique paragraph style which the text variable can use. Add a new layer and make it non printing.Ģ. Your solution did not work for me but the following works.ġ. ![]() A customer wanted the same page number repeated on both left and right pages. Use the File > Open menu in InDesign CS2 or CS3 to reconstitute the INX file back into an INDD layout file. I know Klaus is going to ask (heh), so yes, you can download the spreadnumbering.inx layout file I used to create the screen shots above, before I flowed in the text file, if you want to inspect it yourself. For example, here’s the lower-right corner of the page 14?15 spread: And since the paragraph style is a numbered list, you’ll see each each spread get “numbered” in increments of one. Since each frame can hold only one paragraph, autoflowing the text file will generate a ton of spreads (easily deleted afterwards, or just edit the text file before placing it). Shift-click the loaded place cursor over the frame where the spread numbers should appear to autoflow in the entire text file. Don’t have one hanging around? Here’s one I created in Text Edit, called “returns.txt,” that has about 200 empty returns. Choose File > Place, and select a text file that’s comprised of a series of empty carriage returns, one after the other. Go to the document spread where you want the spread numbering to begin. If you want, you can select the number frame with the Selection tool and choose the spread number paragraph style (as I’ve done below) so the text you’re going to put in there will automatically be styled correctly. Any text you’d like to appear next to the spread number should be in its own separate frame on the master page. ![]() If you inserted any text or even an empty carriage return (as I did above, to test the frame size) into the spread number text frame on the master page, delete it now, otherwise this method won’t work. Uh-huh … can you see where I’m going with this? Even though the paragraph has no text, it still gets a number because of the numbered list settings in the style. In the screen shot below, I’ve zoomed into my spread number text frame on the master page (see the dotted blue text frame?) and inserted an empty paragraph, styled with my “spread numbers” paragraph style, to help me judge the height. (Just one frame per multi-page spread, of course.) Make it shallow enough so only one line of a paragraph, styled with your spread number paragraph style, will fit inside. Next, put a single text frame on the master spread where you want the spread number to appear. (In CS2, just choose None in the Separator field’s menu.) Make sure the style includes settings for a numbered list, and that in the Numbering Style > Number field, you remove the tab (^t) and the “.” (the dot) that comes after the paragraph number by default, as I’ve done below. It doesn’t involve any combination of auto page numbering tricks (e.g., “put both previous and current page numbers on the same page”), as I outlined in this older post, but if you can figure out a way, please tell us in a comment!įirst, create a paragraph style just for the spread numbers–font, alignment, etc. I’ve thought about it and have come up with a solution, a little bit of a kludge and it requires CS2 or CS3, but definitely easier than using sections. Right now I am using section markers to create a new section for each spread. At the end I want to be able to use InBooklet to do the imposition for me. I just want InDesign to number every second page, as I would like the spreads to be numbered rather than each individual page. Yet another e-mail with the same question came in today, this time from a graphic designer named Jazmine: I’ve never actually seen a publication numbered in this way so I’m not sure why people keep asking how to do it! Some users need page 1 to be numbered “1” (first spread), page 3 to be numbered “2” (second spread), page 5 numbered “3,” page 7 numbered “4” and so on. I frequently get asked how to create automatic spread numbers–as opposed to automatic page numbers–in an InDesign layout.
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