ID Question
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- rodzilla
Trying to open a file given to me in InDesign.
I'm getting some "missing plug-in/errors (like 10-12 of them)."
Can you open a CS2 file in CS3 or will there be issues?
- bigtrickagain0
I've opened indesign version 2.0 files in CS3 before - i don't see why opening a CS2 file in CS3 would be any harder. i would imagine that your issue is not to do with the indesign version mismatch specifically, but i'm just conjecturing.
- abhi0
If you're in CS3, you need to export the .indd as an .inx. Then open up the .inx in CS2. You might have to re-link some stuff but shouldn't have any trouble with plug-ins.
- rodzilla0
The file was supplied to me. The person was working in CS2, I'm working in CS3. Never really had an adobe program have issues with plug-ins...
- monospaced0
The problem is that whoever created it has several (10-12) plug-ins on their end and you don't. Ask for a PDF of the original to see what changes when you "convert" it.
- what did you beat me by ummmm 2-1000th of a secksv123
- no biggiemonospaced
- ksv1230
open it, if you don't find anything amiss, then you are good to go. here should be a lowres pdf to reference, if the supplier was any good. :-)
- "if your supplier was any good"
who uses plugins???monospaced - the file isn't complicated. I am just building from the Artwork they supplied. Eff it I guess.rodzilla
- you like supplier, files are like a drug.ksv123
- they are really weird plug-in names too, ie.....conditional Text.inDesignplugin & worldready.IDpluginrodzilla
- "if your supplier was any good"