"Clear Overrides" in Paragraph Styles menu is needlessly picky
I can clear overrides only if the selected text is all in a single paragraph style. If I select multiple lines in different styles (which happens all the time in lists of text, calendar items, etc), the thing is always dimmed out.
This makes it needlessly tedious to get all the text back into a known set of styles, so that the styles themselves can be redefined and the text will update accordingly. (Example: taking formatted text to a new and differently-sized layout.)
This problem is reportedly fixed (finally!) in the latest Beta Build 30.5.0.18. You can update and test if it’s truly gone.
However, please not there are some known issues with this particular build:
- Opening recent files from Home Screen Recent section is not working (opening recent files from File > Open Recent Files works fine).
- Generative Expand does not open its own HUD when used after Generate Vector, Generative Shape Fill, or Sketch to Vector. Instead, the previous tool's HUD is displayed and Generative Expand remains inaccessible. Workaround: Ungroup the generative content first, then apply Generative Expand.
- Half of Astute Graphics plugins can’t get loaded. Both teams are now aware of the problem.
-
Edgar Andres Zorrilla commented
This right here! is the problem i am having which is so stupid. They need to fix this simple ****. Everybody jumps on AI but not on basic f* features that should exist!
-
clusterx
commented
This problem is already 100 years old, is there really only 7 votes?
-
Rebecca
commented
It still is set up that way here in 2022! Very annoying, but good to be aware of - thought I was doing something wrong.
Maybe I will do EVERYTHING text related in INDD now. -
Jolin
commented
Some kind of highlight overwrite would also be neat, to see where it doesn’t respect the style.
-
Anonymous
commented
I can second that. it's is quite annoying, also counter intuitive in my opinion.
Why would you allow your defined text style to be altered that easily but so difficult to change back?
also defeats the purpose of defining a text style at the first place.