E.G.:
I have three manuals each consisting of some 100 files (the reason
being to make it easier to revise). Each file may or may not end in a
blank left page which we chose to have absolutely blank instead of a
page consisting of the regular layout (header/footer and stuff) plus
the text "Intentionally Left Blank" or something of that nature.

It is IMO much easier when your file ends on a right page (even
without doing anything with FrameScript) to add a paragraph or two,
maybe one that flushes the next paragraph off to the nex page. This
last paragraph, which I call EmptyLeft would call a master page that
would be totally blank except for a body frame of the same flow as the
other pages. Or skip the flush paragraph and let the EmptyLeft also
start on top of page or column.

If you are using the single blank page files for adding into the book
file, (and I have seen it done this way by a BIG US company) you have
to go the extra step of checking each file for last page ending. Of
course you can do it by checking the page count in the book file AFTER
you have updated the book, but with a book consisting of maybe
hundreds of files, who would like to add up to 50% of blank files into
the book file? I have seen it and it ain't nice. But, as I said, it
works. But I would not trust it until I would have physically checked
it. And that takes time. I would not like to print out 500 or 1000 or
2000 pages only to find out that there is one paging error or more
early in the book that will make the left pages after the spot to
print on the right page and vice versa.

However, if you have a "List of pages", List of Effective Pages" or
what you choose to name it, a list that counts for and elaborates the
revision status of each page, and if you want to refer to the blank
pages only with the word "BLANK" without any page nunber, it may be
easier to do it with separate blank files, I suppose, I have not trie
it, but I do it this way for now:

I am using LEP Tools from Silicon Prairie Software. I set it to read
the Header/Footer markers #1 and #2 that I use for resp. revision date
and revision number. The LEP Tool reads this into a text box it makes
on each page into which it puts its own type of markers that read the
contents of the markers I have set. Originally I only need to put them
on the first page, of course. But then, I put these markers to the
"EmptyLeft" page into the only paragraph there (the "EmptyLeft" Pgf
tag). Here one marker is empty (one space only) and the other is
populated with the word "BLANK".

This works for me now, but I am hoping for an upgrade solution that
could maybe add a third kind of LEP marker that would read a different
type of marker, we could call it "Blank", and when it finds this
marker it will print only the contents of that marker, which would be
"BLANK" or something like that.

Now, this should be clear as mud, shouldn't it?

Bodvar

On 2/9/06, Mike Feimster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >> Third possibility: Put the back cover into its own one-page file.
>
> >A horrible suggestion IMNSHO, but it works. ;-)
>
> Bodvar,
>
> Care to elaborate?
>
> Mike
>
>
>
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