Thanks for the tip! I'll add that approach to my notes.
Best,
Karen
On Tue, Nov 6, 2018 at 7:57 PM Monique Semp
wrote:
> I think what I've had to do is consistent with what you found, although I
> didn't have quite the same display issues as you did. But menus/displays
> weren't functional enou
I think what I've had to do is consistent with what you found, although
I didn't have quite the same display issues as you did. But
menus/displays weren't functional enough to actually use the product.
I have FrameMaker 2015 (as part of that era's Technical Communication
Suite), and
Thanks Klaus and Mayank, I think we have solved the broken apps.
This problem didn't reveal itself when only FM11 was installed. Once we
added FM2019, a conflict arose with Windows scaling (running inside
Parallels VM). When that was reset to a resolution it could handle (instead
of my big Mac Ret
On 2 Nov 2018 at 10:55, Karen Robbins wrote:
> ...As a quick follow-up, installing 2019 has broken both it and 2011
> versions: windows and dialogs don't render (are blank), and menus don't
> stay visible when clicked (thus nothing can be selected). Not to mention
> the app font has shrunk and fad
...As a quick follow-up, installing 2019 has broken both it and 2011
versions: windows and dialogs don't render (are blank), and menus don't
stay visible when clicked (thus nothing can be selected). Not to mention
the app font has shrunk and faded so it's barely visible.
I guess the more important
Each new release only has info about the features in that specific release.
There are a set of on line tutorials about 2019 on the Adobe site.
They also deal with changes in the interface, so should probably provide
the info you need.
However, if you want info about something that changed earlier
Hi Framers,
Is there a document or online resource about customizing FM 2019 defaults?
I am test-jumping from FM v11, so not familiar with any of the interim
interface versions. I can't abide giant/full-screen start-up screens or
galleries in apps, so just hoping to clean up what I'm forced to see