An even easier method, which lets you keep the heading in the inset, is
to initially insert the cross-reference marker in the inset. After the
inset is updated in the container file, re-create the cross-reference to
the container file, which will use the marker contained inside the
inset. It won't
An even easier method, which lets you keep the heading in the inset, is
to initially insert the cross-reference marker in the inset. After the
inset is updated in the container file, re-create the cross-reference to
the container file, which will use the marker contained inside the
inset. It won't
Hello
2 different manuals use the same text inset and each of them have an
x-ref to the same heading in the text inset.
Whenever I open one manual and solve the unresolved x-ref, the other
manual will get an unresolved x-ref to that heading.
How do you suggest that I solve this?
Verner,
Cross-references with text insets are tricky. X-refs to text insets
require that the container file be specified for the inset. Since the
inset is in two different manuals (Manual A and Manual B), when you set
a reference to the inset in Manual A, then Manual A's file name and
location
Hello
2 different manuals use the same text inset and each of them have an
x-ref to the same heading in the text inset.
Whenever I open one manual and solve the unresolved x-ref, the other
manual will get an unresolved x-ref to that heading.
How do you suggest that I solve this?
Best
Verner,
Cross-references with text insets are tricky. X-refs to text insets
require that the container file be specified for the inset. Since the
inset is in two different manuals (Manual A and Manual B), when you set
a reference to the inset in Manual A, then Manual A's file name and
location