Why can't you use this technique:
As a final, hacky solution, you could make a super-stripped file (I use
MIF editing to kill, like, EVERY catalog I can) and then have one of
those files for each part, in which you define a Variable to carry the
H/F text? That way, you could still use
Thanks to David, Lin, and Robert for replies to my question about
picking up a paratext from a previous file in a book and displaying it
in a running header/footer. It appears that FM will not do this.
To David: No, I can't use the Volume building block because it is
already in use.
To
It does, actually, but since we make sure that the text is black, it
doesn't LOOK like it's clickable. People are so accustomed to links
being blue and/or underlined that they never think to hover over text
that looks like all the other text. Social engineering at its finest.
;-)
--
Lin Sims
On
Another way to work around that is to consolidate everything into a single file.
On Tue, Dec 11, 2012 at 5:20 PM, Lin Sims ljsims...@gmail.com wrote:
Current file only, unless that's changed with FM11 (and I doubt it).
Where I work, we have a sort-of-similar issue, and we solved it by
using
|From: Lin Sims ljsims...@gmail.com
|Date: Tue, December 11, 2012 8:20 pm
|
|Where I work, we have a sort-of-similar issue, and we solved it by
|using cross-references. It means you'll have to remember to check that
|you're pointing to the right files if you add any new ones in, but it
|beats
Current file only, unless that's changed with FM11 (and I doubt it).
Where I work, we have a sort-of-similar issue, and we solved it by
using cross-references. It means you'll have to remember to check that
you're pointing to the right files if you add any new ones in, but it
beats typing