Hi Tony
If I understand you correctly, I would do the following.
Keep all your files in the one folder, including three separate book files:
Book for Product A
Book for Product B
Book for Product C
Add the chapters you need to each book and conditionalise the content of each
file as
Create Group categories, then use the Include and Exclude
functionality
John X Posada
AML Syst Ops Supt Data Analyst | US FCC RC Systems Control Analytics
| HSBC North America Holdings Inc
330 Madison Ave., NY NY
Hi Tony,
Pretty much what Laura said.
I maintain multiple guides that can have different chapters depending on
whether the information is for one customer or another. I have what I call
a master book file that contains all the files (this has to do with our
CMS and locating stuff, you may not
Thanks, you guys! Three good suggestions that I can work with — all rolling
in overnight.
~Tony
*From:* Laura Fergusson [mailto:laura.fergus...@exterity.com]
*Sent:* Wednesday, December 17, 2014 6:36 AM
*To:* Tony Marek (PDF); framers@lists.frameusers.com
*Subject:* RE: Question for the Group:
I practice a version of Laura’s approach for our User Manuals – where I create
8 manuals from one set of files (to be fair, 4 manual are “full manuals” of
about 400 letter-sized pages, while the other 4 are subsets of the 4 “full
manuals” and contain only about 25% of the full content).
To