![]() ![]() None of them are perfect, but they beat starting from scratch.īear in mind, too, that my goal here is not to take a full web page layout and recreate it in InDesign. Whether your preference for tackling this task is down and dirty, methodical and geeky, or somewhere in between, at least one of the approaches in this article should help you get your HTML into InDesign-and, with one exception, won’t require spending a dime, except for the cost of your own time. Currently, there’s no method for directly importing HTML into InDesign, but there are a few “unofficial” paths for bringing HTML in and preserving much of its structure and formatting. But there may also be times when we’re called upon to do the opposite-to take HTML content and bring it into the realm of print or PDF through InDesign. Typically, our challenge as designers is getting content out of InDesign as HTML, a task which I covered in my article “InDesign to HTML” in the April/May 2013 issue of InDesign Magazine. But there’s no denying that a vast amount of content has been structured and formatted in HTML. ![]() Whether or not that’s true, only time will tell. ![]() The future of publishing may rest upon HTML. This article was originally published in InDesign Magazine issue 55 (August–September 2013). ![]()
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