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Table Of Contents
15.1 Key Concepts
To work with document objects, you should understand the following key concepts:
PlanetPress Design Object (Page 236)
Object Layering Order (Page 236)
Group (Page 236)
Snapping Points (Page 237)
Repeat Properties of an Object or Group (Page 240)
15.1.1 PlanetPress Design Object
What is an object in PlanetPress Design?
There are eight different types of objects in PlanetPress Design: data selection, text or box, bar code, business
graphic, shape, picture, PlanetPress Talk, and n-up.
Properties common to all types of objects include the size and position of the object on the page of the
document, the condition, if any, associated with the object, snapping points, Repeat properties, PlanetPress
Talk before and PlanetPress Talk after properties, and whether the object permits scaling, moving or selecting
it with the mouse or with keyboard shortcuts.
The properties that distinguish one object type from another are the kind of information the object can
contain, and the specific properties associated with that kind of information.
Related topics:
Object Layering Order (Page 236)
Group (Page 236)
Snapping Points (Page 237)
Repeat Properties of an Object or Group (Page 240)
15.1.2 Object Layering Order
Is the order in which objects appear in the Structure area significant?
The order in which objects appear in the Structure area determines the order in which the document executes
them, as well as which object appears on top when two objects overlap.
You can think of each object as existing on its own layer. As you add objects, you add layers. The most
recently added object always occupies the foreground layer. In the Structure area, the topmost object
occupies the background layer.
If two objects overlap, the one closest to the foreground appears on top. If you have several objects you want
to place either on top of or under another object or group, it may be useful to group them into a single unit
and then edit the layering order of the group.
Related topics:
PlanetPress Design Object (Page 236)
15.1.3 Group
What is a group?
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