7.0

Table Of Contents
8.1 Key Concepts
To set up a page, you should understand the following key concepts:
Page (Page 88)
Execution Order of Pages (Page 89)
Executing a Page vs. Including a Page in Output (Page 89)
N-Up Object (Page 90)
Cut Marks (Page 90)
Guidelines for Working with Pages (Page 90)
Layout Features (Page 91)
8.1.1 Page
What is a page?
There are three types of pages in PlanetPress Design: normal pages, overlay pages, and virtual pages.
Normal Page
A normal page is one that can print depending on the conditions you set for that page.
Overlay Page
An overlay page is one that you can place either underneath or over top of the contents of another page. A
simple example of an overlay that goes under a page is a company logo that appears as a background graphic
on all pages of the document.
An overlay page can print only if it is associated with a normal page, and only if the normal page with which it
is associated prints. You can have many overlay pages associated with a single page.
In PlanetPress Design, overlay pages are displayed in the Page area in mauve with a yellow border. Mauve
and yellow are both defaults, which you can modify in the User Options dialog box. In the Structure area, you
can distinguish overlay pages by the horizontal lines that appear inside the page symbol.
When you rename an overlay page associated with a normal page, you break the association between both
pages. To fix this, you must recreate the association.
Virtual Page
A virtual page is a page you want to execute n-up. N-up means n instances of the page print on a single sheet
of paper.
The only time a virtual page executes is when an n-up object executes it. If you have a virtual page in a
document, and a no n-up object that executes that virtual page, the virtual page does not execute.
In PlanetPress Design, virtual pages are displayed in the Page area in gray with a yellow border. Gray and
yellow are both defaults, which you can modify in the User Options dialog box. In the Structure area, you can
distinguish a virtual page by its symbol.
Related topics:
Execution Order of Pages (Page 89)
Executing a Page vs. Including a Page in Output (Page 89)
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