Printing batch for InDesign CS files

It looks like you need to tell export PDF which presets to use when exporting. But as you can see I’m not the expert here. But it is a place to start. Use the 5 line code referenced above as a basis… see if that works than modify from there.

So I tried adding using . No change. Still receive the error. Even if that had worked, the problem with using the preset is that you can’t save security settings in presets. So earlier in my code I set the Export Preferences and then try to export the file. However I commented out that section while testing the using . Thanks. Any other ideas would be appreicated.

six

“full name” returns an alias of file reference. When you concatenate that with a string (“.pdf”), you get a list. Try “set docName to full name as Unicode text”.

This sort of stuff is fairly obvious if you look at the log, BTW.

– Shane Stanley

It may have been obvious to you but to those of us who are just starting to work with Applescript it isn’t that easy and basically that’s why we’re here… to learn what our mistakes are from people who know more than us. I hop this worked for sixlegsup also.

Thanks.

This sort of stuff is fairly obvious if you look at the log, BTW.

It may have been obvious to you but to those of us who are just starting to work with
Applescript it isn’t that easy and basically that’s why we’re here… to learn what our
mistakes are from people who know more than us.

Sometimes meaning is hard to interpret in message boards. As you spend more time here, you’ll see that Shane is a really nice/helpful guy. I think what he was getting at is that if you watch the events/responses in the log as your script runs, you’ll see when a variable is a list because it will be encosed in curly brackets. i.e. {} His comment seems intended as a tip, rather than to chastise.

It takes some time to get the hang of telling which line of code produced which log message, but it’s real handy once you get the hang of it.

Thanks for being here, and good luck!

Sorry for jumping to conclusions… it seemed out of place since I have been nothing short of amazed by all the help people are willing to provide on this site. Thanks for clarifying.

Yes, I’m really not a monster :slight_smile: The OP was understandably frustrated – he’d written two long posts here and another elsewhere – and obviously wasted a lot of his time. My point was that you should always look at the log first; some things then become obvious, and can save you a lot of time (and frustration).

– Mild-mannered Shane

Thanks for your note Shane. The error verbage and event log didn’t sync in my mind, but it makes sense. This snippet seemed to work well (though I’ve refined it by stripping out the .indd suffix, etc)…


tell application "InDesign CS"
	set myDoc to active document
	set docName to full name of myDoc as Unicode text
	export myDoc format PDF type to docName & ".pdf"
end tell

It’s good to see the daylight.

After a bit of research it seems this is a better way of writing this statement.


local myDoc, docName
set myDoc to active document
set docName to full name of myDoc & ".pdf" as string
export myDoc format PDF type to docName

How is it better? It involves first making a list before coercing to text, which is less efficient, and you’re producing non-Unicode text, which means it could fail if some accented or foreign characters are used in the path. You were better off with the previous version.

– Shane Stanley

I’m not sure why this is not better. First, it makes more sense to me to assign value and perform the coercion in the same statement, rather than spread that over the assignment and export statements. Second, it is my understanding that Finder performs an implicit coercion between strings and unicode text. I have created files and folders with unicode text, and using the string data type works every time. Finally, both pieces of code appear to perform the same tasks. The first performs a coercion then concatenates the text. The second concatenates a list then performs a coercion. As a whole code snippet I can’t determine how they effectually differ - they take the same time to perform the task. That’s just my take.

OK, so use: (set docName to full name of myDoc as Unicode text) & “.pdf”

No, although it works most of the time. It won’t work with many accented characters – you can’t convert them from Unicode to ASCII strings because there is no ASCII equivalent. For most Engilsh-speakers it’s not really a problem, but don’t expect it to behave on a non-English system.

Appearances can mislead…

Right.

No, it does a bit more than that. First it creates a list via the concatenation, and then to coerce to a string it has to first coerce the file reference separately to a string. Then you are coercing a list to a string, and the result of that depends on the value of AppleScript’s text item delimiters. So for safety’s sake it really needs to make sure they are set to the default. Otherwise you might get something unexpected:

set AppleScript's text item delimiters to {"something"}
-- whole lot of other stuff
tell application "InDesign CS"
	set myDoc to active document
	set docName to full name of myDoc & ".pdf" as string
end tell

By using the other method, you son’t have to worry about text item delimiters.

– Shane Stanley

I was wondering if it was best to set the text item delimiters manually or just leave the default. That would be interesting to play with.

That does make sense that some unicode won’t translate, it’s just confusing to have to use a unicode data type when a ‘string’ seems most natural (for lack of a better word).

Thanks for the feedback. This little project has served as a good learning experience into the nuances and friggin frustrations of Applescript.

Do you know if there’s a way to batch print like this in Microsoft Word?

thanks a ton!

It should be feasible in Word 2004, but the code would look quite different.


Shane Stanley

Any idea how different? or where I could go for some code to manipulate? I have only Office X right now, but could get 2004 if need be.

thanks
-aidan

At a guess, almost completely. They’re very different apps, with a different approach to printing.


Shane Stanley

[quote=“iolaire”]
Here is a minor modification to Kari’s code that works for me as a droplet application. Make sure you change the text “My Printer Preset” to a printer preset name in InDesign CS. Save the script as an application and you should be able to drop a folder on it and all ID files will print. iolaire

Can this script be modified to print to a postscript file? I tried to modify it but it would not work using what I had…of course I am no scripter.
I would like to print to a PS file to a certain folder.

Thanks a lot
Jeff

I have been using the Batch PDF export script for InDesign and I love it. now I’m trying to adapt that and the batch print from InDesign to a batch Illustrator. I think I have everything, except I need a way to select “OK” in the print dialog box. I have the user interaction set to never but it still pops up. Here is my script:

on open sourceFolders
with timeout of 100000 seconds
repeat with sourceFolder in sourceFolders
tell application “Finder”
try
– If you would like to include subfolders, you say - every file of entire contents of folder…
set idFiles to (every file of folder sourceFolder)
on error – work around bug if there is only one file
set idFiles to (every file of folder sourceFolder)
end try
end tell

		if idFiles is not {} then
			tell application "Adobe Illustrator 10.0.3"
				set user interaction level to never interact
				repeat with i from 1 to count of idFiles
					open item i of idFiles
					tell document 1 
                           tell document 1 
                           set myPreset to "Standard" -- name of print style to use 
                           print using myPreset without print dialog 
                           close without saving 
                            
                      end tell 
                      end tell
					end tell
				end repeat
				set user interaction level to interact with all
			end tell
		end if
		return 10 -- try again in 10 seconds 
	end repeat
end timeout

end open

You’re passing a list of Finder references to AI, which means the files are actually opened by the Finder, causing all sorts of potential problems with timing. Modify the relevant section thus:

try
– If you would like to include subfolders, you say - every file of entire contents of folder…
set idFiles to (every file of folder sourceFolder) as alias list
on error – work around bug if there is only one file
set idFiles to (every file of folder sourceFolder) as alias as list
end try

Shane Stanley