So I'll add it to my InCopy user dictionary. So it puts a red squiggle under some of these words that is not understanding, but yes, composting is a word for this leaf and mortar things. We have turned on here under spelling, dynamic spelling, which means, you know, do a spell check, like how Microsoft Word does it. And now that the story is checked out, like it's not recognizing this word composting, let's zoom in even more. So, first of all, you should know the keyboard shortcuts to zoom in and zoom out in the view menu control plus, control minus, or command plus command minus on a Mac. We're just going to talk about getting you to editing. Very powerful, far more powerful than Word, but this is not the scope to teach that in this section. Both of which are available under the edit menu. There you go, now all the stories indicate that I am editing them and I can go ahead and do like document wide spellchecks or find change. And I'll do that in the assignments panel, love the assignments panel, I'm just going to shift quick, all these stories here and then click the icon down here. So what I probably want to do is check out all the stories at once in order to edit them. So in this scenario, let's say I'm the only editor. So instead to force an InDesign file to open in InCopy start the program first, then go to file open and navigate to your shared folder and open it from there. Because if you try to double click an InDesign file in the finder or Windows Explorer, it's either going to say you don't have a program that can open this, or it'll open it in InDesign if you have that installed, which you shouldn't, as I said, it gets things confused. And I just want to make sure that you know that to open the layout InCopy, you really do have to go to file and choose open. And that is that I in InCopy have the layout open. Okay, we're going to pick up where we left off.
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