![]() and would strangely interpret strokes once in a while. When I'd try copy/paste, it would do things like fill in empty closed paths in previously merged objects that had openings when in ai. I would run into this issue a lot when being forced to use inDesign because I often have to illustrate icons, detailed mechanical illustrations/exploded views/etc., and have to cleanly get these from ai to iD. I'm sure it would be a different story if I was taught by an instructor, but here we are Thankfully, Adobe has improved their apps' ability to "talk to" one another and seems to have improved on this issue between inDesign and Illustrator. I'm much more comfortable with Illustrator and often avoid inDesign because it seems to want a much different approach from me workflow and design-wise. I believe I had to do that a few years ago and it took care of the flat graphic problem for me. PDF When Pasting" within the Clip Board Handling options in the Preferences menu. ![]() If people are still running into the bounding box issue after pasting, try doing what Luke Jennings3 suggested, and check the box next to "Prefer. ![]() They don't become rasterized/flattened graphics in inDesign after you paste them from Illustrator. And yes, after pasting into inDesign, they are still vector objects/strokes that have selectable/editable anchor points. It just gets strange here and there when trying to interpret merged VS non-merged elements, and will sometimes have a hiccup when it comes to pasting strokes (at least with CS6). You ABSOLUTELY can paste vector graphics from Illustrator into inDesign.
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