May 27 2009 • 11:22 AM

Jump to a Master Page

If you work on long documents you’re probably aware of the Layout > Go to Page command (cmd/ctrl+j). If you’re not, you should be. It’s a simple way to jump directly from one page to another.

From there you can scroll through or type the number of the page you want to jump to and hit okay or enter and you’re there. But what if you have long document with a lot of masters? The Go to Page dialog only shows document page numbers.

So what’s an user with a large document and a plethora of master pages to do? Well you could use the pages panel or you could use the cmd/ctrl+j command and just type the letter prefix that you assigned to the master. While it’s completely hidden, once you do that the dialog will switch and allow you to scroll through the master pages or type the prefixes to just jump straight to the master.

4 Responses discussing this post. Add yours below.

  1. Michael Trout
    May 27th, 2009 • 12:13 pm • Link

    This fails if you happen to have a master prefix that matches a page number such as with alphabetical page numbering (A, B, C, etc.).

  2. Deborah Dewhirst
    May 27th, 2009 • 9:41 pm • Link

    … in which case you would just enter the master prefix followed by a hyphen in the Go to Page dialog box (i.e. A- or B-), since the convention seems to be that the hyphen always follows the master prefix (as far as I know). I’ve tested it and this seems to work for me.

  3. August 5th, 2009 • 2:53 am • Link

    ctrl+j does not work in my photoshop CS3. Why ?

  4. August 5th, 2009 • 4:33 am • Link

    Andrew, I assume you meant InDesign CS3. If you’re on a Mac, you should be using cmd+j.

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