An object is any printable element on a page or on the pasteboard, such as a path or an imported graphic. A frame or path is a shape you draw or a container for text or graphics. A bounding box is a rectangle with eight selection handles that represents an objects vertical and horizontal dimensions. Before you can modify an object, you must select it using a selection tool.
For a video on selecting objects, see www.adobe.com/go/vid0070.
There are two ways to select an object in InDesign:
You can use the Selection tool to
select the object’s bounding box for performing general layout tasks,
such as positioning and sizing objects.
You can use the Direct Selection tool to
select the contents of a container (such as an imported graphic)
or individual points on a path for tasks involving resizing imported
graphics, drawing and editing paths, and editing text.
With rectangular objects, it can be difficult to tell the difference between the object’s bounding box and the path of the object itself. A bounding box always displays eight large hollow anchor points. A rectangular path always displays four small anchor points (which can be hollow or solid).
For any object, you can select its bounding box—a rectangle that represents the object’s horizontal and vertical dimensions. (For grouped objects, the bounding box is a dashed rectangle.) The bounding box makes it possible to quickly move, duplicate, and scale the object without having to use any other tool. For paths, the bounding box makes it easy to work with an entire object without accidentally altering the anchor points that determine its shape.
Click the object. If the object is an unfilled path, click its edge.
Drag a dotted selection rectangle or marquee around part or all of the object.
With a graphic object or nested content selected,
click the Select Container button on
the Control panel.
When you select one or more objects with the Selection
tool, you see a bounding box that indicates the size of each object.
If you don’t see a bounding box when an object is selected, you
may have selected the object using the Direct Selection tool .
If you click a frame and it is not selected, the frame may be on a locked layer or master page. If the frame is on a locked layer, a pencil icon appears. If the frame is on a master page, you can override it to select it.
Paths in InDesign are defined by anchor points, end points, and direction lines. You select anchor points and end points using the Direct Selection tool.
Click the object using the Direct Selection
tool . The
Direct Selection tool automatically changes to the Hand tool when
placed over a graphic object inside a frame (but not when placed
over a non-graphic object, such as a path).
With a frame selected, choose Select > Content from the Object menu or the frame’s context menu.
With a frame selected, click the Select Content
button on
the Control panel.
To deselect all objects on the spread and its pasteboard, choose Edit > Deselect All. Or, with the Selection tool or Direct Selection tool, click at least 3 pixels away from any object.
The Select All command has a different effect depending on the situation:
If the Selection tool is
active, all paths and frames on the spread and pasteboard are selected,
with their bounding boxes active.
If the Direct Selection tool is
active and an object is direct-selected, Select All selects all
the anchor points of that object but does not select any other object.
If nothing is selected, Select All selects all the path objects
on the spread and pasteboard.
If the Type tool is active and there is an insertion point in a text frame (indicated by a flashing vertical line), Select All selects all text in that text frame and any text frames threaded to it, but selects no other objects.
If an object in a group is selected, Select All selects the rest of the objects in the group but no other objects on the spread.