Creating and Editing Footnotes
One of the most exciting new features in InCopy CS2 is the ability to import, create, and manage footnotes. This is especially helpful when editing longer stories that might be a part of a book, magazine, academic journal, or technical documentation. There have always been labor-intensive work-arounds for creating footnotes, but now InCopy CS2 and InDesign CS2 support them natively without any special plug-ins, tricks, or flaming hoops. The real elegance of InCopy footnotes is that they are edited inline with the rest of the story but are displayed at the bottom of the text frames in the Layout view.You can create, edit and view footnotes in Layout view, but that's not the easiest way to work with footnotes. Instead, we suggest you stick with Galley or Story view when your writing includes footnotes. Because footnotes aren't rendered with accurate line endings in Galley view, it still makes sense to switch to Layout view near the end of the process to make sure the text and footnotes are flowing as you expect.
Creating Footnotes
You can create footnotes as you type by choosing Type > Chapter 5), footnotes can be collapsed and then reopened by clicking the footnote icon again (Figure 6.28).
Figure 6.28. Footnotes are viewed and edited inline in Galley and Story view.
Chapter 1 for instructions on customizing keyboard shortcuts). When your cursor is inside a footnote, the command changes to Type > Go to Footnote Reference but still uses the same shortcut. This makes it easy to jump back and forth.Footnotes can be created in InCopy, but they can also be imported as part of Microsoft Word and RTF (rich text) files. When you place a .doc or .rtf file, enable the Show Import Options checkbox before you click Open to invoke the Import Options dialog. The option to include footnotes is enabled by default, but make sure it's still checked before you click OK (Figure 6.29). All the footnotes and references from the source document are preserved, but they may be renumbered to match the settings of your InCopy file. Read on to learn how the document footnote options control footnote numbering and formatting.
Figure 6.29. Make sure footnotes are included when you place Word and RTF files.
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Customizing Footnote Options
To control how footnote references (usually superscript numbers like this1) appear in your InCopy story, choose Type > Document Footnote Options. Use the Numbering and Formatting section of the Footnote Options dialog to format the footnote markers, and use the Layout section to control the formatting of the actual footnote text (Figure 6.30). You can customize the footnote formatting options, but beware that when an InCopy story is placed in an InDesign layout, the story assumes the footnote options of the InDesign document and ignores the settings you had in InCopy. This means you can customize footnote options for your own convenience while you write and edit, but the formatting of footnotes may or may not match what the InDesign layout shows.
Figure 6.30. Document Footnote Options control the numbering and formatting of the footnote references as well as the layout of the footnote text.
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Figure 6.31. Choose a numbering style from this pull-down list.

Figure 6.32. InCopy can include footnote text when it calculates line, word, and character counts.
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