Adobe 29500007 - Creative Suite 3 Design Premium Manual page 131

Workflow guide
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TOOLS FOR LEARNING
Help Resources
Documentation for your Adobe software is available in a variety
of formats—in the product, on the web, in PDF, or in print.
Help in the product
In-product Help provides access to all documentation and instructional
content available at the time the product ships.
Using Help in the product
In-product Help is available through the Help menu. When you select
Help, you start the Adobe Help Viewer.
You can see Help for additional Adobe products installed on your computer.
To help you learn about multiple Adobe components, these features
are available:
• You can search across Help for multiple components.
• Topics may contain links to topics in Help for other Adobe components,
or to additional content on the web.
• Some topics are shared across multiple components. For example, if you
see a Help topic with a Photoshop icon and an After Effects icon, you
know that the topic either describes functionality that is similar in
the two components or describes cross-component workflows.
Tip: If you search for a phrase, such as "shape tool," enclose it in quotation marks
to see only those topics that include all the words in the phrase.
LiveDocs Help
LiveDocs Help includes all the content from in-product Help, plus
updates and links to additional instructional content, such as video
tutorials and book excerpts available on the web. For some Creative
Suite components, LiveDocs also lets you add comments. Find LiveDocs
Help for your component in the Adobe Help Resource Center,
at www.adobe.com/go/documentation.
Think of Help, both in the product and on the web, as a hub for accessing
additional content and communities of users. The most complete
and up-to-date version of Help is always on the web.
Accessibility features
Adobe Help content is accessible to people with disabilities such
as mobility impairments, blindness, and low vision. In-product Help
supports standard accessibility features, including the following:
• Text size can be changed with standard context menu commands.
• Content supports high-contrast mode.
• Links are underlined for easy recognition.
• If link text doesn't match the title of the destination, the title is
referenced in the Title attribute of the Anchor tag. For example,
the Previous and Next links include the titles of the previous and
next topics.
• Graphics without captions include alternate text.
• Each frame has a title to indicate its purpose.
• Standard HTML tags define content structure, for screen reading
or text-to-speech tools.
• Style sheets control formatting, so there are no embedded fonts.
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