![]() Yes, it is better than the situation before, but it is still far from ideal. It is still far too clumsy for the user to be able to develop any kind of rhythm. I don’t know about you, but I only find this marginally less ridiculous than the situation prior to InDesign CC 2014. click on the button now labelled “ Find Next” again to resume your review of the next occurrences.click on the “ Forward” radio button to change searching direction again.change the occurrence properly by clicking on “ Change” - Don’t click on “ Change/Find”, as this will change the found occurrence, but it will also continue the search backwards and will take you to the next previous occurrence, which you have already reviewed!.click on the button now labelled “ Find Previous” to jump to the previous occurrence.click on the “ Backward” radio button to change searching direction.In other words, in the scenario outlined above, if you accidentally click one time too many and need to reverse course to jump to the previous occurrence, you can now do this: If you click on the “ Backward” radio button, the “ Find Next” button changes to “ Find Previous”: Instead, there is a new section labelled “ Direction” with two radio buttons, for changing the direction of the search. ![]() Now, as you can see, there still isn’t a “ Find Previous” button in there. And yet, this was the reality in InDesign up until about a month ago, when Adobe finally released a version of InDesign (the so-called InDesign CC 2014) that featured some kind of “ Find Previous” command: I don’t need to tell you that this technique was completely ridiculous and highly unreliable.
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