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Applying Condition Tags to Content

After you create condition tags, you can apply them to the appropriate content in your project.

example

Let's say you have one condition tag for a beginner's version of a manual called "Beginner DoohickeyPro" and another condition tag for an advanced version of the manual called "Advanced DoohickeyPro." If you have a sentence in a topic that pertains only to the beginner's version, you would select that sentence and apply the "Beginner DoohickeyPro" tag to it. You might have another sentence in the same topic that pertains only to the advanced version of your manual, so you would apply the "Advanced DoohickeyPro" tag to it.

You can apply condition tags to many different elements in your project, including files that make up the project (e.g., topic, image, style sheet, glossary, skin, target files), full paragraphs, text within paragraphs, table rows and columns, table of contents (TOC) entries, and index keyword markers. Click any of the links below to see steps for applying a condition tag to a particular element.

How to apply condition tags to selected text within a paragraph

How to apply condition tags to an entire block of content in a topic

How to apply condition tags to project or content files (e.g., glossaries, targets, topics, images, style sheets, snippets, page layouts) in a project

How to apply condition tags to a bookmark in a topic

How to apply condition tags to a browse sequence entry in a project

How to apply condition tags to an index keyword marker in a topic

How to apply condition tags to a link in a topic

How to apply condition tags to a picture in a topic

How to apply condition tags to a snippet in a topic

How to apply condition tags to a table row or column in a topic

How to apply condition tags to a variable in a topic

How to apply condition tags to a TOC entry in a project

Note: As you are working on a topic, it is likely that you will want to know what it will look like in the final output, as well as test navigation links and condition tags. There are two ways to do this. First, you could build the output and then view the output. However, this requires you to perform multiple steps and wait for the entire target to generate. A quicker way to see how a topic looks in the output is to preview just that topic by opening it in a preview window.

WHAT'S NEXT?

Although you have applied condition tags to content, any targets that you build will still contain all of your content (whether something has a condition tag applied to it not). To ensure that content with certain condition tags are excluded from your output, you need to associate condition tags with targets.

See Also

Downloads (PDF Format):

Flare Quick Guide

Flare Getting Started Guide

Flare What's New Guide

Flare Key Features Guide

Flare Transition From RoboHelp Guide

Flare Transition From FrameMaker Guide

Flare Styles Guide

Flare Printed Output Guide

Flare WebHelp Plus Guide

Flare Shortcuts