

For adding all these features to your layouts, QuarkXPress sports an HTML5 palette, packed with options that will be familiar to InDesign users. In HTML5 publications from QuarkXPress 2016, you get live text, navigation page thumbnails, hyperlinks, animation, slideshows, scrollable content, pop-ups, audio/video, and more. Just choose File > Export > Layout as HTML5 Publication. You get a self-contained package of HTML, CSS, and Javascript files, along with all the necessary images, fonts, and multimedia content. Put it on a web server and you’re good to go. No extra software or services are needed. You can also easily convert existing print layouts to HTML5.

With just a few clicks (and no coding), you can publish content to the web with full design and typographic fidelity, rich media, and loads of slick interactivity. Perhaps the most impressive new feature in QuarkXPress 2016 is the ability to export a layout to HTML5. So without further ado, let’s get right to the best new stuff. If you haven’t seen QuarkXPress in a while (or ever) this version chart can bring you up to speed on all the most important features the application offers. And what I’ve found is a powerful application that is once again pioneering important publishing features. And I’ve just completed a brand new course for, QuarkXPress 2016 Essential Training. So while writing about InDesign is my “day job,” I have spent months using QuarkXPress 2016, putting both old and new features through their paces. But for years I made a living (and learned to love page layout and publishing) using QuarkXPress. Or, if you’re a bit younger, and have only used InDesign or other tools for page layout, you might think “what’s QuarkXPress”? But no matter which group you fall into, if you’re a creative professional interested in making top quality print and digital publications, you should check out QuarkXPress 2016.įull disclosure: Yes, I am the editor of InDesign Magazine, and InDesignSecrets, and the author of several courses on using InDesign. Or, you might think “ancient history” if you were among those users who grew frustrated in the early ’00s and made the switch to Adobe InDesign. What’s the first thing you think about when you see the name QuarkXPress? If you’ve worked in publishing for a very long time, you might think “ground-breaking layout program.” Quark was there at the birth of desktop publishing in the ’80s, and grew to dominate the industry.
