QuarkXPress 9 review

QuarkXPress returns with some interesting new digital publishing tools

QuarkXPress 9
The powerful XPress 9 interface ensures tools never get in the way of what you're doing

TechRadar Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Slick, fast and powerful

  • +

    ShapeMaker is fun and useful

Cons

  • -

    App Studio not ready for release

  • -

    Still behind InDesign in features

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QuarkXPress had its time at the very top of the publishing tree. It led the DTP revolution in the late 80s and continued to dominate the professional publishing space until – most would say – Adobe released Creative Suite in 2002.

Then the creative world suddenly got a tool called InDesign bundled with their copies of Photoshop and Illustrator.

QuarkXPress 9

Conditional Styles enable you to intelligently combine several rules in one style (such as making the first word in a paragraph italic and the next three words bold and a different font, for instance). It's essentially Nested Styles, as seen in InDesign. It's a more than welcome catch-up and the palette is nice and simple to use.

Bullet and numbering styles go a long way to speeding up layout jobs. Callouts are also new, enabling you to anchor boxes and groups to a particular point in your text.

And now for a feature we really love – ShapeMaker. So simple yet so intuitive, with real pulling power for those without Illustrator, ShapeMaker lives up to its name, enabling you to create complex shapes with a unique slider-based interface. Wavy shapes, polygons, spirals and rounded rectangles can be created with ease, but the fun part is experimenting with the tools.

Similarly, Cloner (enabling you to copy selected items to the same place on different pages or projects) and Linkster (to quickly link and unlink text boxes without overmatter) are very smart additions.

XPress 9 retains its easy-to-use interface and project-based workflow. It's intelligent, fast on low-spec Macs, and a powerful publishing tool for all mediums. But it's still suffering the effects of Adobe's market dominance, so it's going to take a lot more than a great release to pull things back.

But for XPress fans, this is a remarkably good version – and if the App Studio impresses, it's verging on superb.

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