Understanding Version Cue projects and foldersBefore you can start creating and managing file versions and collaborating with other users, you need to create a Version Cue project to group related files in the Version Cue workspace. For example, you could create a Version Cue project for files you don't need to collaborate on with others, a different Version Cue project for files that everyone in your workgroup needs to collaborate on, and a different Version Cue project for files that only users you specify can access. When you create a new Version Cue project, three folders are automatically created in the Version Cue workspace for that project: Documents, Web-Content, and Web-Data. You save files from InCopy CS, Illustrator CS, InDesign CS, and Photoshop CS to a project's Documents folder and save files from GoLive CS to the Web-Content folder. GoLive uses the Web-Content and Web-Data folders by default when you use GoLive to connect to an existing Version Cue project or create a new Version Cue project. When you first use Adobe Illustrator, Adobe InCopy, Adobe InDesign, or Adobe Photoshop to open a Version Cue project in the Version Cue workspace, a folder named Version Cue is created on your computer in your My Documents (Windows) or Documents (Mac OS) folder, and a folder is added inside the Version Cue folder for each project you open. When you open a file from a Version Cue project in the Version Cue workspace, a working copy of the file is added to the project folder in your My Documents/Version Cue (Windows) or Documents/Version Cue (Mac OS) folder. As you edit and save intermediate changes to your file, you are actually editing the working copy. Changes you've made to the working file are added to the master file on the Version Cue workspace when you add a new file version to the master file with the Save A Version command. |