Has the ability to have the title of an image display immediately below or above the image been added? This would be a super useful feature, saving a bunch of hassle and time, especially when movig images around. I thought it was in there, but I can’t find it. If not, what is the best method for doing that, other than adding a text box and chasing the text around with the image when editing? Thanks, Bob
Hello ![]()
It’s possible by adding a Smart Field inside a text box. In the text box, insert the Smart Field “file name.” Then, in the image settings, change the file name. The Smart Field will automatically display the name of the nearest image.
Interesting idea. Trying it out, but not seeing how the image file gets into the text box
You place an empty text field near the image. Then you add a smartfield in this text field “image description”.
Click to open the options of the smartfield. Now you see several options to choose from –> use description. You will see what you added to the field “description”.
I’ll just add if it is an individual image and a title, follow what has been said above and then group the image and smart text field. This way they will remain together.
This is what I’m doing now. It adds a bunch of steps (making the box, aligning it, setting the style, grouping), that would be much more straightforward by clicking a check box next to the title to place the text above or below the image. The use of smartfield for this seems sort of pointless to me, it just adds a couple of steps to the already sorta cumbersome process. Doing all this once isn’t such a big deal, but doing a bunch of times, as I did yesterday, to set up an array of product variations, is time-consuming and error-prone. This would seem to be a sorta easy thing to add, given the otherwise cool and much more complex features already in the program. (I love using AI for the alt-text, man, that really saves some thought and sorta invisible effort and time-sinks. Doing the array of variations I did yesterday, it properly identified the variations and accurately described everything to a tee, with zero user input other than what was already on the page). Thanks for the input. If Duncan sees this, please enter it in the requested feature list.