Many of the GUI elements pioneered in the program have since migrated to the rest of the Adobe suite. Adobe has positioned PageMaker to compete more for the small business market, with Adobe InDesign aimed at the high end, professional designer. PageMaker's feature set is well suited for publications such as corporate newsletters and the straight-news sections of newspapers, but for layouts that need a more complex design, such as magazines or the feature sections of newspapers, it may take much longer to accomplish the task in PageMaker than it would in InDesign or QuarkXPress, if the desired results are possible at all.
While PageMaker is less powerful than InDesign or QuarkXPress, it is simpler to learn than those two packages and yet more powerful than Microsoft Publisher. It is not uncommon for schools that teach page layout to first teach their students PageMaker to get them comfortable with the concepts of desktop publishing, then move them on to QuarkXPress or InDesign.
External links
Adobe Systems' page for PageMaker (http://www.adobe.com/products/pagemaker/main.html)
PageMaker then uses that list to number pages throughout the publication, create indexes, and generate tables of contents.
If you desire, PageMaker automatically updates any graphics that have changed so you won't have to worry about reimporting graphic elements every time changes are made.
PageMaker 4.0 now enables you to copy styles from one publication to another--a convenience when working with shorter publications and a necessity when compiling longer documents.