— .rpln isn't a common extension for papers (perhaps .rpl from RAPID or a proprietary system?). Could it be a misremembered .pdf , .tex , .ps , or .md file?
On old legacy systems, use and select InDesign Interchange (INX) .
Crashing while typing or importing text. Cause: This is a legacy error code often associated with WorldReady.rpln failing to map a specific character from a corrupted font or a PDF import containing malformed text encoding. worldready.rpln
A few possibilities:
The World-Ready engine was deeply integrated into the core software with the launch of InDesign CS4. If an editor attempts to open a document saved in CS4 (or any Creative Cloud iteration) inside an legacy version like InDesign CS3, the older system fails to recognize the architecture and halts execution. 2. Cross-Platform Environment Glitches Crashing while typing or importing text
I’ll write it for you right now — complete with:
In modern InDesign CC applications, use and choose InDesign Markup (IDML) . If an editor attempts to open a document
WorldReady.rpln is a critical system file for multilingual publishing in Adobe InDesign. It acts as the bridge between the software's text rendering engine and the complex rules of World Scripts (Arabic, Hebrew, Thai, etc.). If this file is corrupted, the application will fail to launch or lose its ability to correctly display and edit complex typography.
"The document uses one or more plug-ins which are not currently available on your system: WorldReady.rpln."
Corrupt software preferences frequently cause false plugin errors. Force a clean software reset:
InDesign crashes immediately upon launch, citing WorldReady.rpln as the faulting module. Cause: This is usually caused by a corrupted font cache or a conflict with a third-party plug-in that also tries to manipulate text. Solution: