Hi :)
The Docs Team have looked into ePub versions and have found some good tools to 
use.  Annoyingly i can't remember what they finally worked out was the best one 
so it would be really good if someone could ask them again.  Anyway, perhaps 
there is something even better now.  



In my previous posts i have been a bit annoyed that people who don't spend time 
getting to know the tool they are using then blame the tool.  In England there 
is a saying "A poor workman always blames his tools".  Sometimes the square peg 
trying to fit the round hole is not the tool's fault.  It's all in the way the 
workman is misusing the tool.  However, i now see that Virgil has worked hard 
to get to grips with LO and has spent time experimenting and working with it 
and probably knows a lot more about doing larger works than me.  


Writer, Word and WordPerfect and others do seem to be designed for business 
letters and fairly short works.  LaTeX (and the various front-ends (such as 
LyX) that attempt to make it easier to use) do seem to have advantages for 
larger works but are more difficult to wrestle with in the beginning when you 
are learning how to use them.  Many people try and give up or find them a total 
nightmare.  However, people DO manage to use Writer to do larger books.  Piers 
Anthony, the famous sci-fi writer, mentions it in the preface to most of his 
books.  Also our Documentation Team.  Our Documentation Team have even 
published an ePub and since found an easier way of doing it.  We should be 
learning from them and gain from their experience.  



On the other hand if you have been able to learn how to use LaTeX then you 
probably do have a significant advantage because it is the right tool for the 
right job.  If LyX makes LaTeX easier then go for it.  

Regards from 
Tom :)  







>________________________________
> From: Virgil Arrington <cuyfa...@hotmail.com>
>To: users@global.libreoffice.org 
>Sent: Monday, 8 July 2013, 21:58
>Subject: Re: [libreoffice-users] Book-writing with Writer
> 
>
><snip />
>
>trying to write a book with LO Writer is like trying to force a square peg 
>into a round hole. 
>
><snip />
>
>In my mind, Writer is a business application, useful for letters, memos, legal 
>documents, school reports, and the like. 
>
><snip />
>
>For organizing a book length document, with parts, chapters, and tables, 
>indexes, and sub-documents, etc, I much prefer LyX and LaTeX, both of which 
>are free and opensource. Yes, the LaTeX learning curve can be steep, but LyX 
>makes it so much easier. 
>
><snip />
>
>He wrote the original in WordPerfect, and it was a formatting mess, with stray 
>tabs, carriage returns, and inconsistent formatting across chapter and section 
>headings. I began the task of reformatting his 127 page novel using 
>WordPerfect, the original program. It didn't take long for me to realize it 
>would take days and days to wade through all of the formatting codes inserted 
>by WP.
>
>Instead, I  ... <snip /> ...  loaded it into LyX. <snip />  The entire 
>formatting process took about a half hour. I surprised even myself.
>
>I could have done the same thing with LO's styles and master documents, but 
>they're not quite as fully automatic as LyX/LaTeX, so it would have longer.
>
>So far, however, I've found LyX/LaTeX's support for e-books to be a little 
>lacking (but no more so than LO's). 
>
><snip />
>
>In short, while I love LO, I honestly think there are better tools for the 
>task of book and e-book writing.
>
>Virgil
>
>
>
>2013.07.08. 7:34 keltezéssel, Pablo Dotro írta:
>> Greetings!
>
><snip />
>
>> Does anyone know about a tutorial, book or website where I can 
>> specifically learn about creating a book-length document, with chapters 
>> (as subdocuments) and a master document, consistent styling, indexing and 
>> table of contents with LibreOffice?
>>
>> Thank you very much for your time, and best regards,
>>
>
>
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