The new KF8 format seems to have fixed many of the problems that plagued the
older mobi format, though we still try to create high-quality files that work
on both kinds of devices. I haven't worked as closely on those formats in a
while, so I can only speak broadly and of the experience I had six to twelve
months ago. These problems are
The biggest problem is that in the old mobi format, you cannot write CSS to
select items within a div. For example, if you want to set font size within a
sidebar at a smaller text size, you can only accomplish this by putting a
unique class style on every paragraph within that sidebar. You cannot do
div.sidebar p {font-size: 90%}. This causes a number of problems because the
DocBook epub is built quite handily to allow you to control all kinds of things
within divs. About 80% of my perl scripts are about adding unique class styles
to p tags to enable me to style them differently. The same is true of first
paragraphs, which we do not indent.
As for HTML issues, the biggest I can recall is an inability to use p tags in
<li> and <blockquote>.
-----Original Message-----
From: Bob Stayton [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, August 15, 2012 12:50 PM
To: Jason Zech; Richard L Hamilton; DocBook Apps
Subject: Re: [docbook-apps] ePub to MOBI conversion
Is there a summary of the changes to the tagging that are needed "to fit
Amazon's
non-standard requirements"? Like Dick said, the kindle.extensions parameter in
epub3
XSL could implement those.
Bob Stayton
Sagehill Enterprises
[email protected]
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jason Zech" <[email protected]>
To: "Richard L Hamilton" <[email protected]>; "DocBook Apps"
<[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, August 15, 2012 10:00 AM
Subject: RE: [docbook-apps] ePub to MOBI conversion
I take my finished epub, extract the OEBPS with all the epub contents, and run
a Perl
script filled with regex on the files (to change the standard epub, tagging to
fit
Amazon's non-standard requirements). Then I drag the content.opf into the
Kindle
Previewer window. There are a lot of changes to make (such as removing p tags
from
within li or p tags within blockquotes). I also maintain a separate mobi CSS
stylesheet. It's a giant pain, but for our books the standard epub to mobi
conversion
provided out of the box by Kindlegen is too messy, and Calibre scares me a bit.
I'm thinking about starting a customization of the docbook epub transform that
outputs
the tags in a way that works better with kindlegen. One of these days...
-----Original Message-----
From: Richard L Hamilton [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, August 15, 2012 11:36 AM
To: DocBook Apps
Subject: [docbook-apps] ePub to MOBI conversion
At different times I've used kindlegen and calibre for ePub to MOBI conversion,
with
varying results, but I've never been 100% happy with the result from either.
Does anyone on the list have any suggestions as to which of these (or which
alternative) is the best choice for conversion when the ePub was generated
using the
DocBook stylesheets?
Thanks,
Dick Hamilton
-------
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