1) When one links to another document, such as through a section, it's fine if another openoffice file; it also works with HTML...but if there is CSS or .js files then these aren't applied or displayed. The advantage, then, of linking is lost; and X/HTML + CSS/.js is incredibly useful for doing things that word-processors and other file formats just don't want to. It's also useful to be able to do markup for one body of text, as well as uniformly controlling the text and its styles, fonts, etc. across many different documents, for online work, as well as then being able to import that through linking and finish formatting for printing and/or book work. Though openoffice has its own styles features, it would be advantageous and very useful to support css and .js so that if those documents change, then the appearance when opened in a linked doc changes.
In theory, it should just be a matter of linking to the HTML files published as the epub. In reality, first you have to strip the first couple of lines the EPUB format requires, then deal with the formatting challenges (in Open Office 2.4.1).
openoffice epub format for kindle
EPUB (Electronic Publication) is an e-book file format that uses the .epub file extension. EPUB is supported by many e-readers like Kindle devices, smartphones, and tablets with compatible software installed.
Pandoc can convert between a variety of different formats, including txt, html, xhtml, doc, docx, odt, epub, fb2, docbook, OPML, LaTeX, pdf, markdown, asciidoc, MediaWiki, Dokuwiki, org-mode, and a variety of others.
It does not appear to support conversion to/from mobi or aw3, but could certainly build an epub file from a variety of different sources. Then if you like the epub file it produces, you could use @John1024 's answer to convert to mobi or kindle format.
By starting with a source file that supports formatting, such as markdown, html, asciidoc, or the like, you can get a nicely-formatted epub output. The pandoc README file gives a nice overview of the command-line options that are available (including options for table of contents, fonts, link styles, margins, etc).
The MimeType file is a basic ASCII text file that is located at the root of the archive. The purpose of the MimeType file is to basically declare to the reading system how the archive is formatted and how it should be processed. All MimeType files used in EPUBs are the same and need only include a single declarative line: application/epub+zip.
This is an exclusive format for all e-books sold on the Apple iBooks store. It is built using the EPUB standard, but adds restrictions so it can only be sold and consumed within the Apple iBooks realm. Because of this, iBook formats are incompatible with readers which can read the standard .epub format. 2ff7e9595c
Comments