Sergey, many thanks for this wonderful alternative!
For a limit amount of time Iīve the availability over a Kobo-Glo. The standard Kobo reader engine do has itīs shortcomings. Youīre Coolreader is a magnificent reader that perfectly fill in these blanks for me!
Awesome stuff: nightmode with the possibility to disable screen refresh (goodbye flash!) Also the two page implementation, hyphenation on/off, gesture control and floating punctuations (!) are top notch!!!
I had to prepare the epubīs by converting them with Calibreīs Epub -> Epub to release the lock from the embedded fonts, margins etc. Too bad the Calibre conversion generated 2 stylesheets which had to be merged (Calibre edit book option) for Coolreader to show the italics within the epubs. See screenshots below to guide people facing the same "challenge".
Iīve add some attachments for all the dutchies out there; it would be nice to implement them in future releases =)
Here some findings...
IMO, the orientation-setting in the laucher is CCW based. Is this correct as some Ļincluding myself - might suspect it to be CW.
When you increase the Left Margin to f.i. 30, the right side of the right page in Two Pages View Mode (Landscape) is cut off.
It would be nice - if possible - to extend the Negative view (Night mode) operation also to all Coolreader menuīs instead only during reading.
In the Styles Tab there is an example text incl. header. It would be nice to implement this header also in the Page Tab with the possibility to live view the adjustments in the header elements components.
The menu-font of Coolreader can not be adjusted. Thatīs a pitty for itīs quite wide and not very economical for the small ereader screen: a more narrow font gives the opportunity to display a larger size of the font with the advantage for an user to much easier tap the menus because of the greater menu-/fonthight.
Last note: when I was translating Coolreader I noticed that some translators did there job a bit too thoroughly by translating the pangram
The quick brown fox... literal to their native language.