Hi!
I like to remove all the text justification from my epubs - personal preference - and have been using Sigil to edit the CSS. After a quick view through the Calibre online User Manual, it said that the newest version of Calibre can do it under "Look & Feel> Miscellaneous" options. So I upgraded, but I can't find the option to remove all the justification. I see "text justification", but under the pull down menu is "Original, "left align", and "justify text". This is a screen shot of 1.27's "Look & Feel" screen:

(if that is too small, use this link for a bigger image:
http://i142.photobucket.com/albums/r...pse11e15f7.jpg)
This is what the online user manual says:
Quote:
Miscellaneous
There are a few more options in this section.
No text justification
Normally, if the output format supports it, calibre will force the output ebook to have justified text (i.e., a smooth right margin). This option will turn off this behavior, in which case whatever justification is specified in the input document will be used instead.
Linearize tables
Some badly designed documents use tables to control the layout of text on the page. When converted these documents often have text that runs off the page and other artifacts. This option will extract the content from the tables and present it in a linear fashion. Note that this option linearizes all tables, so only use it if you are sure the input document does not use tables for legitimate purposes, like presenting tabular information.
Transliterate unicode characters
Transliterate unicode characters to an ASCII representation. Use with care because this will replace unicode characters with ASCII. For instance it will replace “Михаил Горбачёв” with “Mikhail Gorbachiov”. Also, note that in cases where there are multiple representations of a character (characters shared by Chinese and Japanese for instance) the representation used by the largest number of people will be used (Chinese in the previous example). This option is mainly useful if you are going to view the ebook on a device that does not have support for unicode.
Input character encoding
Older documents sometimes don’t specify their character encoding. When converted, this can result in non-English characters or special characters like smart quotes being corrupted. calibre tries to auto-detect the character encoding of the source document, but it does not’ always succeed. You can force it to assume a particular character encoding by using this setting. cp1252 is a common encoding for documents produced using windows software. You should also read How do I convert my file containing non-English characters, or smart quotes? for more on encoding issues.
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I'm kinda frustrated as this was the only reason I updated the program, 0.9.33 was working just fine for me. Am I missing something?