Quote:
Originally Posted by Hitch
? Are you reading the full Publisher's Guidelines? Or the Simplified ones?
They have 3 different sets of "guidelines" out. The ones on the web; the downloadable "simplified guidelines" and the actual Publisher's Guidelines. Google for it, and download the PDF. It absolutely is clear on what CSS is supported and which isn't.
We use page-break-after all the time. Something's not right in your file.
Hitch
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I'm looking at a 102-page PDF from here:
https://kindlegen.s3.amazonaws.com/A...Guidelines.pdf
If that's not the one you mean, can you post me a link please?
In this one, Section 6 is a single page of dos and don'ts; on p.30 it says "Do not insert blank lines of text to create page breaks. Use the CSS page-break-before and page-break-after attributes." It doesn't say anything about
avoiding page breaks. Section 16.2 (p.81 onwards) is a list of supported CSS attributes; page-break-after and page-break-before are not listed.
I have <h3> specified as "page-break-after: avoid", but despite this <h3> headings sometimes appear as the last line on a page. Changing "avoid" to "always" appears to work.
So, further advice is welcome.