Quote:
Originally Posted by jackie_w
There are 3 ways to do what you want. In all honesty I'd say the hand editing option is the one most like hard work and certainly not the one I'd recommend for an easy life in 2020.
But, as this is the option you're asking about ... You need to edit the CSS file(s) in your kepubs using whatever method you normally use. Append the following style rule to each one.
Code:
div#book-inner {
font-size: 1.5em;
}
If your kepub has been created with calibre (KoboTouchExtended plugin or Kepub Output plugin) this should work reliably. 99.99999% of standard epubs would ignore this very specific style.
The method mentioned in the second half of my post that you quoted is far less effort if you're a calibre user. There's more detail on using a kobo_extra.css here. You'd just need to add the above CSS rule to your kobo_extra.css file.
The 3rd method of equalising font-size in kepubs & epubs, but only if you're a kobopatch user (or willing to become one) is to enable the patch named 'ePub uniform font scale'. If you do this you won't need to do any editing of CSS files because the scale mismatch will be "fixed" in the firmware.
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Hi Jackie. Thanks a lot for replying. In the end, I agree with you. You're right about the 2020 thing. I just patched the Kobo, and it's really nice. It's much faster, even though I ran into an ugly yellow tint issue and the UI is really bad compared to the one from 2017.
Will write later more about that.
Thanks a lot for the write-up on manual work, I'll use it for my old version Kobo