Thank you for the additional thoughts. I tried that, both ways ("Images/" or "images/") not yielding productive results.
I even tried shortening the file name, wondering if the "../" was due to a longer name, but that didn't make a difference.
Moreover, I experimented by adding a new random file from my computer, which was also given a "../" before the file name, so that suggests a Calibre default.
As the EPUB has not been flagged by any other aggregator, and the file naming is consistent within the EPUB (as visible using Calibre), I wonder if the Smashwords quality check (presumably AI-based) just doesn't know what to do with the "../". Judging by their website interface for authors, perhaps they are using an older framework for checking EPUB files. Unless I am missing something.
|