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Old 01-26-2026, 10:11 PM   #5
retiredbiker
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Posts: 461
Karma: 3886916
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Ontario, Canada
Device: Kindle KB, Oasis, Pop_Os!, Kobo Forma
Quote:
Originally Posted by mdpeterson42 View Post
I wrote my first book in HTML and had several issues creating the epub to pass the checks. I got it figured out, thanks to a lot of help from people on this forum, but it took weeks. Several people said it was easier to just format in styles and convert on Calibre. I am going to try that, but there are a couple points of which I am unsure.

First, in HTML, I set it so that the book would use whatever font the reader preferred. My LibreOffice style has a font, obviously. How do I make that conversion?

Second, similarly, my HTML did not dictate font size, other than that chapter headings were comparatively larger than the text. How do I set that up?

Third, some of the text will be "redacted." Will setting up a style with black highlighting accomplish that? Or will that run afoul of people who like dark mode? Is there a style that actually redacts?

Thank you all!
If you want a really seamless way to get from a Writer file in LibreOffice to an epub, preserving your styles right down to their names, you might want to look into trying Sigil and their odt file import plugin. Here is the setup I use, copied from an old post:

Quote:
Make a Writer template file, an .ott file, with the custom styles you normally use.

Make a css file in a text editor that matches the style names in the Writer template. Only for each style, do the epub-ish styling you want. (Example: I have a style in the template called "indent" that makes a paragraph indented and spaced in Writer to make it easy to proof on screen. The "indent" style in the css is styled in ems, not cms, with spacing, margins, and so on to look good on my Kobo.)

Put this text css in the ODTImport plugin directory as "epub.css". It will show up in the imported book as "styles.css", alongside the css file generated by the plugin -- "styles1.css".

Use the .ott template file to make your book, and use only your custom styles. (You may need a new style not in the template, so just add it.)

With this is set up correctly, I can now import a book, simply delete the "styles1.css" made by the import,*and have all my custom styles now active in their epub versions. This is amazing! It works so well for me it is hard to believe.

What else though?

--If you have added a new style in your Writer doc, you need to add it to the "styles.css". It will show up in "styles1.css" but with dimensions and whatever Writer had.

--Images will need attention. The import is pretty crude. I have some image styles using width % and height=auto in my epub.css, so a little search and replace can fix them easily.

All this saves so much time and effort compared to other methods I have used, I am just amazed.
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