Quote:
Originally Posted by papierflieger
Thank you, that was really quick! I'm not exactly sure how to use PyGlossary, are there instructions for this somewhere?
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If you have a Mac, you'll have to launch the Python GUI by either executing
pyglossary.pyw in the src folder or
pyglossary.sh in the root folder.
Quote:
Originally Posted by papierflieger
And I guess I'm going to have to find a windows pc to follow the instructions found in the second link, is that right? (because there are .exe files in the dictionary creator zip archive)
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The instructions are indeed for Windows users, but if you know how to use the Mac shell you can also simply use
tab2mobi.py to convert your tab-delimited file to a dictionary.
The command is:
python tab2opf.py DICTIONARY.tab
If the source file is utf-8 encoded add -utf:
python tab2opf.py -utf DICTIONARY.tab
(Obviously, you'll have to replace DICTIONARY.tab with the name of your tab-delimited Korean-English text file, which should be utf-8 encoded.)
This will generate Kindle source files that you'll need to compile by opening the .opf file with
KindlePreviewer.