|  02-04-2017, 01:19 PM | #256 | 
| just an egg            Posts: 1,848 Karma: 8006346 Join Date: Mar 2015 Device: Kindle, iOS | |
|   |   | 
|  02-10-2017, 12:24 AM | #257 | |
| Addict            Posts: 288 Karma: 1546488 Join Date: Jan 2016 Device: ipad | Quote: 
 | |
|   |   | 
|  02-10-2017, 04:37 AM | #258 | |
| Fanatic            Posts: 540 Karma: 10491221 Join Date: Apr 2010 Location: Denmark Device: Kobo: Clara BW, Libra 2,Sage. Kindle Oasis  3, Ipad Mini | Quote: 
 My problem was that Set My Command opens a small local browser inside MapleReader where I can't make a login. | |
|   |   | 
|  02-10-2017, 04:51 AM | #259 | 
| Fanatic            Posts: 540 Karma: 10491221 Join Date: Apr 2010 Location: Denmark Device: Kobo: Clara BW, Libra 2,Sage. Kindle Oasis  3, Ipad Mini | |
|   |   | 
|  02-10-2017, 02:44 PM | #260 | 
| Guru            Posts: 733 Karma: 5797160 Join Date: Jun 2010 Location: Istanbul Device: Kobo Libra | 
			
			Would it be possible to enable ligatures?
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  02-16-2017, 01:39 AM | #261 | 
| Addict            Posts: 218 Karma: 32081 Join Date: Dec 2015 Location: USA Device: iPad, iPad mini, iPhone | 
				
				Font ligatures
			 
			
			Not every font comes with typographic ligatures. However, for those which do, I think the common ligature is enabled by default in iOS. One such example is the serif font Hoefler Text. This is obvious by looking at how fl is rendered in the font name itself in Text Font menu of MapleRead. Another example is the sans serif font Futura. (Do a text search on "fl" to see for yourself.) Moreover, how prominent the ligature effect is depends on the two adjoining letter and the particular font design.
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  02-18-2017, 11:02 PM | #262 | 
| pokrývač škridiel            Posts: 1,525 Karma: 3300000 Join Date: Oct 2011 Location: Bratislava, Slovakia Device: 3*iPad, SamsungNote & Tabs, 2*OnyxBoox, Huawei 8″, PocketBook |   
			
			Hi, I've just purchased MapleRead SE earlier today. Mostly out of curiosity, because so many users have been praising MapleRead, but also to reward your obviously hard and passionate work with at least this small purchase price. Congratulations on an outstanding reading app! For now, I'll be sticking to Marvin as my main e-reader, although it has one monumental flaw (among many lesser ones) that MapleRead does not have: no annotations syncing. First off, the thing I like most about MapleRead: terrific themes treatment. I love all the parchment backgrounds, and whatnot. An unlimited amount of user-defined themes, etc. Just great. For many years, I begged Marvin's developer to give us an unlimited amount of user-defined themes, but nope. The only thing we got was an increase from 3 to 5 themes in Marvin 3, but no user-customizable background pictures, etc. As of right now, I still prefer Marvin, despite its many flaws, over MapleRead (or Hyphen, which is another worthy competitor, though I'd rank it at #3 currently). Below is a listing of what I find to be MapleRead's biggest flaws as of this moment. If you could fix these issues later on, I'll be very grateful. 
   Last edited by Faterson; 02-18-2017 at 11:05 PM. | 
|   |   | 
|  02-21-2017, 01:57 AM | #263 | ||
| Addict            Posts: 288 Karma: 1546488 Join Date: Jan 2016 Device: ipad | Quote: 
  Quote: 
  However, not everything you stated in #4 above is correct. MapleRead highlights do preserve the "newline" characters between adjacent paragraphs. It does not unconditionally merge everything in a single paragraph. I have tried it so many times myself that I know that's not the case. Even their sample note lists and screenshots clearly show that's not the case. See the screenshot of FAQ How to export my notes? on their website. | ||
|   |   | 
|  02-21-2017, 07:41 PM | #264 | ||||
| pokrývač škridiel            Posts: 1,525 Karma: 3300000 Join Date: Oct 2011 Location: Bratislava, Slovakia Device: 3*iPad, SamsungNote & Tabs, 2*OnyxBoox, Huawei 8″, PocketBook |   
			
			It's definitely a major flaw. Sorry, but it's really unacceptable – to expect the user to manually check and fix all the errors and distortions in highlights/annotations upon their export. Quote: 
 Quote: 
  What has that got to do with "web browsers"? It's not about web browsers – it's about exporting annotations from EPUB files. Precisely because EPUB files are HTML-based, there should clearly be a way to determine whether a word appears in the book in italics or bold (etc.), whether what is highlighted are 2 or 3 separate paragraphs, or a single paragraph, and so on. Of course there is a way to determine that – otherwise, MapleRead and all the others would also be incapable of displaying those fundamental formatting features properly. So, what is needed – and sorry, it's a non-negotiable – is for the e-reader app to faithfully also export what it faithfully displays. As I mentioned, I realize that this is no easy thing to achieve, because a text property like "italics" can be marked up in an EPUB file in many ways (think of all the CSS variations...), but that doesn't mean developers should just give up and be content with the corruption of highlights/annotations upon export. That's unacceptable for professional-grade software, and will never be acceptable. I'm not being harsh, cedhax – just describing some basic requirements in straightforward language.  On the positive side: MapleRead does at least preserve new-lines in user-written annotations.  (I believe here is where Marvin and others fail – merging the entire annotation into a single line upon export.) For user-written annotations, cedhax, it's OK to talk about "new-lines", because annotations are composed in plain-text. And in plain-text, a standard paragraph break is "hitting the Enter key twice" – that is, two successive new-lines. But none of this applies to book texts which are, typically for 2017, no longer plain-text (as in Project Gutenberg in the 1990s), but rich-text. Therefore, paragraph breaks from the book text should be exported as paragraph breaks (not "new-lines") in exported highlights. That means: the exported highlights/annotations file must be rich-text, not plain-text. This is the great irony: Marvin allows you to export annotations via (among other options) a HTML file (which is a fabulous Marvin "killer feature" that MapleRead would do well to emulate), but the highlights inserted into that HTML file are... plain-text  , which just makes no sense whatsoever... Quote: 
  And, although the "new-lines" might appear upon export from the Alice sample book provided by MapleRead, that definitely doesn't work in all e-books I tested in MapleRead. For an example, please see the first screenshot attached to this post. That's an official EPUB release I purchased via Lulu – and all multiple-paragraph highlights get merged into a single paragraph (no new-lines anywhere) by MapleRead upon export. In the meantime, I have discovered one more major shortcoming of MapleRead (you may wish to be "politically correct" and call it a "missing feature" instead, but that doesn't make the issue any more palatable...): MapleRead, unlike Marvin (and, apparently, Hyphen), does not support the higher resolution on the 13-inch iPad. That's a major drawback, in my eyes, because the interface of apps only optimized for 10-inch screens looks really terrible on that gorgeous, expansive (also expensive...)  13-inch iPad screen. Therefore, MapleRead should cater to the 13-inch iPads as well. You can take a look at the second screenshot attached to this post – it shows the multi-tasking screen on the 13-inch iPad, with the same book opened in MapleRead, Hypen and Marvin. It would, I think, be difficult to deny that Marvin's display of the book is the most elegant of all three. And MapleRead's display is the least elegant of the three... (The lack of distinct separation between book text and headers/footers once again comes into play.) Among other things, when an app isn't optimized for the 13-inch screen, the fonts employed in such an app seem slightly grainy/blurry upon viewing. And that's hardly acceptable for MapleRead in the long run, right? Quote: 
  Then Stanza. Then Marvin. And I'm sticking with Marvin as my main e-reader app for now, because although it's marred with many flaws or shortcomings, other apps seem to have even more of those, although they may be superior over Marvin in certain aspects (such as MapleRead's annotations syncing, fabulous themes treatment, the "curl" option for page flips, etc.). That's the sad state of things in the world of e-books (not just on Apple's platform) as of 2017. The good news is, MapleRead (and Hyphen, and Marvin itself) can all become better than the current Marvin. So, there is always some hope. Although it might be an unrealistic "hope against hope" because, as someone (an app developer) remarked in this forum subsection a few weeks ago, it's likely impossible to earn a livelihood by developing a top-quality e-reader app...  The world at large is content with mediocrity – and when it comes to catering to the mediocre, the likes of Apple, Amazon, Google or Microsoft will always gladly deliver.   Last edited by Faterson; 02-21-2017 at 08:10 PM. | ||||
|   |   | 
|  02-22-2017, 05:53 AM | #265 | 
| Member  Posts: 18 Karma: 10 Join Date: Nov 2007 Device: 505, Kindle DX | 
			
			Is iPad Pro 12.9 support planned please?
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  02-22-2017, 05:02 PM | #266 | 
| Addict            Posts: 218 Karma: 32081 Join Date: Dec 2015 Location: USA Device: iPad, iPad mini, iPhone | 
				
				iPad Pro (12.9 inch) native resolution support
			 
			
			MapleRead does support iPad Pro (12.9 inch). It just doesn't support it at its native resolution yet. Besides Faterson, AndyG is presumably also an iPad Pro (12.9 inch) user . Can we hear from other MapleRead SE users who also own iPad Pro (12.9 inch)? Last edited by sbaylor; 02-24-2017 at 02:34 PM. Reason: clarification: native support -> native resolution support | 
|   |   | 
|  02-24-2017, 05:32 AM | #267 | 
| Member  Posts: 18 Karma: 10 Join Date: Nov 2007 Device: 505, Kindle DX | 
			
			For what it's worth not having "native support" is the same as not having support at all as far as I'm concerned, since zoomed text in a reading app is awful. I bought your app but then claimed a refund once I found this was a problem I'm afraid, but I would consider re-buying if/when you fix it.
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  02-24-2017, 02:42 PM | #268 | 
| Addict            Posts: 218 Karma: 32081 Join Date: Dec 2015 Location: USA Device: iPad, iPad mini, iPhone | |
|   |   | 
|  02-24-2017, 03:57 PM | #269 | 
| Addict            Posts: 288 Karma: 1546488 Join Date: Jan 2016 Device: ipad | 
				
				iPad Pro 2 coming soon?
			 
			
			I understand that MapleRead (SE and CE) already works at the native resolution of iPad Pro (9.7 inch). The new iPad Pro 2 (9.7-inch and 12.9-inch versions) release date is rumored to be this coming March. Therefore, I think there is a good marketing reason for MapleRead to support at native resolution of all iPad (Pro) models ASAP.
		 | 
|   |   | 
|  02-24-2017, 05:50 PM | #270 | 
| Addict            Posts: 218 Karma: 32081 Join Date: Dec 2015 Location: USA Device: iPad, iPad mini, iPhone | 
			
			@cedhax - This is an interesting viewpoint. I'll keep it in mind.    | 
|   |   | 
|  | 
| Tags | 
| mapleread | 
| 
 | 
|  Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post | 
| MapleRead CX - new ePUB Reader is free | cedhax | Deals and Resources (No Self-Promotion or Affiliate Links) | 2 | 07-09-2016 05:13 PM | 
| New Poll: Which ebook reader on iOS? | kyteflyer | Apple Devices | 40 | 11-11-2012 11:10 AM | 
| Trying to get to Content Server on OS X 10.7.2 using iPad 2 iOS 5.0.1 | cdg | Apple Devices | 0 | 11-15-2011 03:25 PM | 
| iOS reader that uses Calibre server? | Seanette | Calibre | 2 | 10-17-2011 07:26 AM |