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#16 | |||
pokrývač škridiel
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Of course. And your differing opinions are likewise subjective opinions. What else is new? That's what discussion boards are for – they allow us to exchange our subjective views.
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Marvin 3 currently insists that a page in a chapter is a screen flip (my preference), but at the same time, Marvin 3 insists that a page in a book is something entirely different – an arbitrarily invented (and ill-chosen), abstract concept of "250 words". How can Marvin 3 call two entirely different concepts the same thing – "page", even simultaneously inside the same footer? ![]() The esteemed MobileRead poster Tex2002ans sent me a private message on the current subject, alerting me to an important MobileRead thread on cross-referencing in e-books, and I'm quoting a part of my reply to Tex here below. ***** That post #129 is another classic from you. ![]() ![]() As to my own preference for cross-referencing in e-books, it would be "percentage inside e-book", using the 4-digit format: 72.54%, whereby the percentage is determined by word count (say, 5,000th word in a 10,000-word book would be 50.00% inside the book). It's not precise either, and there are potential pitfalls you detail in your post #129, but it seems to me to be the best option from among all available. But let's just forget about pages for cross-referencing purposes in e-books, please. As I believe you indicated in your post #129, e-books resemble webpages a lot more than they do physical books, and we have no page numbering for webpages, right? And, of course an e-book is basically built out of HTML code just like a webpage is. E-books and webpages are "brothers and sisters", so to say, whereas printed books are just distant relatives. ![]() Word count is an excellent option, in my opinion, to determine the "percentage read"/location inside an e-book; but word count is a terrible choice even for abstract page counts, which is why I believe ADE is right in defining a page (the "abstract/fake" page) as 1024 characters, but Marvin is completely wrong in defining it as 250 words. As I mentioned elsewhere, German (for example) has much longer words than (say) English – so does this mean now that all German e-books will have fewer pages, on average, in Marvin, than English e-books? ![]() Last edited by Faterson; 07-12-2016 at 05:29 PM. |
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#17 |
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@cedhax None.
Footnotes: The original poster asked a simple, direct question to which there is an equally direct and simple answer. Please don't hijack his/her post. |
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#18 | |
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![]() Because as long as Marvin continues to be "flawed" in all these myriad ways, the most important thing in this forum is to take every opportunity to interject and describe how Marvin desperately needs to be "fixed". ![]() |
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#19 |
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Well, I guess if you only read cookbooks then you need page numbers to get to the chocolate cake section. Faterson must be a baker of note. Hence not having page numbers leaves everything half-bake in his view. Somebody stick a toothpick in him.
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#20 |
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In all seriousness, the (misguided
![]() Now you are opening a huge can of worms, ask the gurus @Hitch and @Tex2002ans if you like... "see page xx" type instructions essentially require either being replaced with hyperlinks, or Amazon's "Real Page Numbers" (or Page-map/PageList which few books seem to actually contain). Option #1 requires shenanigans to create separate paper/digital master copies. And that's very fun when digitizing old books, too. ![]() Option #2 requires a lot of confidence in the vendor, and breaks hard on many many reader apps no matter what. Also, Faterson already vehemently rejected option #2. |
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#21 |
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#22 | ||
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I went into quite a bit of the nitty gritty in Posts #129 and beyond (although I would recommend reading the entire topic): https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...85#post3290585 Side Note: In the above topic, I also brought in the (in my mind) heavily related topic of Indexes + Referencing in ebooks as well. Quote:
There are quite a few alternate methods of "Page Numbering" in ebooks. In Post #166 I tried to categorize what I believe are the different methods: https://www.mobileread.com/forums/sho...97#post3293297 Faterson is a proponent of what I categorized as the "Screen Numbering" method, while I argue strongly in favor for others (and try my best to lay out the Pros/Cons of the different methods). I have been meaning to make a summarized post as a proposal to kguil, as I think Marvin (or any ereading program) would benefit from being able to choose between alternative numbering schemes. Plus I wanted to brainstorm + come up with good ideas for the details/variables/options (for example, Percentage displaying the tenths/hundredths place). I didn't want to just reiterate what was stated elsewhere. I will probably be making that post in one of the other topics (or in a topic of its own). Last edited by Tex2002ans; 07-15-2016 at 05:22 PM. |
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#23 | ||
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But do you think it's better to have an image element taking up some number of page(s) other than zero? Otherwise, the result (as it is defined now in Marvin 3) may be very strange if not bad in some cases. For example, consider some comic book in EPUB with hundreds of images all referenced from the same HTML file, where there is no interleaving whitespace between adjacent image elements. By your current definition of a page, this book will then have only zero page! I'm really not comfortable with this implication. What do you think? |
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#24 |
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@cedhax In the ideal case, yes, you're right. However, determining the "size" of an image requires prerendering the whole EPUB and it slows everything down. This prerendering would need to happen each time the text size, page margins, indents, etc... change.
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#25 |
pokrývač škridiel
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Please definitely make that pre-rendering a user option. If you can pre-render chapters, you can certainly pre-render entire EPUBs – at least as a user option. iBooks can prerender EPUBs, even showing nicely the number of real pages (screens) in Table of Contents – therefore, Marvin should definitely accomplish the same, given that it runs on the same devices as iBooks.
Really, calling two entirely different concepts the same name, "page", even simultaneously in the same footer (!), is the most glaring, in-your-face inconsistency in the history of Marvin. ![]() |
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#26 |
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So, you want actual counts for consistency? Say you have a 4.6" phone and a 11.6" tablet. How consistent is the count here? And the variance will exceed Marvin's standard page which is at least consistent over a variety of screens to find a position.
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#27 |
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It's all perfectly natural and 100% consistent on the same reading device, using the current settings.
For finding your current reading position, you have Marvin's automatic location sync. Why would you wish to use pages instead? ![]() Why would you, in fact, in a discussion about pages, mention "consistency" across different layout settings, or across different reading devices, or even across different e-reader apps and platforms? ![]() As to me, I discard all of those arbitrary schemes. Just give me natural page-counts instead, please – I flip a page, and the page-count goes up/down by 1 exactly, regardless of your current layout settings, regardless of your current reading device, app, or platform. I'm simply devoid of those "consistent cross-device page-count" illusions. I do not wish to see the same number of pages for the same book across all reading devices (tiny and large) and even platforms. I don't wish to see it because I know it's a pipe-dream. For cross-device and cross-platform references to text locations, I propose using the percentage-into-text metric instead, with two decimals, calculating it based on word counts. If you're 75.29% inside a book on one device or platform, and then look up the 75.29% location on a different device or platform, you should land pretty much reliably in the same location. No page references are necessary for this. When you buy a printed paperback edition of the Bible, JKenP, and then a large-format hardcover edition of the Bible, you don't expect the two editions to have the exact same number of pages, right? Why should they? It's perfectly natural for the small-format Bible to have a higher number of pages than the large-format Bible. I expect the same, 100% logical behavior from Marvin: the same e-book, when opened in Marvin on an iPhone, should by necessity have a much higher number of pages than when it's opened in Marvin on the 13-inch iPad. If you don't care for that logic and prefer the fiction of "pages" instead, fine. Kris can keep that as Marvin's default, the way it is now. But for those of us who find it nonsensical, please give us the alternative – what I call the "natural page-counts". Marvin currently counts pages in chapters naturally, while digressing into fictional "pages" for page-counts in books. That is what's currently inconsistent within Marvin itself, on a single reading-device, and I will appreciate if Kris gives us the opportunity to avoid that inconsistency. iBooks does give us this opportunity (in fact, it's the only page-count option in iBooks), so why should Marvin withhold it from us? Yes, it's more resource-intensive, but the calculation typically only needs to be performed once for every e-book, ideally when it's opened for the first time. iBooks calculates all of this without any noticeable delays; and I for one would be perfectly willing to wait even for a minute ![]() Last edited by Faterson; 07-27-2016 at 05:04 PM. |
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#28 |
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And I will go further and say you should deprecate page numbers entirely.
![]() Call it what it is -- an arbitrary location indicator. |
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#29 |
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They are not at all arbitrary – they are 100% precise, and correspond to reality exactly. You flip a page = the page-count goes up or down by exactly 1. That's exactly how it works in printed books, and that's exactly how it should work in e-books, too. Regardless of the size of the printed book, and regardless of the size of your electronic reading device. That's exactly what pages are.
![]() There's no need to discard the concept or word "pages". It's an extremely useful and time-honored concept. The only confusion arises when you guys, for some reason unfathomable to me, expect pages to perform what they never can perform: to be consistent across various layout settings, or reading devices, or apps, or platforms. Why should they be consistent, for heaven's sake? ![]() Once again, for cross-referencing text locations across different layout settings, reading devices, apps, or platforms, I propose to forget about pages once and for all (but only for that particular cross-referencing purpose!), and use the percentage-into-text (with 2 decimals) metric (based on word counts) instead. ![]() |
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#30 | |
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Generally speaking, a paper book does not change its own page numbering!
And multiple copies of the same edition of the paper book will always have the same page numbers. Quote:
Using the @Faterson definition of a page does not make it any less subjective than using the @eschwartz definition. ... Having seen more than enough cases of people actually expecting ebook pseudorandom-calculated "pages" to be useful reference indicators (and the amusing intersection with acedemia), I no longer hold the delusion that holding onto that word will be helpful to the masses. Last edited by eschwartz; 07-27-2016 at 09:34 PM. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Page Numbering | 46jimbo | Kobo Reader | 22 | 04-04-2013 08:18 PM |
Glo Page Numbering | dixieknits | Kobo Reader | 3 | 01-06-2013 04:43 PM |
ePub Page Numbering Using Page-map | Dark123 | Calibre | 2 | 06-16-2010 07:15 AM |
Page numbering | StanByk | Calibre | 2 | 09-07-2009 02:10 PM |
Page Numbering... | slantybard | Calibre | 3 | 08-02-2009 11:41 AM |