For the small caps, it might be a function of the device or epub viewer that you're using. Here's a dummy file where the first two words of every paragraph are tagged with a small cap attribute. The first paragraph also has a Bold/Heavy attribute applied to the first two words. The left version is from Sigil and he right one is using Calibre for the same ePub file.

Not surprising, Jeff, that the epub links would be from RH since Frame didn't have the ability before now. However, some of the links on that post no longer work and others are about mobile help, so I don't know what I'm not seeing.


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In order to understand this problem fully, you have to carefully review the HTML markup that is being generated by FM/RH. (Note that this forum is specific to Adobe products, so that's what we're talking about here .. but this problem exists for ALL techcomm tools that I've tested, so it's not a matter of choosing another tool.) In order to review the underlying HTML, you need to use a tool that lets you open up the generated EPUB and look at the files. Calibre and Sigil are two tools that can do this (both are free) .. I prefer to use Oxygen XML Editor, because it is a powerful XML editor that lets you make global changes to the files in the EPUB, much better than other tools. It also lets you run the epubcheck validator within the interface and lists all problems which are easily accessible to review and locate.

The Frame 12 dialogue box for "Publish" comes up with 5 options and a 6th (all of the 5). I've been watching Frame 12 seminars and imagining that there's a way to structure the document so that it will work for all 5 options. But, based on your post, this is not sensible. Formatting for print and epub should be in different documents...

The ePub file is just a zip container so you can open it with any zip utility, like 7z or WinZip. The CSS file being used for rendering the published document will be found in the \OEBPS folder and will have the same name as the ePub file, e.g. for myBook.epub look for \OEBPS\myBook.css

The Guide_to_smallcaps covers current DP expectations for how post processors should handle small caps. There's a lot of good advice there, but quite a lot of it depends on the css attributes {font-variant:small-caps;} and {text-transform:uppercase;} and {text-transform:lowercase;}. None of these attributes work in Adobe Digital Editions ver.4.5.7.179634, and there's no good reason to predict that they will ever work well in epub, since small caps are not usually used semantically in books. The Formatting Guidelines cover expectations for how formatters should handle small caps during the F1, F2, and F3 rounds.

In this css, the attributes {text-transform: uppercase;} and {letter-spacing: 0.05em;} have no effect in the epub edition. The letter-spacing probably works only in the html edition. The text-transform is only a formality; it would make the small caps appear correctly in the html edition in case I forget to do the conversion manually during installation. The installed html for this example would be:

Amazon strongly recommends marking footnotes with the HTML5 aside element, together with the epub:type attribute. This allows accessible reading systems to ignore the footnotes except when followed by their referents and allows any reading system to handle them more intelligently (e.g., as popups). This usage ensures that even if the EPUB semantic is not recognized, the notes will still be treated as secondary content due the nature of the HTML5 aside element.

In his most famous essay, The Man Who Mistook his Wife for a Hat, Sacks describes a man who suffers from visual agnosia, which is an inability to recognize objects and people (such as hats and wives). It's a case study of sorts, as are most of his other essays. But to call them 'case studies' is to sell them short, because really they are personal stories, often with two main characters: the patient and Sacks himself. And although their relationship is always that between a patient and a doctor, both are described as people with their own views, worries, and interests.

InDesign creates a single .epub file containing the XHTML-based content. To view the file, you need an EPUB reader. You can also use the Adobe Digital Editions reader, which you can download free from the Adobe website.

Specify the resolution of the images in pixels per inch (ppi). The higher the number, the better the resolution. While operating systems have standardized on either 72 ppi or 96 ppi, mobile devices range from 132 ppi (iPad) to 172 ppi (Sony Reader) to over 300 ppi (iPhone 4).

You can select a ppi value for each object selected. Values include 72, 96, 150 (average for all eBook devices today), and 300.

InDesign provides support for the EPUB 2 section in the OPF file. InDesign automatically detects the cover and the print Table Of Contents option. To determine the text type, InDesign uses the epub:type values specified in the Object Export Options dialog.

The race politics that pushed U.S. blacks into espousing UNIA goals is laid out much more fully in the biography. Terrorism against freed African Americans had been ongoing from slave emancipation in 1865. In the thirty years before Garvey arrived in the U.S. more than three thousand southern blacks had been lynched; many more had been burnt out of their homes and forced into exile. These conditions, the devastation caused by the boll weevil on cotton harvests, and the search for work, propelled them North. Post-war demobilization, combined with a major economic downturn, triggered rioting by whites in many U.S. cities; the rioters attacked the black population, particularly black soldiers who some claimed were spreading Bolshevik propaganda.

Here in the NJI Media development shop, we wear many hats. From web apps to interactive dashboards, we stay sharp in a wide spectrum of digital skills. A little-known segment of our skill-set is digital publishing: the process of taking a regular document (such as an InDesign file or a .pdf) and transforming it into a e-book.

The .epub format is supported by iOS (via the iBooks app), Nook (both the device and the desktop application), most mobile OS e-book apps (such as Bluefire Reader for iOS, or Aldiko Book Reader for Android), and many other common e-reader devices (such as the Sony Reader).

The .mobi format is supported by Kindle (the device, the desktop application, and the mobile apps). Although .mobi files are not as widely supported as .epub files, they are the primary file format for the Kindle, so .mobi conversion is recommended.

Documents of the .mobi format do not offer the same editing flexibility as .epub files. This is a non-issue, though, since we recommend any conversion to .mobi go use .epub as the source. Presentation is fairly congruent between the two formats, so getting it right in .epub means getting it right in .mobi. 589ccfa754

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