1/8/2024 0 Comments Scrivener windows beta presets![]() ![]() Creating an ebook should not require a degree in Computer Science and fluency in programming languages. Those e-queries and e-submissions we labor over until they are perfect should not turn into funhouse mirror words the moment we hit SEND. Electronic files should not be filled with tiger traps and landmines waiting to turn our lovely words into gibberish marching all over a user’s screen. My eyes aren’t red just from the Colorado wildfires, but from spending hours trying to figure this shit out. Come to find out, there are different languages and coding for HTML, too! Ay yi yi. So, damn it, I’m doing what I told myself I really didn’t want to do, and am learning HTML in order to produce ebooks. Until I do know why and can figure out how to prevent that from happening, I’m now leery of Scrivener. Why? I think it’s something Amazon did, but hey, I’m a fiction writer, not a programmer. The problem occurred because Amazon updated older model Kindles and now some people will find that some ebooks–not all!–are compressed and they will have to manually enlarge the screens. Last week I learned there is a problem with one of the books I produced. It does a great job and it’s relatively painless. I had thought (foolishly) that all my problems were solved by getting away from Word (except to use its turbo-charged Find/Replace feature to clean up files) and using Scrivener to produce ebooks. Here is an end product I’m going for (still some tinkering left to do, but you get the idea): Here is what it looks like if I format it for an ebook in Word (for uploading to Smashwords): Here is what the same document looks like when I upload a cleaned up copy into Scrivener for ebook formatting: Here is what the same document looks like loaded into a text editor for HTML formatting: Now here is the same document with all the extra paragraph returns and spaces removed, and the special formatting and paragraph returns tagged. Everything is nicely laid out on the screen and without the Show/Hide feature toggled, one would look at it and think, “Beautiful.” Here’s how it looks if I convert this and load it on my Kindle.īecause the writer used paragraph returns to make a new page (instead of inserted page breaks) this is what the start of chapter two looks like: The writer has created a document suitable for print. Those little marks you see in the image indicate spaces and paragraph returns. In the meantime, I’d thought I’d show you what we’re up against.įirst, here is a document provided by a writer for whom I’m producing an ebook. If William succeeds, I’ll be his first customer. The user selects a “theme” for how he/she wants the ebook to look, then loads in their text and images and the program takes care of all the formatting. Essentially he wants a program similar to what blogging sites use. He is currently working on a program for ebook producers. I’ve been talking to William Ockham and he thinks my efforts are on the right track, but kind of sad, too, because he is a computer programmer and he is frustrated by how out-of-synch users and developers are. Adjusting my way of looking at the subject is difficult and I backslide worse than a dieter at a chocolate fountain. For one thing, there’s a language problem. You’d think this would be simple, but it’s not. One of the problems is that the tools we use–namely word processors–are superb for producing printed documents, but frustrating, maddening and over-powered when creating electronic files.Ĭurrently, I’m in the process of creating a booklet/cheat sheet to help fiction writers who are NOT computer programmers to painlessly use the tools they have– and are comfortable using–to create electronic files suitable for e-queries, e-submissions and ebooks. So last week I talked about the importance of writers shifting their mindset from thinking “Print Documents” to thinking “Electronic Files.” Judging by the responses I got, I’d say I’m not the only one concerned with this subject.
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