if the additon of --toc and --chapters does not produce the desired results, leave these out. Sometimes the pictures inside the epub are invalid to be used with latex so you need to convert them in the process :
Extract images and other media contained in the epub container to the path DIR, creating it if necessary, and adjust the images references in the [LaTeX] document so they point to the extracted files, with the option --extract-media= DIR . Select the current directory which also contains the ePub file. Add --extract-media=. which means extract in the current directory, which is also $HOME/Documents
I'm selling art ebooks on KDP Amazon, and I need the pictures not be shrinked as they automatically are when passing from odt to mobi/epub.But it would be easier if Amazon didn't have to convert epub itself, time-wise to begin with, and also since there are errors here and there (rarely but still) and it just can't do it sometimes. A hussle.Now, I'm forced to make epub from libreoffice, then correct it a bit sometime with sigil, then provide it to Amazon. Too time-consuming.
You can visit the official website of PDFMate at www.pdfmate.com. Some of its programs are free. PDFMate eBook Converter seems to be a new program as I didn't see it months ago. I downloaded the program the other day to convert epub to pdf & mobi, worked okay for me.
\tE-book converter: With Calibre you can take an e-book in one file format and convert it to another that is supported by your e-book reading device and, if you're not happy with the result, you can tweak the conversion settings and even manually edit the book's contents and formatting. It took us four seconds to convert a 40-page e-book from PDF to ePub.
E-book converter: With Calibre you can take an e-book in one file format and convert it to another that is supported by your e-book reading device and, if you're not happy with the result, you can tweak the conversion settings and even manually edit the book's contents and formatting. It took us four seconds to convert a 40-page e-book from PDF to ePub.
I can't comment on that. I convert .docx files in Calibre to epub for the ebook distributors that require it. I use APub to convert the .docx files into pdfs for Amazon and Ingram Spark POD books. Beyond that, I'm no help whatsoever.
A few years ago I tried PDF2ID, with mixed results, but I gather it's improved now. It might help
BTW I've finally given up on Affinity. Apub is no use at all for what I need to do - (get INDD files from the (non-profit) publisher and make epub versions for them.) There is no inclination at all from Serif to do anything about supporting Epubs in Apub.
ID do a sad job converting to epub, if the original file wasn't produced with this intend, since we use tricks and special characters that can't be well converted to html.
And publishing houses will convert the ID file without finesse... (at least, a big editor does it this way, perhaps some will put more time on this and get a better result).
I am saying that as Affinity has no support for exporting HTML/CSS today, it is not as simple a matter as you suggest to provide the epub support. If they already had HTML/CSS support it would be less work (though still significant), but as they don't, providing HTML/CSS is a pre-requisite.
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