Writer2ePub is an OpenOffice.org extension that creates an ePub file from any document openable by the OOo Word Processor.
Just simply one click, you can obtain a well formatted, easy readable ePub file from almost any document.
What is Writer2ePub?
W2E is an ePub creator. Simply write your document with the OOo Word Processor and W2E will make an ePub file using the best traditional typographic rules, by applying a predefined style sheet (CSS). If you need a good ePub document and you can use the OOo Writer Word Processor, W2E is your tool.
What Writer2ePub is not?
W2E is not a simple file converter. It does not just convert an existing document to ePub. If you need to obtain a pure wysiwyg ePub file, W2E is not for you. Please look at [URL=" =166"]Calibre[/URL] or other OOo extensions available on the Internet to do this kind of jobs.
Neither is W2E an ePub editor, please look at [URL=" =203"]Sigil[/URL] or other similar product if you need to edit and modify an existing ePub.
Who can use Writer2ePub?
W2E is intended for occasional users and professional use. The occasional user can create an high quality epub without worrying about the source document quality, while professional can create an easy editable, well structured and valid ePub file.
Installation
Just double click on the dowloaded file, it will install or replace the old W2E version.
Otherwise, please open the Extension Manager from the Tools menu and add the extension from there.
Once installed, on opening a new writer document you will find a small toolbar with three green icons.
Use
Simply press the first icon, and an ePub will be created in the same folder of the original file.
The icon with the blue mark is useful to add or edit the metadata information (title, author and so on).
The last icon with the red mark is to modify the preference. In a normal use you don't need to modify these settings.
Disclaimer:
Writer2ePub is a software tool written by non-professional programmers.
The author and all the collaborators are not responsible in any way for direct or indirect damages caused by W2E to your data, your software, your hard disk, your computer, your person, your home, your town, your country, your planet or your universe.
Please use it carefully and at your own risk!
Using OpenOffice 4.1.6 on WinXP Pro. More often than not, it starts the export while I'm entering/editing metadata (haven't gone anywhere near the "OK" button). 50/50 chance it hangs up and I have to force-close OpenOffice. I see from another comment here that it doesn't export graphics in "frames"--in other words, it dumps most graphics with captions (though it picked a framed graphic that wasn't first as a "first image" for the cover), because that's how OO handles captions. I've got 58 illustrations (mostly captioned) and four sidebars (framed text)--this is WHY I'm looking for a way to get OO to export PDF, because the web-based converters keep screwing it up!
I downloaded and used the extension to try and get clean html for a manuscript. It worked well and gave me the epub and the folder. I am using the xhtml text in the folder to set up the formatting and style sheet, I will also be inserting a cover picture and inner cover picture. My question is once finished how do I archive the folder back to being an epub? Thanks
Although an epub is technically a Zip file, just using Zip often doesn't work and e-reading devices will not recognize the epub. There are a couple of utilities out there that will do it, though. I use one called "Epub Zip-Unzip" which is an Applescript application for Mac, but there are various other ones out there for Unix, etc.
I have installed 1.1.28. I have tried a new document. I have tried opening an existing document. I am not seeing the tool bar with the three buttons. I have looked in the tool bar menu, and do not find toolbar with a name appropriate to this extension. What am I missing? Am I looking in the wrong place?
In the course of testing it, I have found that if a hyperlink contains an ampersand ("&"), the published eBook will cut off (i.e. simply be blank) from the point where the sentence containing the offending hyperlink is.
This has to be inserted as a hyperlink in the source ODT file to reproduce the problem. Specifically, the link target (not text) must contain the ampersand to reproduce the problem. Remove the ampersand, and the eBook will publish and appear normally.
I am short storywriter, before, I am using word then convert files for ePub or ereader format so the files can be readable to any mobile ereader capable devices. Thanksfully that now I can use this app directly to write epub files without any conversion. Thanks, this works in my iPad device.
I have an OO document that I want to export to EPUB. The document contains a single image with alt text. When I export my document using Writer2ePub, the text exports without problems but the image does *not* export with the book. Does Writer2ePub not export images? I'm using version 1.1.24 with OO 3.4.1.
Sorry for the delay in my answer. Maybe your images are included in frames, and W2E still doesn't support frames. For a better solution, please send to me your .odt file using the contact form in my blog -tools/writer2epub/
Yes, you can! Just download Kindlegen from Amazon site and specify the path in preferences. W2E will create both EPUB and Mobipocket files. If you use W2E for professional use don't forget a donation ;)
To prevent problems, please work only with .odt files. If your source is an .rtf or .doc, please save them to .odt before start the creation.
This because only .odt files can store additional information about metadata and settings.
Luke
I'm sonewhat confused as to whether or not this is the right tool for me. In the description it says "If you need a good ePub document and you can use the OOo Writer Word Processor, W2E is your tool", but later on it also says "If you need to obtain a pure wysiwyg ePub file, W2E is not for you". Not sure what the wysiwyg refers to here. Are the files created by W2E readable on ebook readers or not? Another important question is, does this support using the Arabic Alphabet in documents?
Maybe: the RTL languages needs to be supported also in the eReader software. I will check for W2E RTL compatibility in next revisions.
Please send to me an Arabic sample text (with at least one heading 1) to writer2epub[at]gmail.com
Hi - the function worked very well in converting my document, except that the internal hyperlinks didn't convert. In the original document, I have many internal links, mostly when there is a term that is described in detail elsewhere in the document. The hyperlinks work properly in the .odt flie, but there appears to be just the text in the epub document, no associated link.
I installed the Version 1.1.13 from this site, first it says here to be 1.1.10 but it is not, it is 1.1.13, but after installing it, I get neverending Update request in OpenOffice, showing me, that Version 1.1.14 is available.
It is not.
I can upate it in OpenOffice but I will again get only 1.1.13 AND I will get another annoying Update information.
When i download a format lets say:epub, mobi, fb2, Word.doc/docx, txt.zip, sfb.zip or some other file i was able to open it in the classic Edge and read it.Is there such an option in Chromium Edge because i couldn't find it.
MOBI is an eBook format now owned by Amazon. Amazon's eBook formats (AZW, AZW1, and AZW3) use the MOBI format but incorporate a proprietary DRM, and Kindle's newest format (KF8) is based on MOBI, also with a proprietary DRM. To my knowldge, EdgeClassic does not support MOBI, but I could be wrong.
Although Amazon now owns MOBI, MOBI is based on the Open eBook standard and is not itself proprietary. MOBI supports most Windows platforms, as well as Linux and MacOS, and depreciated OS's like Symbian, Blackberry and Palm. Mobi does not support Android natively, however.
As an aside, Amazon has developed an ePub to MOBI converter, supporting port of ePub books to an unprotected MOBI format that can be read by the Kindle Reader, which is handy. I use a Kindle Reader, and have converted many ePub books to Kindle format over the years.
Personal preference. My experience with PDF on a Kindle Reader has not been particularly satisfactory. Although Amazon includes many PDF format books (usually those outside of copyright protection scanned and converted by enthusiasts) in its collection, I've found that MOBI is the better format for my use. MOBI allows me to change formatting (typeface, type size, line/margin spacing, and so on) while those choices are much limited or nonexistent in PDF format most of the time.
I suppose that my preference for MOBI format for my Kindle Reader is similar to those who prefer Microsoft Office rather than LibreOffice, or vice versus. I've been using LibreOffice/OpenOffice for 20+ years. I prefer LibreOffice to Microsoft Office because it is FOSS, cross-platform between Windows and Linux, and I like the way it formats. My husband, on the other hand, is an author who prefers Microsoft Office because it converts better (in his opinion) into standard eBook formats, including Kindle format. We both have good reasons for our preferences. Who's to argue with either of us?
The preferred Kindle (KDP Amazon) method is using Mobi Creator but apparently Mac doesn't work with mobi; next best is using MS Word, compressing a Word .doc file with imbedded images and uploading that. And there's the problem because when I go from a Pages file to a Word .doc file, but I'm losing images, fonts are changing and text formatting is getting messed up. The "worst" format by Kindle standards is .pdf file because their conversion really doesn't work very well with it. Then it is further messed up using Mac OS file compression which apparently changes some coding compared to Windows "zip" compression but that's another issue.
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