![]() GNU/Linux only, I don't have (or will have) Windows. Of course, the whole lot of s in the text will do their weird things, maybe it's a good idea to remove them.īut of course if there is a tool available I might as well use it do you guys know of any? If there is no solution already there I'm thinking about picking an ebook that currently displays correctly, taking the BlockStyle and TextStyle that are used in the majority of the paragraphs, and writing a script that will substitute the most used BlockStyle and TextStyle for those, thus giving all my books a consistant look. Guess what's in there, a gazillion styles and lots of with custom formatting things within the. I have then converted lrf to lrs and examined the source. For now I'm using a little perl script that reduces all font sizes by a factor. ![]() no spacing between paragraphs or first line indentation.įor the font size thing, I've tried converting with calibre, but it seems to ignore my font size preferences (tried the last version yesterday, still no luck). some parts of the text have weird sizes At times, there may be problems when trying to update or uninstall Adobe Acrobat. Updates to Acrobat Reader are available on a regular basis for free and should be installed for best results. ![]() Adobe Acrobat Reader is a popular and a useful tool for reading documents and any Office software is incomplete without it. line spacing keeps changing (sometimes the last line of every paragraph has some extra space on top) Sometimes, it may become impossible to uninstall or update Adobe Acrobat Reader. Probably many of you have experienced this: you get an ebook, maybe in lit or rtf (or ever lrf itself), convert it to lrf using ebook-convert, and it looks like shit on your ebook reader (not calibre's fault, the original file is already crappy), namely: ![]()
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