![]() Some users think of software development by taking already developed and debugged code, using Ctrl + C and Ctrl + V to transfer it to a new application - and that's it. It's certainly a lot cheaper than any of Adobe's pricing options. If Affinity Designer supported EPUB export, it could be the software print authors turn to for their layout and digitizing needs. Designer already supports continuous-flow text, which is what an EPUB requires, since ebook readers have no concept of physical pages (unless you force it, which isn't a good experience for the reader), and paragraph and text styles can readily be converted to CSS styles. That makes it pretty trivial to convert to HTML/CSS - every entity on every page already contains all the information you need to include it in the final EPUB. ![]() Affinity Publisher documents are highly structured, if you create them properly. I think supporting this format is more relevant now than ever before because of Amazon's switch.Īs far as the format: I'm unconvinced it would necessarily be difficult to implement the HTML and CSS serializers to generate an EPUB file. He's not a techie, he's an author and an artist, and when you've got non-tech people using software, the fewer applications they have to learn, the better.Īmazon just announced they're ending support for MOBI and AZW, and they're finally moving to EPUB. ![]() I'm working on digitizing a rather large book, and for the time being, InDesign is still the best option for him, because it allows managing both the print and digital versions of the book from one application. Count me as a user who would love EPUB export. ![]()
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