
This is when the Publisher Font is NOT selected.
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In mobi all the books show 29 lines on my Kindle 3, and all of them when converted to azw3 (using almost the same conversion setting as for mobi) have only 25 lines. #3 Bigo2 06-27-2014, 07:19 AMThanks theducks - I tried azw3 conversions of some of the books which I converted to mobi over the last 3-4 years. Use Calibre-editor to see what values are used in the AZW3 to see which of the items above are in use in your book (if not set in your book, the K3's AZW3 style defaults may be coming into play) (I actually hand edit a file on my k4 to reduce the minimum value to one BELOW what the K4 uses to base the Right+Left margins.) Your Kindle has settings (and defaults) that override or supplement the stylesheet. If you are using the 'Publishers styles', In the books stylesheet:įont-family choice) because of the fonts metrics Then, in no particular order, things, if used that could affect your view

to ignore The default is ignore use K internals) There are many things that affect hat you see with AZW3, at least ther is on the K4NT.įirst of all there is the Kindle setting to use/ignore the 'Publishers Stylesheet. Is there any explanation and more important: is there any setting in Calibre or Kindle which would give me 29 lines I prefer? I would like to start using azw3 for my conversions, the conversion seems to be more accurate - except for this problem with the smaller number of lines.

However, when I convert epub to azw3, with the same setting, I only see 25 lines. This is very counter intuitive as you might think you would want to embed any fonts for it to be able to display your fonts properly.Hi - when I convert epub to mobi (old), using the setting I prefer on my Kindle 3 I always see 29 lines per page. Later I found out it could have been fixed way easier… Upon exporting your Epub in InDesign, go to the Contents tab and Uncheck “Include Embeddable Fonts”. This option is very tedious and sensitive to errors, but it does the job. rar -> open it -> find “template.css” -> edit the CSS in an editor such as Dreamweaver -> save -> rename file extention back to. One way to fix this is to manually dig into the Epub and change the CSS (rename the file’s extension from. The Epub worked fine in Adobe Digital Editions, but the font style didn’t show up correctly in Calibre. One thing that was super annoying was that Bold & Italic text wasn’t showing properly.

You can’t just convert a PDF into an Epub that can be used effectively for e-readers as it requires style formatting and further editing.
