Research/Web-to-print

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Revision as of 10:00, 5 June 2015 by Andre (talk | contribs)

This page is dedicated to research on web-to-print approaches and workflows.

Deadline for research: June 26


Starting points

Ultimate goal: transform reflowable (markup-based) digital publications into fixed-layout PDF.

Case study: Beyond Social. How can web-to-print (or wiki-to-print) be applied to Beyond Social.

Requisites:

  • an online workflow, that can be run on a server
  • support page numbers
  • gather all articles in on to 1 document

Advanced features:

  • impositions - how can impositions, instead of simple stack of pages, be integrate into this workflow?


Possible strategies - software

  • laTex - Document preparation system, focused on the creation of PDFs, uses its own markup, supported by Pandoc.
  • wkhtmltopdf - HTML to PDF converter based on Webkit.
  • Weasy Print - Python, visual rendering engine for HTML and CSS that can export to PDF
  • Mediawiki Collection Extension - the same system used by Wikipedia to create books in PDF and Epub formats.

assessment

For each strategy try to point out:

  • summary of the workflow
  • example prototype
  • advantages
  • disadvantages
  • how can it be integrated into teaching

further questions

can you export latex rules to css?