Research/Web-to-print/WeasyPrint

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Revision as of 08:55, 26 November 2015 by Andre (talk | contribs) (→‎Weasy Print)

Print in hybrid publishing workflows

Print products = bottleneck in hybrid publishing workflows

Screens in pages represent different paradigms

  • Instead of reflowable text, continuous space, variable screen size
  • Page: a fixed space

The translation of layouts for screen to page layouts, within is not trivial.

HTML-to-print Tools

LaTex

A type-setting/document preparation language, focused on producing typographicaly correct PDFs.

positive aspects

  • LaTex is a markup language;
  • Pandoc converts seamlessly to LaTex.
  • Supports page numbers, hyphenation, bibliography, references, hyperlinks, etc, etc...
  • Can produce more experimental and generative outputs. [1].

negative aspects

  • Outputs are by default look academic, although this can be changed
  • Use is outmoded
  • Styling is defined by packages imported into the document, which is very different and incompatible with CSS.
  • A difficult tool to work with, let alone to teach.


Browser built-in pdf rendering

Current browsers have built-in pdf rendering engines. By using the browser function «Print to file» and CSS rules for print, print layouts can be created from HTML files.

positive aspects

  • relies on the same set of technologies - HTML, CSS and JS - as other hybrid publishing formats: webpages, ePubs, apps
  • it is simple, easily to teach
  • CSS includes page specific options: @media page rule, and the pseudo-classes :first :left :right @bottom-left

negative aspects

  • works poorly and inconsistently
  • requires a lot of trial-and-error to achieve the desired output, with results differing widely across browsers and versions

* difficult to avoid page breaks breaking and hiding content.

show example

Desktop publishing software

Software such as Scribus and inDesign can be incorporated into an HP workflow.

Scribus can import HTML files and inDesign ICML(XML)files. Both formats keep their structure when imported and can remain updatable.

positive aspects

  • allows direct feedback between operations and their effects
  • graphic designers are familiar their workflows
  • can produce complex PDFs with impositions, hyphenation, page numbers. etc
  • can intervene in almost all aspects of the document

negative aspects

  • to keep the content updatable operations (in inDesign) interventions on content are not possible
  • complex structures, like large tables, are difficult to handle, while keeping content updatable (in inDesign)


Weasy Print

Weasy Print (WP)[2] is a visual rendering engine for HTML and CSS that can export to PDF.

Its CSS layout engine is written in Python, but employs several libraries to render the HTML and CSS onto a PDF.


positive aspects

  • Uses HTML and CSS to layout the PDF
  • Supports features like page size, page numbering, hyphenation in several languages [3]
  • Resulting PDFs can achieve high level of complexity, with simple instructions
  • Simple and easy to use
  • Can be used as a Python library or as a standalone program
  • Free software (BSD license)

negative aspects

  • Can be difficult to install, due to its dependencies
  • It does not support CSS custom fonts
  • No support for folded formats, such as booklets: no mechanism for imposition




What is Weasy Print

Weasy Print (WP) is


Testing Weasy Print

references

  1. See works by Lafkon studio for an idea of the possibilities
  2. “WeasyPrint Documentation” http://weasyprint.org/docs/.
  3. With the pyphen library