Difference between revisions of "Courses/Hybrid publishing/Q8"
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'''Professional development workshop on Hybrid Publishing''' | '''Professional development workshop on Hybrid Publishing''' | ||
=practicals= | ==practicals== | ||
* planning page: https://mywdka.nl/15kw8go/onderwijsenlesaanbod/planning/#post-7 | * planning page: https://mywdka.nl/15kw8go/onderwijsenlesaanbod/planning/#post-7 | ||
* Room: [https://wdka.asimut.net/public/index.php?dato=20160527&akt=vislokale&id=81 BL.00.10a] | * Room: [https://wdka.asimut.net/public/index.php?dato=20160527&akt=vislokale&id=81 BL.00.10a] | ||
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= Plan = | == Plan == | ||
* Presentations | * Presentations | ||
* Hybrid publishing | * Hybrid publishing | ||
* concepts, | * concepts, | ||
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------ | |||
= Day 2= | |||
==Revision: 1 source many outputs== | |||
'''1 source many outputs''' | |||
[[File:Conversions.svg]] | |||
=== 3 Conversions - using Pandoc === | |||
<pre>pandoc input.md --from markdown --to html5 --standalone --css style.css --output output.html</pre> | |||
* markdown (source) -> HTML (website) | |||
** using CSS | |||
* markdown (source) -> ICML (PDF of paper book) | |||
** to be used with inDesign styles | |||
<pre>pandoc input.md --from markdown --to icml --standalone --output=ouput.icml</pre> | |||
* markdown (source) -> epub3 (ebook) | |||
** '''Simple''': | |||
<pre>pandoc input.md --from markdown --to epub3 --output=mybook.epub</pre> | |||
** '''using CSS and cover image''' | |||
<pre>pandoc input.md --from markdown --to epub3 --epub-stylesheet=styles.css --epub-cover-image=cover.jpg --output=mybook.epub</pre> | |||
==== options ==== | |||
* <code>--from</code> - option: '''format to convert “from”'''; | |||
* <code>--to </code> - option: '''format to convert “to”'''; | |||
* <code>--standalone </code> - option: standing for '''“standalone”,''' produces HTML file with an appropriate html, head, body tags; | |||
* <code>--css</code> - option: option for CSS style file | |||
* <code>--output</code> - option for '''file output''' | |||
* <code>--epub-stylesheet</code> - option for CSS style file in ePub | |||
* <code>----epub-cover-image</code> - option for cover img in ePub | |||
------- | |||
<div style="background:#FFE972"> | |||
{{:Hybrid_publishing_resources}} | |||
== Hybrid Publishing Resources == | |||
An easier way to automate the process of converting and updating the content, style or metadata of a publication. | |||
* using calibre viewer, also as prototyping tool | |||
* using calibre editor to change | |||
==Todo == | |||
fix links and dowload images from Mondotheque | |||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[Category:Courses]] | [[Category:Courses]] |
Latest revision as of 07:41, 20 July 2016
Professional development workshop on Hybrid Publishing
practicals
- planning page: https://mywdka.nl/15kw8go/onderwijsenlesaanbod/planning/#post-7
- Room: BL.00.10a
- Reading List
- From Print to Ebooks: a Hybrid Publishing Toolkit for the Arts
- chapters 02,
- chapert 6.3 3. "Do-it-yourself EPUB using Pandoc"
- From Print to Ebooks: a Hybrid Publishing Toolkit for the Arts
- Publications we'll work on:
- software used (download to your computer):
- Calibre,
- Pandoc download for mac,
- plain-text editors ( Sublime Text, Gedit )
- Xcode (mac)
Plan
- Presentations
- Hybrid publishing
- concepts,
- examples
- formats (markups)
- tools and strategies
publishing in WdKA
- hybrid publishing as an extension of efforts from Publication station - establishing dialog between analog & digital
- continuation of Alessandro Ludovico's research on Post-Digital Print at WdKA
- continuation of Digital Publishing Toolkit project & From Print to Ebooks – a Hybrid Publishing Toolkit for the Arts
- publishing as a way to expose the research undertaken within WdKA
- publishing as a learning tool
hybrid publication?
A publication that inhabits both analog and digital worlds.
hybrid publishing works
Traumawien [1] [2] http://rlv.zcache.com/traumawien_button-rb0a7981400224870838ec6aaa582161c_x7j3i_8byvr_512.jpg
Badlands Unlimited http://badlandsunlimited.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/book_small.gif http://badlandsunlimited.com/books/phaedrus-pron/
Books Scapes, Julien Levesque, 2012
http://p-dpa.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Screen-Shot-2014-02-15-at-17.17.18-600x150.png
E-Book Backup, Jesse England, 2012
http://p-dpa.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/9_ebookbackup4-300x225.jpg
More hybrid publishing works in Post-Digital Publishing Archive
Publications we'll work on
repository: https://github.com/wdka-publicationSt/editorial_design/ zip: https://github.com/wdka-publicationSt/editorial_design/archive/master.zip
- Radical Tactics of the Offline Library - Henry Warwick
- The Radiated Book - ed. Femke Snelting
- About Bugs Bots & Bytes - Hackers & Designers
Multichannel publishing workflows
- ePub
- PDF (print book)
- website
- ebook trailer
Ebook trailer of From Print to Ebooks
Tools for hybrid publishing
- open source, simple tools that work in combination, forming publishing pipelines
Hands-on exploration of strategies and tools
plain text files
Are only constituted by text. No images, no visual markings.
Are edited using plain text editors and NOT word processors.
Can be displayed using the terminal cat myfile.txt
will print the content of myfile.txt
Markings are done using special (meta)characters
Historical examples of plain text file undeground publishing
Markups languages
Markups languages are ways of marking text, giving with words specific hierarchical and visual rendering.
By marking the text according to markup languages it is possible to:
- add reading aids, such bold, italic, blockquotes
- add a clear text hierarchy: section titles, sub-section titles, sub-sub-sub section titles
- convert between different markup languages - as they mostly compatible
Markup languages examples
Each markup uses a different markings
HTML:
<h1>Revenge of the Text</h1>
<p>There is a room in the <strong>Musée d’Orsay</strong> that I call the <em>room of possibilities</em>.</p>
<p>That room contains:</p>
<ul>
<li>a snow flake</li>
<li>the end of a cloud</li>
<li>a bit of nothing</li>
</ul>
# Revenge of the Text There is a room in the **Musée d’Orsay** that I call the *room of possibilities*. That room contains: * a snow flake * the end of a cloud * a bit of nothing
= Revenge of the Text = There is a room in the '''Musée d’Orsay''' that I call the ''room of possibilities''. That room contains: * a snow flake * the end of a cloud * a bit of nothing
Why Markdown ?
- simple
- only one way to create a structure
- compatible with HTML, but easier to read and write
- allows the inclusion of HTML tags.
- any plain text editor such as Sublime Text or Gedit can edit Markdown files.
- there are WYSIWYG Markdown editors such as MacDown.
How to write in Markdown http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax
Hands on
- download the repository of texts for this project: https://github.com/wdka-publicationSt/editorial_design/archive/master.zip
- unzip
- from all its files there choose 1 file, you'll be working on, for today
- copy it to a folder dedicated to today's class
- open in a text editor: sublime, gedit,etc
- Look at the markdown syntax
Pandoc - a markup converter
If you need to convert files from one markup format into another, Pandoc is your swiss-army knife. But it runs on the command line.
With Pandoc is possible to convert between different formats:
For instances: docx <-> markdown <-> html
Command Line or Shell
- a text-based interface to your computer's file system
- popularized before the period of personal computers,
- when computers where shared (time-sharing) by many users
- accessed by a dumb terminal (screen and keyboard interface to the main computer) File:Dumbterminal.jpg
- centeral to UNIX and descendant operating systems: Linux, Mac
- constituted by small programs that do one thing only and well
Command line cheat-sheet
CORE COMMANDS
cd [folder]
Change directory
~/
shortcut for your home directory. ~/Documents, ~/Downloads, ~/Desktop
cd ~
Change to Home directory, e.g. ‘cd ~/Documents/’
cd /
Root of drive
‘cd ../’ = Move 1 level up
‘cd ../../’ = Move 2 levels up
ls
List files and folder inside current folder
pwd
Full path to working directory
cat [file]
print content (concatenate) of file to screen
less [file]
read into content (concatenate) of file to screen
rm [file]
Remove a file, e.g. rm [file] [file]
rm -r [dir]
Remove a directory and contents
cp [file] [newfile]
Copy file to file
cp [file] [dir]
Copy file to directory
mv [file] [new filename]
Move/Rename file or dirtory, e.g. mv -v [file] [dir]
clear
Clear screen
COMMAND HISTORY
history
Shows the stuff typed previously
DIRECTORY MANAGEMENT
mkdir [dir]
Create new directory
mkdir -p [dir]/[dir]
Create nested directories
rmdir [dir]
Remove directory ( only operates on empty directories )
rm -R [dir]
Remove directory and contents
PIPES - Allows to combine multiple commands that generate output
more
Output content delivered in screensize chunks
> [file]
Push output to file, keep in mind it will get overwritten
>> [file]
Append output to existing file
<
Tell command to read content from a file
HELP
man [command]
Show the manual for ‘command’
whatis [command]
Gives a one-line description of ‘command’
[command] -h
Offers help
[command] —help
Offers help
[command] help
Offers help
reset
Resets the terminal display
~ from Terminal_cheat_sheet
Command line exercise
create directory Game: mkdir ~/Documents/Game
write to file: echo 'Can you find me?'> ~/Documents/Game/caca.txt
Now, using only the command line, you have to :
- change to directory Game, which is inside Documents
- copy the file caca.txt from the Game folder to the Desktop
Pandoc - Convert from Markdown to HTML
pandoc --from markdown --to html5 --standalone input.mw --css style.css --output output.html
--from
- option: format to convert “from”;
--to
- option: format to convert “to”;
--standalone
- option: standing for “standalone”, produces HTML file with an appropriate html, head, body tags;
--css
- option: option for CSS style file
--output
- option for file output
on EPUB and HTML
The EPUB format is essentially a bundled archive of HTML files.
To try out sketches for the identity of an EPUB, it is simpler to:
- use a HTML file instead of an EPUB
- use a CSS file - for style
- try out the sketches using the CSS
Pandoc - converting to ICML
ICML is a (XML based) file format, from InCopy(Adobe’s own text processor), which can be imported into Adobe InDesign, and maintain its structures (bolds, italics, section titles), etc.
pandoc --standalone --from markdown --to icml input.html --output=ouput.icml
Importing ICML to inDesign
- import ICML file to a InDesign project with: File > Place
- Its paragraph and chapter styles remain intact:
- Images are given an empty placeholder.
Design with Styles in inDesign
Style the content only using paragraph and character styles.
Paragraph/Characters styles are in: Type > Paragraph/Character Styles
Updating content in inDesign
If you don't change the content inside a inDesign project.
- the ICML remains linked to the inDesign project,
- changes: in the performed on Markdown source file will be integrated into the inDesign project.
Pandoc - converting to ePub
Simple:
pandoc --from html --to epub3 input.html --output=mybook.epub
Advanced (including stylesheet, cover image, chapter level ):
pandoc --from html --to epub3 input.html --output=mybook.epub --epub-stylesheet=styles.css --epub-cover-image=cover.jpg --epub-chapter-level=1
--epub-stylesheet
- CSS file that will style the Epub
--epub-cover-image
- cover file - can either be .jpg or .png
--epub-chapter-level
- at what heading level will the chapter brakes occur
ASSIGNMENT
For May 27:
Choose 1 publication (does not have to be the final one you'll work with) from the 3 possible publications in https://github.com/wdka-publicationSt/editorial_design/archive/master.zip
Using at least 1 file from the chosen publication
- convert it to: an HTML file
- use CSSing to make different sketches for the digital (html/epub) publication this book
- convert it to: an ICML file (to be Place in inDesign):
- using inDesign paragraph and chapter styles: create different sketches for the paper publication.
These sketches will be the starting points for the publication you will develop during the quarter 8.
Bring these sketches to next class, on May 27;
Day 2
Revision: 1 source many outputs
1 source many outputs
3 Conversions - using Pandoc
pandoc input.md --from markdown --to html5 --standalone --css style.css --output output.html
- markdown (source) -> HTML (website)
- using CSS
- markdown (source) -> ICML (PDF of paper book)
- to be used with inDesign styles
pandoc input.md --from markdown --to icml --standalone --output=ouput.icml
- markdown (source) -> epub3 (ebook)
- Simple:
pandoc input.md --from markdown --to epub3 --output=mybook.epub
- using CSS and cover image
pandoc input.md --from markdown --to epub3 --epub-stylesheet=styles.css --epub-cover-image=cover.jpg --output=mybook.epub
options
--from
- option: format to convert “from”;
--to
- option: format to convert “to”;
--standalone
- option: standing for “standalone”, produces HTML file with an appropriate html, head, body tags;
--css
- option: option for CSS style file
--output
- option for file output
--epub-stylesheet
- option for CSS style file in ePub
----epub-cover-image
- option for cover img in ePub
streamlining conversions
This same approach for converting between markups using Pandoc can be automated.
Since computers are good at doing repetitive and boring tasks, we can take advantage from it.
We can store commands in scripts and have them perform the same task on multiple source files, producing multiple outputs (E.G. EPUB, ICML, HTML).
Overview
In this process, from several .docx files we'll try to create two outputs:
- an ICML file for inDesign
- an EPUB
And we'll also try to keep a connection between the source and its outcomes.
Makefile
My proposal involves using a Makefile to automate the conversions between markups.
They are like recipe book, with instructions of how to process stuff and generate other stuff from it.
Read more about Makefiles in the context of hybrid publishing:
- blog post Make Book by Michael Murtaugh
- Report on the Don Marti's presentation at SCALE
- GNU Make official site
Recipe Preparation
Download Hybrid Publishing Resources
- Download the zip from Hybrid Publishing Resources code repository to your computer.
- Move the downloaded .zip to a dedicated folder.
- Unzip
- In terminal change directory
cd
to the unzip folder
Start Cooking
0. Folder structure
To create folder structure, which will be understood by the scripts from this repository, you need to run:
make folders
This script will generate the following folder structure, which you'll use to store the files essentially for the creation of the EPUB.
├── docx
├── epub
├── icml
├── md
│ └── imgs
└── scripts
1. Manuscript: .docx
This is a preparatory stage. Yet it is important for the series of conversions that will lead to the different publication's outputs.
You need to edit the manuscript, handed by the author, using paragraph styles in MS Word/Libre Office/Open Office
2. Source: converting the manuscript files to Markdown files
Run: make markdowns
to start this stage.
This command will convert all the .docx
files inside the docx/
folder into corresponding markdown files inside md/ folder
.
The resulting markdown files are the source files, from which all of the publication's outputs will be generated.
2.1 Images in Markdown
At this stage you should insert the images onto the texts, now in markdown format.
First of all, you need to save all the images included in the essays in the folder md/imgs/
Then place the images on the markdown document: ![My image caption](imgs/myImage.jpg)
Don't forget to include captions, if the image has them. Markdown captions will become visible, and associated to the image in the EPUB output.
3. make icmls - ICML files for inDesign
Run: make icmls
to start this stage.
The individual Markdown source files, stored in md/
, can be converted into ICML files which can be imported into inDesign.
Read more on ICML files and inDesign in #working_with_ICML_files section
4. make book.epub
4.0 make book.md
You don't have to perform this step, the makefile does it for you.
It generates a single Markdown file book.md
and save it it inside the md/
folder.
book.md
consists of the content from all the individual Markdow files inside the md/
folder, in alphabetical order (00 to ZZ).
If you want to change the order the publication, you can change the filenames in order to do so.
Markdown filenames should NOT contain spaces or dots, except for the extension .md
4.1 make book.epub (EPUB)
Produce the epub file: make book.epub
4.1.1 Essential files for EPUB
To produce an EPUB a few files are needed, namely:
- cover image
epub/cover.jpg
- metadata
epub/metadata.xml
- CSS stylesheet
epub/styles.epub.css
These files will strongly influence the EPUB's outcome, and consequently should be edited for each publication.
4.1.2 Fonts (optional) for EPUB
lib/
is folder for storing custom fonts, that will be used in the EPUB
If you choose to use fonts, make sure to change the makefile to include the use of fonts in the makefile epub rule, such as in the rule bellow, where --epub-embed-font=lib/UbuntuMono-B.ttf \
is added to allow for the use of the Ubuntu Mono font. Also include the font on the EPUB style-sheet with @font-face
rule
4.1.3 EPUB check
The health of the created EPUB can be checked with http://validator.idpf.org/
4.1.5 make book.epub : An iterative process
This work is in many way as cyclical process, where you work in circles: changing the source files (markdown files, the EPUB's stylesheet, the EPUB's metadata) and seeing the results of those changes in Calibre (or other ebook-viwerer)
ICML files
ICML files are useful, since they ensure that the structural information of the Markdown source files is also present in the inDesign projects, which use them.
With ICML it is also possible to update the content and structure of the inDesign projects, by changing the Markdown source files, converting the once more to ICML. For this to happens is however necessary that inDesign remains linked to its source, and that the designers works with paragraph and chapter styles, instead of directly into the text.
Note: malformatted links in the markdown files will create problems when imported into inDesign.
Place ICMLs
Open inDesign and ...
Place your output.icml in a inDesign project.
The Place function is in: File > Place (shortcut: Apple+D)
Design with Styles
Style the content using paragraph and character styles.
Paragraph/Characters styles are in: Type > Paragraph/Character Styles
ICML Content updates
Using Sublime Text, edit one ICML file adding some text to it.
See the content being updated in inDesign.
Hands off content
In in inDesgin content shall remain untouched until the last moment
If you change the content of the articles inDesign, the link between the inDesign content and its source ICML file will be lost, and it no longer be able to be updated.
This "disconnection" should only be the last step to be done on your design workflow.
Hybrid Publishing Resources
An easier way to automate the process of converting and updating the content, style or metadata of a publication.
- using calibre viewer, also as prototyping tool
- using calibre editor to change
Todo
fix links and dowload images from Mondotheque
- ↑ Markdown Syntax in http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax