Difference between revisions of "Courses/Hybrid publishing resources"
Line 148: | Line 148: | ||
* [http://www.gnu.org/software/make/ GNU Make official site ] | * [http://www.gnu.org/software/make/ GNU Make official site ] | ||
== download | == download hybrid publishing resources == | ||
Download the code repository into your computer: | * Download the [https://gitlab.com/DigitalPublishingToolkit/Hybrid-Publishing-Resources/tree/wdka code repository] into your computer. Download link: https://gitlab.com/DigitalPublishingToolkit/Hybrid-Publishing-Resources/repository/archive.zip?ref=wdka | ||
* Move the downloaded .zip into a dedicated folder (inside DATASTORAGE in WdKA computers). | |||
https://gitlab.com/DigitalPublishingToolkit/Hybrid-Publishing-Resources/repository/archive.zip?ref=wdka | * Unzip | ||
* In terminal change directory <pre>cd </pre> to the unzip folder | |||
== the makefile == | == the makefile == |
Revision as of 17:42, 11 March 2015
<slidy theme="a" />
publicationstation.wdka.hro.nl/wiki
Hybrid Publishing
Focus
Transforming a source (manuscript) into multiple publishable outputs
In a Hybrid Publishing Workflow
Hybrid Publishing Workflow
- various outcomes from one workflow
- constant connection between source-content and outcome
- avoiding repeating tasks
Hybrid Publishing Workflow
How?
How can we achieve a publishing workflow where we can go from the source (a word document, a wiki page, a webpage) to several outputs (an EPUB, a website, an animated gif, an inDesign project)?
Structure
By putting the content into an explicit structure, which can withstand those transformations.
How to achieve explicit structure?
An explicit structure is achieved by marking the text with structural information.
marking the text = markup
Markup languages
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
pandoc
pandoc: software for converting between markups with
http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/diagram.png
markup a text in MS Word/Libre Office/Open Office
- styles; Test on WDKA
create a .docx file and mark it up with a few of the following paragraph and characters styles:
- headings
- body text
- block quotes: indented blocks of text
- footnotes
- hyperlinks
- Preformatted text
- Bold
- Italics
Save in .docx
convert
Convert your docx file into a an HTML file using Pandoc.
- shell
- Pandoc command
convert once more, now to EPUB
Can you instead of converting the .docx into HTML convert into an EPUB?
- clues
Markdown
Markdown as the source file.
- link to Markdown syntax
Any plain text editor such as Sublime Text or Gedit can be used to edit Markdown files. There are also WYSIWYG Markdown editors such as MacDown.
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. E.g.
<!-- an html comment --> <span id="mrspan">a div</span>
convert once more, now to Markdown
- pandoc argument
****
stream line: makefile
This same approach of converting between markups using Pandoc can be automated through scripts that execute the commands we have been writing in the terminal.
Ands since computers are good at doing repetitive and boring tasks, we can take advantage from it.
We can make them perform the same task on multiple source files, and make them produce multiple outputs (E.G. EPUB, ICML, HTML).
makefile
My proposal involves using a Makefile to automate conversions between markup-languages
Makefiles are usually used to in the free-software community to compile source code into running applications. However they are not more than a notebook of commands to process stuff and generate other stuff from it: e.g. create executables programs out of source code files. There is nothing stopping us from using makefiles to automate conversions between markup-languages.
Read more about Makefiles in the context of hybrid publishing:
another, he said, so they can be used for any repetitive task, not just compilation.
download hybrid publishing resources
- Download the code repository into your computer. Download link: https://gitlab.com/DigitalPublishingToolkit/Hybrid-Publishing-Resources/repository/archive.zip?ref=wdka
- Move the downloaded .zip into a dedicated folder (inside DATASTORAGE in WdKA computers).
- Unzip
- In terminal change directory
cd
to the unzip folder
the makefile
*****
IMCL
- to be edited
Recipe Ingredients
- empty folder - to create the recipe
- content in a markup language: HTML (or wiki syntax)
- terminal - a text-based interface to your file system
- pandoc - markup converter software
- plain-text editor: Sublime Text or Gedit
- your favorite text layout software
Testing the Recipe
Testing the Recipe step#1
In on empty folder in your computer save 1 BS article in HTML.
Testing the Recipe step#2
Convert that HTML file into an ICML file.
pandoc -f html -t icml -s input.html -o output.icml
pandoc - program dedicate to the conversion between different markups.
-f - option standing for “from”, is followed by the input format;
-t - option standing for “to”, is followed by the output format;
-s - option standing for “standalone”, produces output with an appropriate header and footer;
-o - option for file output;
input.html - html input filename - you need to replace it by its actual name
Testing the Recipe step#3
Open inDesign and ...
Place your output.icml in a inDesign project.
The Place function is in: File > Place (shortcut: Apple+D)
Testing the Recipe step#4
Style the content using paragraph and character styles.
Paragraph/Characters styles are in: Type > Paragraph/Character Styles
Testing the Recipe step#5
Content updates
Using Sublime Text, edit the source html file adding something or extracting something to it.
Repeat the whole recipe, so that you see the content being updated in inDesign.
Recipe Warning
Content should 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.
Recipe Tips
Loading paragraph styles
Recipe Questions
Can CSS rules be imported and used as inDesign Paragraph/Character Styles ?
Can inDesign styles be exported as CSS style-sheets ?
+ ... ?
software used
- Shell terminal - a text-based interface to your file system. there are plenty of terminal tutorial online, here are some:
- pandoc - markup converter software
- plain-text editor: Sublime Text or Gedit
- Markdown syntax: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax provides a good overview not only of the syntax, but also the philosophy behind Markdown.