tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086063689299587968.post5381740774455631686..comments2021-10-23T10:55:30.453-04:00Comments on Mises Books: Why American History Is Not As They Say by Jeff RiggenbachTex2002anshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03986273766979462347noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086063689299587968.post-14948576316647615252012-10-30T10:34:18.374-04:002012-10-30T10:34:18.374-04:00That explains a lot. Thank you very much!That explains a lot. Thank you very much!Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03191276599501111737noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086063689299587968.post-8797825633715814262012-10-27T23:11:30.803-04:002012-10-27T23:11:30.803-04:00In order to clean up Calibre bloat, I would recomm...In order to clean up Calibre bloat, I would recommend having a basic knowledge of HTML+CSS, and Regular Expressions (not needed but helps A TON).<br /><br />I stay away from Calibre as much as possible, as it should only be used when doing conversions for your own personal usage. It creates very bloated code.<br /><br />I personally use Sigil for all my EPUB creating/editing, and for "non-destructive" editing I just use Notepad++ (or any text editor with Regular Expression support).<br /><br />Every book that calibre converts will be slightly different, but if you take a look at the Calibre generated stylesheet, you will see Calibre inserting tens (sometimes hundreds) of different "calibre###" classes. Where all of them basically do the same exact thing.<br /><br />calibre1 will have a "text-indent: 1.2em"<br />calibre2 will have a "text-indent: 1.22em"<br />calibre3 will have a "text-indent: 1.23em"<br />...<br />calibre99 will have a "text-indent:1.1589em"<br /><br />calibre123 will have a "margin-top: 1em"<br />calibre124 will have a "margin-top: 1.01em"<br />...<br /><br />So I just use a regular expression to remove all classes of calibre1 -> calibre99, and have my generic stylesheet have a p with "text-indent:1.2em". Then just go through the book/stylesheet to figure out what every calibre class does, and remove it from the actual book.<br /><br />This cuts down the amount of classes used in the book from hundreds down to a handful.<br /><br />I should definitely do an in depth post on this topic, and also an in depth post on my typical workflow.Tex2002anshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03986273766979462347noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4086063689299587968.post-2934663236410626842012-10-27T19:34:15.941-04:002012-10-27T19:34:15.941-04:00I also use Calibre. How is it possible to clean up...I also use Calibre. How is it possible to clean up the conversions?Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03191276599501111737noreply@blogger.com