Dear Idris If your document is simple I would consider the following workflow. I use this method for simple novels to produce both ePubs and Kindle output relatively quickly from a word docs which authors send me. Load the word doc into OpenOffice and save in OpenOffice format (.odt). Using the Writer2ePub extension in OpenOffice convert to ePub. You will get a reasonable looking ePub if you have taken a little care to style the document beforehand. Load the ePub into Sigil and tidy up the ePub. I Usually split the ePub into Chapters, embed fonts and add any images where I want them to go at this point. Once you are happy with the ePub you should test it on the various eReaders to make sure it looks as expected, don't be surprised to see differences and you may have to create different ePubs for the different eReaders. I have to do that for iBooks and Kobo eReaders. The idpf have an online ePub validator for ePubs which you should use to check for ePub standard compliance. Adobe Digital Editions is a useful tool here. You can now convert it into Kindle format using Kindle Previewer. If it requires changes, do that in Sigil and then run through Kindle Previewer again. To get pdf output I have been experimenting with pandoc quite recently with some success. I take the ePub and rename as a zip file and open it to expose its directory structure. Using pandoc I convert it to ConText code and tidy up a wee bit but, on the whole, Pandoc gives a not bad conversion even if images are present. Again you will probably have to tidy up the Context code and play about with fonts etc. This workflow looks a wee bit complicated but it does work well once you get the hang of it. I had originally tried using the Context to ePub but as previous correspondents have intimated you only get xml output rather than xhtml which is what eReaders require. If you need help feel free to email me privately. Best Wishes Keith McKay Hamilton, Scotland On 02/07/2014 22:12, Idris Samawi Hamid ادريس سماوي حامد wrote:
Dear gang,
I have an urgent project that needs three outputs: pdf, epub, and kindle. The formatting needs are pretty basic. In your experience:
What is the recommended, more efficient workflow for this sort of thing? Should I start with markdown and then generate context and epub (then convert epub=>kindle I presume)? Or does one context file with pdf and epub outputs work well? Many years ago I did some documents in ConTeXt with both print and screen pdfs from a single source. Can we do the latter in ConTeXt now? Does anyone have any examples?
According to
http://wiki.contextgarden.net/epub
There is no support for graphics in ConTeXt epub output. Are there workarounds?
In any case, all advice for an efficient workflow for this project will be greatly appreciated!
Best wishes Idris