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 topic : HTML Formatting for ebook I uploaded my short story on Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) yesterday. All went well and I am excited, given this is my first attempt to publish anything! I did some

Si5022468 @Si5022468

Posted in: #Ebook #Formatting #Kindle

I uploaded my short story on Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) yesterday. All went well and I am excited, given this is my first attempt to publish anything!

I did some research prior to making the above attempt. Obviously, I wanted to get it right from the start.

The one thing I was constantly alerted to by others was formatting. This included advice on using a professional, a third company etc. I am unsure whether it related to using a service provider such as Lulu (i.e. unsure if the latter related to formatting only or wider matters, including publishing on multiple platforms through lulu etc.)

I appreciate the tips and advice I got.

I was told to do HTML formating and all the coding was beyond me.

I am unsure where I read it but I followed the following steps:


Typed my story in Word (It was just three pages; I wanted to start with something I could manage.)
Use the indent feature (under paragraph tab) to set the paragraphing.
Saved my file as Web Page Filtered. I was told to use this (rather than Web Page) because it took care of the hidden codes in the document.


I then logged into KDP and uploaded my document, previewed the format and then clicked OK.

All the above was relatively easy.

Question: Is there anything I am not doing in terms of formatting my document in HTML?

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@Rambettina586

Rambettina586 @Rambettina586

As said above, MS word was not created to do this task. A quick search on Google found a program called Sqribble. It's paid cloud-based software.

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@Gonzalez219

Gonzalez219 @Gonzalez219

I've submitted books in Word .doc, docx, filtered HTML and ePub formats. As an ex website developer I know that Word makes a terrible mess of converting text to HTML - especially the older versions of it. I would NOT submit a document in HTML produced by MS WORD.
Amazon is quite happy to accept .doc or .docx files as the source but making the contents can be tricky.
My solution is to start with a Word .docx file. I use File > inspect to strip out all the comments, personal data, headers and footers then re-save the document. I then import that into the calibre ebook management program. That's an open source program (free). It allows me to edit the book's meta data and add 10 keywords (keyphrases really) Amazon allows only 7. I then convert the .docx file to ePub format. That's easy in calibre and takes care of the contents file. That ePub file is sent as the source document to Amazon.

EPub and MOBI/AZW3 files are actually a compressed version of HTML files. calibre (yes - it is spelled with a lower case 'c') does a better job of converting to HTML than Word does. You can get calibre at calibre-ebook.com/download

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@Kristi637

Kristi637 @Kristi637

MS Word brings a lot of trash along, when converted to HTML. By trash, I mean unnecessary formating tags and styles that can mess your content if you decide to change it in the future. I won't give much more details but MS Word was design to create Doc files, not HTML. If you need something else than Doc files, Word is probably not for you.

HTML is extremely easy for basic documents like a 3 pages text, but it has its learning curve. Besides, HTML will split content from formatting, and that means that you will probably need to learn a few more things to do small funky things like add extra space after a paragraph.

Again, it's not hard. Anybody can learn basic HTML without any problems but it has its learning curve. Of course, HTML was not exactly designed to book writing so I don't think you will enjoy to write using HTML without a visual editor.

What I suggest is: use Markdown and Pandoc if you really intent to write ebooks.

Markdown is extremely simple. I'm using it right now to write this answer and it was designed to create a text that could be read almost in the same way by a render software and by a human. Also, it's plain text what means that can be edited in any text editor.

Using Pandoc, you will be able to compile (aka export) your markdown file into almost anything you want: DOC, HTML, PDF, LATEX,... And the code Pandoc generate is way cleaner than MS Word.

So, you asked if there was anything you are not doing in terms of formatting my document in HTML, and the answer is: there's so many trash in a HTML document generated from MS Word that it would be hard to tell.

You want to write eBooks, use proper eBooks tools. MS Word is a wonderful software, I just don't think it's the right tool to create web content.

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@Chiappetta298

Chiappetta298 @Chiappetta298

When saving a file from Word as HTML, Word acts as a WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) HTML editor. From personal experience, the HTML produced by the program is passable and effective, though inelegant and usually not the absolute best it could be.

The only impact this has, the vast majority of the time, is that the file-size is the tiniest bit bigger than it could be - it's not really a big deal.

If you have tested the file in your browser and on an e-reader and it looks ok, then you aren't "missing" anything integral to having a functional e-book.

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