I think you mean PDFs don’t flow well, they scale great.
Not sure that I follow "flow" vs "zoom"...all I know is that when I try to read pdfs on my iPad, I have to zoom in every individual page, move the page around to read all the text on the page, shrink the page to normal size to turn the page, and then do everything all over again to read the next page. It is a pretty unpleasant reading experience...I can't imagine trying to read a book in pdf format on my phone.As Scott notes, the eRB text scales well; I find it perfectly readable on an iPhone. The pocket Chapter H (and the eRB) will now have errata incorporated, as well.
The PDF format is designed to keep the layout and design of the original document. So it appears exactly the same as the physical product.For other formats (html?) I can set a font size once, and then my phone/tablet will scale the all the text/pages properly for the screen size.
Am I missing something?
Yeah, that's kind of my point--I'm not sure I'd actually buy a pdf version, because it will be too much of a PITA to read, unless I buy a 12" tablet of some sort so I don't have to monkey around with the page size. I've got other eManuals in html and they work great on all my devices, including things like tables and images.The PDF format is designed to keep the layout and design of the original document. So it appears exactly the same as the physical product.
Something like epub (or any ebook format) is designed to focus on the text and not include layout or design elements and so you can vary the font and size.
A PDF is not going to reflow in the same way that an epub file will.
There are many free reader programs that work on any tablet (or phone I suppose), so you wouldn't have to buy anything in any event.As long as it works in Windows 10 (adobe) on my Surface Pro I'm happy. I don't want to have to buy a 'reader' (physical or program).
My iPad has decent enough resolution that in portrait mode I can read most rulebooks. In landscape mode it is a bit of a PITA.Yeah, that's kind of my point--I'm not sure I'd actually buy a pdf version, because it will be too much of a PITA to read, unless I buy a 12" tablet of some sort so I don't have to monkey around with the page size. I've got other eManuals in html and they work great on all my devices, including things like tables and images.
I'll keep my fingers crossed...I would love to buy an eASLRB, but only if I can read it conveniently, otherwise I'll probably give it a pass (depending on the price).I don't see why an eASLRB couldn't be done in an epub format or html to allow easier reading on a device.
Fittingly illuminated by ASL Monks, I hope.
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If MMP is clever, they'll offer it in various formats to fit each one's bill.I don't see why an eASLRB couldn't be done in an epub format or html to allow easier reading on a device.
That would be very untrue. You would need to do an entire QA run on the new version. My assumption was that they would only do an elub or HTML version.I imagine that making an ePub out of a PDF is not much fuss after finally getting the eASLRB on track and ready for sale.
Ah, with rubrics. AwesomeOn further reflection, I might hold off on getting the Pocket ASLRB - in hopes that a Red Letter Edition, with all the Words of Perry in red typeface, would soon be forthcoming.
You don't make an epub out of a pdf, you build an epub from your source files that were used to build the pdf. There is some fuss and even smaller publishers will outsource some of the labor.If MMP is clever, they'll offer it in various formats to fit each one's bill.
I imagine that making an ePub out of a PDF is not much fuss after finally getting the eASLRB on track and ready for sale.
von Marwitz
I think it will be a separate book.Any word on whether or not the eASLRB will include Chapter H?
I meant the PDF rulebook - will it include Chapter H, or will Chapter H be available as a separate PDF later (as with the pocket rulebooks)?I think it will be a separate book.