The toolset used to produce Standard Ebooks epub ebooks.
Project description
About
A collection of tools Standard Ebooks uses to produce its ebooks, including basic setup of ebooks, text processing, and build tools.
Installing this toolset using pipx
makes the se
command line executable available. Its various commands are described below, or you can use se help
to list them.
Installation
The toolset requires Python >= 3.8 and <= 3.12.
To install the toolset locally for development and debugging, see Installation for toolset developers.
Optionally, install Ace and the se build --check
command will automatically run it as part of the checking process.
Ubuntu 20.04 (Trusty) users
# Install some pre-flight dependencies.
sudo apt install -y calibre default-jre git python3-dev python3-pip python3-venv
# Install pipx.
python3 -m pip install --user pipx
python3 -m pipx ensurepath
# Install the toolset.
pipx install --python=3.12 --fetch-missing-python standardebooks
Optional: Install shell completions
# Install ZSH completions.
sudo ln -s $HOME/.local/pipx/venvs/standardebooks/lib/python3.*/site-packages/se/completions/zsh/_se /usr/share/zsh/vendor-completions/_se && hash -rf && compinit
# Install Bash completions.
sudo ln -s $HOME/.local/pipx/venvs/standardebooks/lib/python3.*/site-packages/se/completions/bash/se /usr/share/bash-completion/completions/se
# Install Fish completions.
ln -s $HOME/.local/pipx/venvs/standardebooks/lib/python3.*/site-packages/se/completions/fish/se $HOME/.config/fish/completions/se.fish
Fedora 41 users
# Install some pre-flight dependencies.
sudo dnf install pipx python3.12 python3.12-devel gcc libxslt-devel calibre git java-21-openjdk-headless
# Ensure PATH environment variable is correctly set up for pipx
pipx ensurepath
# Install the toolset.
pipx install --python=3.12 standardebooks
pipx inject standardebooks setuptools
Optional: Install shell completions
# Install ZSH completions.
sudo ln -s $HOME/.local/share/pipx/venvs/standardebooks/lib/python3.*/site-packages/se/completions/zsh/_se /usr/share/zsh/vendor-completions/_se && hash -rf && compinit
# Install Bash completions.
sudo ln -s $HOME/.local/share/pipx/venvs/standardebooks/lib/python3.*/site-packages/se/completions/bash/se /usr/share/bash-completion/completions/se
# Install Fish completions.
ln -s $HOME/.local/share/pipx/venvs/standardebooks/lib/python3.*/site-packages/se/completions/fish/se $HOME/.config/fish/completions/se.fish
macOS users
-
Install the Homebrew package manager. Or, if you already have it installed, make sure it’s up to date:
brew update
-
Install dependencies:
# Install some pre-flight dependencies. brew install cairo calibre git openjdk pipx python@3.11 pipx ensurepath sudo ln -sfn $(brew --prefix)/opt/openjdk/libexec/openjdk.jdk /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/openjdk.jdk # Install the toolset. pipx install --python python3.11 standardebooks # Optional: Bash users who have set up bash-completion via brew can install tab completion. ln -s $HOME/.local/pipx/venvs/standardebooks/lib/python3.*/site-packages/se/completions/bash/se $(brew --prefix)/etc/bash_completion.d/se # Optional: Fish users can install tab completion. ln -s $HOME/.local/pipx/venvs/standardebooks/lib/python3.*/site-packages/se/completions/fish/se $HOME/.config/fish/completions/se.fish
OpenBSD 6.6 Users
These instructions were tested on OpenBSD 6.6, but may also work on the 6.5 release as well.
-
Create a text file to feed into
pkg_add
called~/standard-ebooks-packages
. It should contain the following:py3-pip-- py3-virtualenv-- py3-gitdb-- jdk--%11 calibre-- git--
-
Install dependencies using
doas pkg_add -ivl ~/standard-ebooks-packages
. Follow linking instructions provided bypkg_add
to save keystrokes, unless you want to have multiple python versions and pip versions. In my case, I randoas ln -sf /usr/local/bin/pip3.7 /usr/local/bin/pip
. -
Add
~/.local/bin
to your path. -
Run
pip install --user pipx
-
If you’re using
ksh
from base and have already added~/.local/bin
, you can skippipx ensurepath
because this step is forbash
users. -
The rest of the process is similar to that used on other platforms:
# Install the toolset. pipx install standardebooks
Installation for toolset developers
If you want to work on the toolset source, it’s helpful to tell pipx
to install the package in “editable” mode. This will allow you to edit the source of the package live and see changes immediately, without having to uninstall and re-install the package.
To do that, follow the general installation instructions above; but instead of doing pipx install standardebooks
, do the following:
git clone https://github.com/standardebooks/tools.git
pipx install --editable ./tools
Now the se
binary is in your path, and any edits you make to source files in the tools/
directory are immediately reflected when executing the binary.
Running commands on the entire corpus
As a developer, it’s often useful to run an se
command like se lint
or se build
on the entire corpus for testing purposes. This can be very time-consuming in a regular invocation (like se lint /path/to/ebook/repos/*
), because each argument is processed sequentially. Instead of waiting for a single invocation to process all of its arguments sequentially, use GNU Parallel to start multiple invocations in parallel, with each one processing a single argument. For example:
# Slow, each argument is processed in sequence
se lint /path/to/ebook/repos/*
# Fast, multiple invocations each process a single argument in parallel
export COLUMNS; parallel --keep-order se lint ::: /path/to/ebook/repos/*
The toolset tries to detect when it’s being invoked from parallel
, and it adjusts its output to accomodate.
We export COLUMNS
because se lint
needs to know the width of the terminal so that it can format its tabular output correctly. We pass the --keep-order
flag to output results in the order we passed them in, which is useful if comparing the results of multiple runs.
Linting with pylint
and mypy
Before we can use pylint
or mypy
on the toolset source, we have to inject them (and additional typings) into the venv pipx
created for the standardebooks
package:
pipx inject standardebooks pylint==3.2.2 mypy==1.10.0 types-requests==2.32.0.20240602 types-setuptools==70.0.0.20240524 types-Pillow==10.2.0.20240520
Then make sure to call the pylint
and mypy
binaries that pipx
installed in the standardebooks
venv, not any other globally-installed binaries:
cd /path/to/tools/repo
$HOME/.local/pipx/venvs/standardebooks/bin/pylint tests/*.py se
Testing with pytest
Instructions are found in the testing README.
Code style
-
In general we follow a relaxed version of PEP 8. In particular, we use tabs instead of spaces, and there is no line length limit.
-
Always use the
regex
module instead of there
module.
Help wanted
We need volunteers to take the lead on the following goals:
-
Add more test cases to the test framework.
-
Writing installation instructions for Bash and ZSH completions for MacOS.
-
Currently the toolset requires the whole Calibre package, which is very big, but it’s only used to convert epub to azw3. Can we inline Calibre’s azw3 conversion code into our
./vendor/
directory, to avoid having to install the entire Calibre package as a big dependency? If so, how do we keep it updated as Calibre evolves? -
Over the years,
./se/se_epub_build.py
has evolved to become very large and unwieldy. Is there a better, clearer way to organize this code?
Tool descriptions
-
se british2american
Try to convert British quote style to American quote style in
DIRECTORY/src/epub/text/
.Quotes must already be typogrified using the
se typogrify
tool.This script isn’t perfect; proofreading is required, especially near closing quotes near to em-dashes.
-
se build
Build an ebook from a Standard Ebook source directory.
-
se build-ids
Change ID attributes for non-sectioning content to their expected values across the entire ebook. IDs must be globally unique and correctly referenced, and the ebook spine must be complete.
-
se build-images
Build ebook cover and titlepage images in a Standard Ebook source directory and place the output in
DIRECTORY/src/epub/images/
. -
se build-manifest
Generate the
<manifest>
element for the given Standard Ebooks source directory and write it to the ebook’s metadata file. -
se build-spine
Generate the
<spine>
element for the given Standard Ebooks source directory and write it to the ebook’s metadata file. -
se build-title
Generate the title of an XHTML file based on its headings and update the file’s
<title>
element. -
se build-toc
Generate the table of contents for the ebook’s source directory and update the ToC file.
-
se clean
Prettify and canonicalize individual XHTML, SVG, or CSS files, or all XHTML, SVG, or CSS files in a source directory.
-
se compare-versions
Use Firefox to render and compare XHTML files in an ebook repository. Run on a dirty repository to visually compare the repository’s dirty state with its clean state. If a file renders differently, place screenshots of the new, original, and diff (if available) renderings in the current working directory. A file called diff.html is created to allow for side-by-side comparisons of original and new files.
-
se create-draft
Create a skeleton of a new Standard Ebook.
-
se css-select
Print the results of a CSS selector evaluated against a set of XHTML files.
-
se dec2roman
Convert a decimal number to a Roman numeral.
-
se extract-ebook
Extract an .epub, .mobi, or .azw3 ebook into
./FILENAME.extracted/
or a target directory. -
se find-mismatched-dashes
Find words with mismatched dashes in a set of XHTML files. For example,
extra-physical
in one file andextraphysical
in another. -
se find-mismatched-diacritics
Find words with mismatched diacritics in a set of XHTML files. For example,
cafe
in one file andcafé
in another. -
se find-unusual-characters
Find characters outside a nominal expected range in a set of XHTML files. This can be useful to find transcription mistakes and mojibake.
-
se help
List available SE commands.
-
se hyphenate
Insert soft hyphens at syllable breaks in an XHTML file.
-
se interactive-replace
Perform an interactive search and replace on a list of files using Python-flavored regex. The view is scrolled using the arrow keys, with alt to scroll by page in any direction. Basic Emacs (default) or Vim style navigation is available. The following actions are possible: (y) Accept replacement. (n) Reject replacement. (a) Accept all remaining replacements in this file. (r) Reject all remaining replacements in this file. (c) Center on match. (q) Save this file and quit.
-
se lint
Check for various Standard Ebooks style errors.
-
se make-url-safe
Make a string URL-safe.
-
se modernize-spelling
Modernize spelling of some archaic words, and replace words that may be archaically compounded with a dash to a more modern spelling. For example, replace
ash-tray
withashtray
. -
se prepare-release
Calculate work word count, insert release date if not yet set, and update modified date and revision number.
-
se recompose-epub
Recompose a Standard Ebooks source directory into a single HTML5 file, and print to standard output.
-
se renumber-endnotes
Renumber all endnotes and noterefs sequentially from the beginning.
-
se roman2dec
Convert a Roman numeral to a decimal number.
-
se semanticate
Apply some scriptable semantics rules from the Standard Ebooks semantics manual to a Standard Ebook source directory.
-
se shift-endnotes
Increment or decrement the specified endnote and all following endnotes by 1 or a specified amount.
-
se split-file
Split an XHTML file into many files at all instances of
<!--se:split-->
, and include a header template for each file. -
se titlecase
Convert a string to titlecase.
-
se typogrify
Apply some scriptable typography rules from the Standard Ebooks typography manual to a Standard Ebook source directory.
-
se unicode-names
Display Unicode code points, descriptions, and links to more details for each character in a string. Useful for differentiating between different flavors of spaces, dashes, and invisible characters like word joiners.
-
se word-count
Count the number of words in an HTML file and optionally categorize by length.
-
se xpath
Print the results of an xpath expression evaluated against a set of XHTML files. The default namespace is removed.
What a Standard Ebooks source directory looks like
Many of these tools act on Standard Ebooks source directories. Such directories have a consistent minimal structure:
.
|__ images/
| |__ cover.jpg
| |__ cover.source.jpg
| |__ cover.svg
| |__ titlepage.svg
|
|__ src/
| |__ META-INF/
| | |__ container.xml
| |
| |__ epub/
| | |__ css/
| | | |__ core.css
| | | |__ local.css
| | | |__ se.css
| | |
| | |__ images/
| | | |__ cover.svg
| | | |__ logo.svg
| | | |__ titlepage.svg
| | |
| | |__ text/
| | | |__ colophon.xhtml
| | | |__ imprint.xhtml
| | | |__ titlepage.xhtml
| | | |__ uncopyright.xhtml
| | |
| | |__ content.opf
| | |__ onix.xml
| | |__ toc.xhtml
| |
| |__ mimetype
|
|__ LICENSE.md
./images/
contains source images for the cover and titlepages, as well as ebook-specific source images. Source images should be in their maximum available resolution, then compressed and placed in ./src/epub/images/
for distribution.
./src/epub/
contains the actual epub files.
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