The Magic Book Project is an open-source framework that facilitates the design and production of electronic and print books for authors.
Here’s a circa-2008 scenario for you. An author is excited to hear that a big company has decided to publish his or her book. The author sits down and types a lot of text into Microsoft Word. The publisher takes that text and “typesets” it using Adobe InDesign, painstakingly laying out each individual page by hand. To market the book, the author decides to post an excerpt from the book online as HTML and performs an elaborate contortion of copying/pasting and reformatting. The book is published and is offered for sale for fifty dollars. An ebook is also for sale for fifty dollars. The author receives a few dollars when a book is sold. Anyone on the internet, however, can easily download a free, illegal PDF version of the book.
See any problems with this scenario?
This is is the impetus behind the Magic Book Project, developed by a small team of ITP faculty, researchers, and students. The Magic Book Project seeks to help authors self-publish in variety of formats, making books available to the widest audience possible at the cheapest prices.
Rather than type into a word processor, the Magic Book Project allows an author to write a book once (using ASCIIDOC, a simple text document format) and procedurally generate the layout for a variety of formats using modern code-based design tools, such as CSS, the stylesheet standard. Write your book once, press a magic button, and out come multiple versions: printed hardcopy, digital PDF, HTML, MOBI, and EPUB.
-
Clone this repository
$ git clone https://github.com/runemadsen/Magic-Book-Project.git $ cd Magic-Book-Project
-
Use Ruby 1.9.3. To manage multiple rubies, install either RVM, rbenv, or chruby.
-
Run bundler to install gems (if you don't have bundler do
$ gem install bundler
).$ bundle install
One of the gems we use, Nokogiri, has some system pre-requirements. Under Ubuntu 12.04, before you run
bundle install
you need to install the development libraries for xml and xslt with$ sudo apt-get install libxml2-dev libxslt1-dev
On Mac OS X Mountain Lion with XCode 4.5.2 Developer tools, in order to get Nokogiri to work, I had to do the following before bundle install:
$ sudo ln -s /usr/bin/gcc /usr/bin/gcc-4.2 $ brew install libxml2 --with-xml2-config $ brew link libxml2 $ gem install nokogiri -- --with-xml2-include=/usr/local/Cellar/libxml2/2.8.0/include/libxml2/ --with-xml2-lib=/usr/local/Cellar/libxml2/2.8.0/lib/ --with-xslt-dir=/usr/local/Cellar/libxslt/1.1.26/
-
We are using a custom build of the asciidoc gem. To keep track of changes to this gem use git submodules. From the root of the repository run the following two commands to initialize the submodule and then get any updates.
$ git submodule init $ git submodule update
-
Now you need the asciidoc program. We recommend installing asciidoc with homebrew. Once you have homebrew installed get the asciidoc keg like so
$ brew install asciidoc
Under Ubuntu, you'll need to install asciidoc with
$ sudo apt-get install asciidoc
If your book will include code blocks you'll need to install pygments for syntax highlighting.
$ sudo easy_install Pygments
Under Ubuntu, it's probably better to install it as a system package:
$ sudo apt-get install python-pygments
cd Magic-Book-Project
shotgun config.ru
- Then visit in your browser one of these urls:
-
localhost:9393/create_html/:filename
-
localhost:9393/create_html_chapters/:filename
-
localhost:9393/create_pdf/:filename
where
:filename
is the path to an.asc
,.asciidoc
or.txt
file.Note: For the time being, the asciidoc gem uses Prince XML for PDF rendering (we are using this until we find a good, open-source HTML to PDF renderer). If you want to produce PDF output, you'l need to download and install it from http://www.princexml.com/download/.
If it's been a while since you've used this app, update the asciidoc gem by
running $ git submodule update
.