![]() ![]() Several separate areas of selection are not supported. Use double-click to select a word, and drag the mouse to select a region of text. Hold down shift with a navigation key to select content you can use Ctrl+A to select all text in a section. Use this sparingly, if at all, since it can be confusing to edit paragraphs containing line breaks. Use Shift+Enter to insert a line break character within a paragraph. Home and End move to the beginning and end of the line respectively hold down the control key (command key on Mac) to move to the start or end of the whole section. Use Page Up and Page Down to move up and down a page at a time. Hold down the control key to move a word at a time. Use the arrows to navigate a character or line at a time. Here are the more important keyboard and mouse operations: Many of the editing keystrokes will be familiar from other editors, though there will be some differences. You can use this just to review the content in your book, or you can edit the text, graphics and formatting. When you click on a book section in the project outline, or create a new book section with Document | New | Book Section, you are presented with the Jutoh editor. The clickable section title Basic content editing This title will be used in the automatic table of contents. You can edit the title of a particular section by clicking on the title above the editor, as shown in the illustration below, or using the Rename command on the project outline’s context menu (right-click to see it). ![]() If the new document was inserted at the wrong place, you can drag it into the correct position. If you change your mind, you can undo this with Edit | Undo Project Properties, or you can join this document with the next one using Document | Join Document. Place the cursor on the paragraph you wish to be at the start of a new document, and use the command Document | Split Document. If Jutoh didn’t split up your book when importing, you can do it manually, one split at a time. Finally, you’ll find it easier and faster to navigate and edit a book divided into sections. Via section properties, you can tell the ebook reader that a section is a table of contents or other kind of section, which you couldn’t do if it was buried inside one huge section. Another reason is that it is easy to compile a table of contents for a book that’s divided into sections (though Jutoh can also look inside sections for headings if required). One reason for this is because some ebook readers, with their restricted memory, simply can’t cope with large chunks of text or if they can, slow down when loading and paging through such a book. Most ebooks are comprised of sections rather than being one enormous chunk like a Word document. A section can be a chapter, a title page, a table of contents, and so on. Why divide a book into sections?įirst, a quick word about why Jutoh projects, and ebooks in general, are divided into sections. ![]() In this chapter we’ll learn how to edit and format your book’s text and graphics. Jutoh is not just a way of converting existing files to ebooks: one of its major strengths is the ability to edit and tweak your book before creating the ebook in the desired format(s). Importing Files | Next: Chapter 7: Editing Your Book’s Metadata CHAPTER 6: EDITING AND FORMATTING CONTENT Chapter 6: Editing and Formatting ContentĬontents | Start | End | Previous: Chapter 5.
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