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crowbook/book_example/config.md

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The configuration file

If you want to use Crowbook for your book, this configuration file is all you'll have to add (assuming you'll already have the book in Markdown files; if you don't, you'll also have to write a book first, but that's besides the scope of this document).

The format is not very complicated. This is an example of it:

# metadata
author: Joan Doe
title: Some book
lang: en

output.html: some_book.html

# list of chapters
- preface.md
+ chapter_1.md
+ chapter_2.md
+ chapter_3.md
+ chapter_4.md
- epilogue.md

Basically, it is divided in two parts:

  • a list of options, under the form key: value;
  • a list of Markdown files.

Files starting with the # characters are comments and are discarded by Crowbook when parsing the files. Note that # must be at the beginning of the line, so e.g.:

author: John Smith # aka John Doe

will set the author key to John Smith # aka John Doe.

The list of files

There are various options to include a markdown file.

  • + file_name.md includes a numbered chapter.
  • - file_name.md includes an unnumbered chapter.
  • ! file_name.md includes a chapter whose title won't be displayed (except in the toc for epub); this is useful for e.g. including a copyright at the beginning or the book, or for short stories where there is only one chapter.
  • 42. file_name.md specifies the number for a chapter.

So a typical usage might look like this:

! copyright.md
- preface.md
# We want first chapter to be Chapter 0 because we are programmers!
0. chapter_0.md
# Next chapters can be numbered automatically
+ chapter_1.md
+ chapter_3.md
...

There are two important things to note:

  1. you must not use quotes around the file names
  2. the path of these files are relative to the directory where your config file is, not to the directory where you are when running crowbook. E.g. you can run crowbook books/my_trilogy/first_book/config.book without being in the book's directory.

Also note that you don't have to specify a title. This is because the title of the chapter is inferred from the Markdown document. To go back to our previous example:

+ chapter_1.md

does not specify a chapter title, because it will read it directly in chapter_1.md, e.g.:

The day I was born
==================

...

You should have one and only one level-one header (i.e. chapter title) in each markdown file.

If you have more than one, Crowbook won't get too angry at you and will just print a warning and treat it as another chapter (numbered according to the scheme specified for including the file). It will however mess the table of contents if Crowbook tries to generate one (e.g. for Epub).

It's also a problem if you do not have a level-1 header in a markdown file. If it is a numbered chapter Crowbook will still be able to infer a chapter name, but if it is not numbered Crowbook will fail to generate an Epub file.


So, to sum it up. please: one file = one chapter, a chapter starts with a title, and this way this will work nice.

Crowbook options

The first part of the configuration file is dedicated to pass options to Crowbook. Each one is of the form option: value. Note that you don't have to put string in quotes, e.g.:

title: My title

If you do use quotes, Crowbook will actually put those quotes in the string, so basically don't do that.

Metadata

author

Quite obviously, the author of the book. Note that it's currently just a single string, so if you want to have multiple authors, you'll have to do something like:

author: Jane Doe, John Smith

default: Anonymous

title

The title of the book.

default: Untitled

lang

The language of the book, in a standard format. "en", "fr", and so on.

default: en

cover

The file name of a cover image for the book. Note that, here again, you must not use quotes:

cover: cover.png

default: None

subject

What your book is about: e.g. Programming, Science-Fiction...

default: None

description

A description of your book. Note that Crowbook does not support multi-line strings in configuration field, and it is a field where it might be a problem if you don't like very long lines.

default: None

Output options

These options specify which files to generate. You must at least set one of this option, or Crowbook won't do anything.

Recall that all file paths are relative to the directory where the config file is, not to the one where you run crowbook. So if you set

output.epub = foo.epub

and runs

$ crowbook some/dir/config.book

foo.epub will be generated in some/dir, not in your current directory.

Crowbook will try to generate each of the output.xxx files that are specified. That means that you'll have to set at least one of those if you want a call to

$ crowbook my.book

to generate anything. (It's still possible to generate a specific format, and only this one, by using the --to argument on the command line).

output.epub

The name of the epub file you want to generate.

default: None

Crowbook use the zip command to generate the epub, so it won't work if this command is not installed on your system.

output.html

The name of the HTML file you want to generate. Note that this HTML file is self-contained, it doesn't require e.g. CSS from other files.

default: None

output.tex

The name of the LaTeX file you want to generate.

default: None

output.pdf

The name of the PDF file you want to generate. Crowbook uses LaTeX to generate it, so it won't work if it isn't installed on your computer. (See tex_command to specify which flavour of LaTeX you want to use.)

default: None

output.odt

The name of the ODT (OpenOffice) file you want to generate. Beware: ODT support is still experimental.

default: None

As for Epub generation, Crowbook depends on the presence of the zip command to generate this file.

Generic options for rendering

numbering

A boolean that sets whether or not you want numbering. Setting it to false is equivalent to including all your chapters with - my_chapter.md. Note that even if it is set to true, numbering will be desactivated for chapters that are included with - my_chapter.md.

default:: true

numbering_template

A string will be used as chapter title. You can use {{number}} and {{title}} in this string, e.g.:

numbering_template: Chapter {{number}} {{title}}

Note that:

  • this string isn't used for unnumbered chapters;
  • this string isn't used for LaTeX, either.

default: {{number}}. {{title}}

autoclean

This option cleans a bit the input markdown. With the default implementation, it only removes consecutive spaces, which has not real impact (they are ignored anyway both by HTML viewers and by LaTeX).

However, if lang is set to fr, it also tries to add non-breaking spaces in front (or after) characters like '?', '!', ';' to respect french typography.

default: true

nb_char

This option allows you to specify the non breaking character used by the french cleaning method (see above). Probably not really something you need to modify.

default: '' (i.e. narrrow non-breaking space)

Options for HTML rendering

html.template

A file containing a (mustache) HTML template.

default: None (built-in template)

html.css

A file containing a stylesheet for the HTML file.

default: None (built-in)

Options for Epub rendering

epub.template

A file containing a (mustache) xhtml template for the files generated for each chapter.

default: None (built-in template)

epub.css

A file containing a stylesheet for the Epub file.

default: None (built-in)

epub_version

Sets the version for generated Epub, either 2 or 3.

default: 2

Options for LaTeX / PDF rendering

tex.template

Sets the LaTeX template.

default: None (builtin)

tex.command

The command used to generate a PDF file.

default: pdflatex

Display the link in the document, using the \footnote{} command. This is useful if you want your readers to be able to see the URLs in a printed document.

default: true

Additional options

temp_dir

When it is generating epub or pdf files, Crowbook creates a temporary directory (which is then removed), named from a random uuid (so we can be pretty certain it's not gonna exist). This option specify where to create this directory. E.g., if you set:

temp_dir: /tmp

crowbook might create a temporary directory /tmp/7fcbe41e-1676-46ba-b1a7-40c2fa37a3a7.

By default, this temporary directory is created where the config file is.

default: .