
I loaded the TT.txt directly into Calibre and made an epub. Best from a docx (never edit a docx in LO Writer, only extra Save As). So conclusion is that you are copying plain text to an ereader. I put the document in Word 2003 (on WINE) and LO Writer 6.x.
Jutoh styles greyed out mac#
I've NEVER had bold show up in any plain text editor on Windows (All verssions from 3.0 to 10 except win8), Mac OS9, Linux, Xenix, CP/M, MSDOS, or Android. I opened it in the WINE version of Windows Notepad. I opened your TT.txt in Linux xed (similar thing to Windows Notepad). The renderer in the ereader must be interpreting something as a command to do bold. Never load plain text direct to an ereader, but use epub (or convert epub to mobi, dual mobi or azw3 for a kindle). Then use Calibre to convert the docx to an epub. Save or Save As a copy in docx AFTER fixing headings and paragraph styles. Paste into MS Word (or LO Writer, but use native save in odt). That might cause issues when TT.txt is imported into something. But it has multiple //textmarked// lines. There is usage for ' to break up some non-English words or sometimes show syllables. An italic straight quote and double quote looks similar ' ", but it's a specific character.Īctual straight quotes are for programming and originate with typewriters. Those should be ′ and ″, the prime and double prime. They all use ’ and ” for feet & inches or degrees or time. As an aside, almost all wordprocessors do '60s as ‘60s instead of ’60s. If you type "some text" and it is automagically “some text” then you are using a wordprocessor, not a text editor like notepad! So called smart quotes. I disable most Autoformat in MS Word or LO Writer for "as you write" as well as Autocorrect. Make sure on a Wordprocessor that Autoformat is off and you Paste Special unformatted text. The only exception is if you do a Smart Paste in to a Word Processor with auto formatting on then Copy & past that into something else, or save and there is NEVER any formatting like bold. It won't even store bold.Ĭopy & paste to a text editor and only tabs, spaces, special spaces, line breaks remain. It has no formatting at all other than line-wrap options. Modern ones also have styles.Ī real text editor can't even display bold. Which actual program / application? Plain Text in some arbitrary program that CAN do styles is not notepad.Ī wordprocessor (even Wordpad or MS Write) can do formatting. Please advise if there is something I can sort out this issue.īasically I use Plain Text Doc
Jutoh styles greyed out free#
But sometimes it doesn't, for example if I copy all and there is a picture too, the text below the picture appears bold on my reader eventually.įunny fact: the very same text document appears bold free on one of my e reader, however, the other one shows those bold styles. I use a normal Text Doc, Notepad, if you will, and as you said it strips all those styles, normally. If none of that works, try a really simple pure-text editor. Or the editor might have some way to "remove all formatting", like ctrl-M does in LibreOffice. Or maybe the editor will let you do that some other way, maybe with a right-click. If you are pasting into a word processor or some smart editor, try using shift-ctrl-V to paste, and select 'unformatted text". If you paste it into a pure text editor like gedit or notepad, the styling should be stripped off. When you copy text from a web page, you are almost sure to get some styling with it.
