kitabu
Kitabu is a framework for creating e-books from Markdown using Ruby. Using
Prince PDF generator, you'll be able to get high quality PDFs. Also supports
EPUB, Mobi, and HTML generation.
While Prince is too expensive (495USD for a single user license), the free
version available at http://www.princexml.com/download generates a PDF with a
small logo on the first page, which is removed when sent to a printer; you can
use it locally for viewing the results immediately. When you're done writing
your e-book, you can use DocRaptor, which have plans
starting at $15/mo.
Features
- Write using Markdown
- Book layout support
- Syntax highlight
- Generate HTML, PDF, e-Pub, and Mobi
- Table of Contents automatically generated from chapter titles
Installation
To install Kitabu, you'll need a working Ruby 3.2+ installation. If you're cool
with it, just run the following command to install it.
gem install kitabu
After installing Kitabu, run the following command to check your external
dependencies.
$ kitabu check
Prince XML: Converts HTML files into PDF files.
Installed.
Calibre's ebook-convert: Converts ePub e-books into .mobi files.
Installed.
There are no hard requirements here; just make sure you cleared the correct
dependency based on the formats you want to export to.
Usage
To create a new e-book, just run
$ kitabu new mybook
This command creates a directory mybook
with the following structure:
.
├── Gemfile
├── Gemfile.lock
├── Guardfile
├── config
│ ├── helper.rb
│ └── kitabu.yml
├── images
│ ├── kitabu-icon.png
│ ├── kitabu-icon.svg
│ ├── kitabu-word.png
│ ├── kitabu-word.svg
│ ├── kitabu.png
│ └── kitabu.svg
├── output
├── templates
│ ├── epub
│ │ ├── cover.erb
│ │ ├── cover.png
│ │ └── page.erb
│ ├── html
│ │ └── layout.erb
│ └── styles
│ ├── epub.css
│ ├── files
│ │ └── _normalize.css
│ ├── html.css
│ ├── pdf.css
│ └── print.css
└── text
├── 01_Getting_Started.md
├── 02_Creating_Chapters.md
├── 03_Syntax_Highlighting.md.erb
├── 04_Dynamic_Content.md.erb
└── 05_Exporting_Files.md
The config/kitabu.yml
file holds some information about your book; so you'll
always change it.
The generated structure is actually a good example. So make sure you try it!
There's a generated sample available on the
attachments directory
• PDF /
EPUB /
MOBI /
HTML.
Now it's time to write your e-book. All your book content will be placed on the
text directory. Kitabu requires you to separate your book into chapters. A
chapter is nothing but a directory that holds lots of text files. The e-book
will be generated using every folder/file alphabetically. So be sure to use a
sequential numbering as the name. Here's a sample:
* text
* 01_Introduction
* 01_introduction.md
* 02_What_is_Ruby_on_Rails
* 01_MVC.md
* 02_DRY.md
* 03_Convention_Over_Configuration.md
* 03_Installing_Ruby_on_Rails
* 01_Installing.md
* 02_Mac_OS_X_instructions.md
* 03_Windows_instructions.md
* 04_Ubuntu_Linux_instructions.md
If you prefer, you can add a chapter per file:
* text
* 01_Introduction.md
* 02_What_is_Ruby_on_Rails.md
* 03_Installing_Ruby_on_Rails.md
You'll want to see your progress eventually; it's time for you to generate the
book PDF. Just run the command kitabu export
and your book will be created on
the output
directory.
Kitabu can generate a Table of Contents (TOC) based on your h2-h6 tags. The h1
tag is discarded because it's meant to be the book title.
To print the TOC, you need to print a variable called toc
, using the eRb tag.
<%= toc %>
Using ERB
You can also have .md.erb
files. You can mix Markdown and HTML, like the
following:
## This the chapter title
<% note do %>
Make sure you try .md.erb files!
<% end %>
The above content must be placed in a .md.erb
file. The generated content will
be something like this:
<div class="note info">
<p>Make sure you try .md.erb files!</p>
</div>
The note
helper is built-in and can accept a different note type.
<% note :warning do %>
Make sure you write valid ERB code.
<% end %>
You can see available helpers on
https://github.com/fnando/kitabu/blob/main/lib/kitabu/markdown.rb.
Syntax Highlighting
To highlight code, use fenced code blocks.
``` ruby
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
validates_presence_of :login, :password, :email
validates_uniqueness_of :login, :email
end
```
You can even provide options:
```php?start_inline=1&line_numbers=1
echo "Hello World";
```
- We use Redcarpet for Markdown
processing.
- We use Rouge for syntax highlighting.
The following Redcarpet options are enabled:
autolink
fenced_code_blocks
footnotes
hard_wrap
highlight
no_intra_emphasis
safe_links_only
space_after_headers
strikethrough
superscript
tables
Using custom fonts
You can use custom fonts for your PDF. Just add them to the fonts
directory
(you can create this directory on your book's root directory if it doesn't
exist).
Then, on templates/styles/pdf.css
you can add the @font-face
declaration.
@font-face {
font-family: "Open Sans Condensed Bold";
src: url("../../fonts/OpenSans-CondBold.ttf");
}
Finally, to use this font, do something like this:
.chapter > h2 {
font-family: "Open Sans Condensed Bold";
}
Configuring Markdown
Kitabu uses Redcarpet as the Markdown
engine. You can override the default processor by setting
Kitabu::Markdown.processor
. This can be done by adding something like the
following to config/helper.rb
:
Kitabu::Markdown.processor = Redcarpet::Markdown.new(
Kitabu::Markdown::Renderer.new(hard_wrap: false, safe_links_only: true),
tables: true,
footnotes: true,
space_after_headers: true,
superscript: true,
highlight: true,
strikethrough: true,
autolink: true,
fenced_code_blocks: true,
no_intra_emphasis: true
)
The above options are Kitabu's defaults.
References
Legal Notes
Alternatives:
- If you're not planning to buy PrinceXML, consider using
DocRaptor. Here's how you can easily do it:
curl -H "Content-Type:application/json" -d'{"user_credentials":"YOUR_CREDENTIALS_HERE", "doc":{"name":"kitabu.pdf", "document_type":"pdf", "test":"false", "document_url":"https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/123456789/output/kitabu.pdf.html"}}' http://docraptor.com/docs > kitabu.pdf
Maintainer
Contributors
Contributing
For more details about how to contribute, please read
https://github.com/fnando/kitabu/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md.
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the
MIT License. A copy of the license can be
found at https://github.com/fnando/kitabu/blob/main/LICENSE.md.
Code of Conduct
Everyone interacting in the kitabu project's codebases, issue trackers, chat
rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the
code of conduct.