Amazon Kindle Publishing Guidelines

December 16, 2016 | Author: dand1234 | Category: N/A
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Amazon Kindle Publishing Guidelines How to make books available for the Kindle platform version 2012.2

This document describes the primary ways publishers, authors, and conversion houses can make their content available on the Amazon Kindle platform. This document includes guidelines and suggestions to ensure a smooth conversion and publication process. Copyright © 2012 Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

Table of Contents

1 Getting Started ............................................................................................................................ 7 2 Paths to Getting Your Content on Kindle ................................................................................. 7 2.1 Amazon’s Kindle Direct Publishing Platform ....................................................................... 7 2.2 Creating Kindle Books In-House Using Kindle Publisher Tools .......................................... 7 2.2.1 Kindle Plugin for Adobe InDesign ..................................................................................................................... 7 2.2.2 KindleGen ........................................................................................................................................................ 7 2.2.3 Kindle Previewer Software ............................................................................................................................. 10

2.3 Third-Party Conversion Services ....................................................................................... 11 3 General Formatting Guidelines ............................................................................................... 11 3.1 Text Guidelines .................................................................................................................. 12 3.1.1 Text Guideline #1: Normal Text Must Use Defaults ........................................................................................ 12 3.1.2 Text Guideline #2: Use CSS for Page Breaks ................................................................................................ 13 3.1.3 Text Guideline #3: Formatting Paragraphs ..................................................................................................... 13 3.1.4 Text Guideline #4: Other Encodings Are Supported ....................................................................................... 13 3.1.5 Text Guideline #5: Spaces and Unicode Characters ...................................................................................... 14 3.1.6 Text Guideline #6: Monospaced Font Is Supported ........................................................................................ 14 3.1.7 Text Guideline #7: CSS Support .................................................................................................................... 14 3.1.8 Text Guideline #8: Page Numbers.................................................................................................................. 15

3.2 Cover Image Guidelines .................................................................................................... 15 3.2.1 Cover Image Guideline #1: Marketing Cover Image Is Mandatory .................................................................. 15 3.2.2 Cover Image Guideline #2: Internal Content Cover Image Is Mandatory ........................................................ 15 3.2.3 Cover Image Guideline #3: Internal Cover Must Not Appear Twice ................................................................ 16

3.3 Table of Contents Guidelines ............................................................................................ 16 3.3.1 TOC Guideline #1: Logical TOC (NCX) Is Mandatory ..................................................................................... 16 3.3.2 TOC Guideline #2: HTML TOC Must Be Linked ............................................................................................. 17

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

3.3.3 TOC Guideline #3: HTML TOC Must Be Referenced as a Guide Item ............................................................ 17 3.3.4 TOC Guideline #4: No Tables in TOC ............................................................................................................ 18 3.3.5 TOC Guideline #5: No Page Numbers in TOC ............................................................................................... 18 3.3.6 TOC Guideline #6: Place the TOC at the Front of the Book ............................................................................ 18 3.3.7 TOC Guideline #7: Include a TOC for Bundled Editions ................................................................................. 18

3.4 Guide Item Guidelines ....................................................................................................... 18 3.4.1 Guide Item Guideline #1: Recommended Guide Items ................................................................................... 18

3.5 Image Guidelines ............................................................................................................... 18 3.5.1 Image Guideline #1: Use Supported Input Formats ........................................................................................ 18 3.5.2 Image Guideline #2: KindleGen Performs Automatic Image Conversions....................................................... 19 3.5.3 Image Guideline #3: Use Color Images .......................................................................................................... 19 3.5.4 Image Guideline #4: Photographs Should Use JPEG Format ......................................................................... 19 3.5.5 Image Guideline #5: Use GIF for Line-Art and Text ........................................................................................ 19 3.5.6 Image Guideline #6: Image and Font Size Requirements for Line-Art and Text .............................................. 20 3.5.7 Image Guideline #7: Prefer HTML to Images.................................................................................................. 22 3.5.8 Image Guideline #8: Image Caption Placement.............................................................................................. 23 3.5.9 Image Guideline #9: Controlling Image Aspect Ratio...................................................................................... 23

3.6 Table Guidelines ................................................................................................................ 23 3.6.1 Table Guideline #1: Use Tables for Tabular Data Only................................................................................... 23 3.6.2 Table Guideline #2: Avoid Large Tables ......................................................................................................... 24 3.6.3 Table Guideline #3: Create Simple HTML Tables ........................................................................................... 25 3.6.4 Table Guideline #4: Split Tables as Needed ................................................................................................... 25 3.6.5 Table Guideline #5: Optimize for Maximum Table Size .................................................................................. 26

3.7 Adobe Digital Editions Compatibility Guidelines................................................................ 26 3.7.1 Adobe Digital Editions Compatibility Guideline #1: Use Unique Item IDs ........................................................ 26

3.8 Styling Guidelines .............................................................................................................. 26 3.8.1 Styling Guideline #1: Use a Nested HTML TOC ............................................................................................. 26 3.8.2 Styling Guideline #2: Format Sidebars Correctly ............................................................................................ 27

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

3.9 HTML Guidelines ............................................................................................................... 27 3.9.1 HTML Guideline #1: Constructing Well-Formed HTML Documents (XHTML) ................................................. 27 3.9.2 HTML Guideline #2: Anchors Must Be Added Before Formatting Tags........................................................... 27 3.9.3 HTML Guideline #3: EPUB Guide Items Are Optional .................................................................................... 27 3.9.4 HTML Guideline #4: Using Single Column Layout and Avoiding Absolute Positions ....................................... 27 3.9.5 HTML Guideline #5: Using position:absolute for Text on Image ..................................................................... 28 3.9.6 HTML Guideline #6: Avoid Using Negative Em Values ................................................................................... 28 3.9.7 HTML Guideline #7: Avoid Using Scripting with SVG Images ......................................................................... 28 3.9.8 HTML Guideline #8: Avoid Using Negative Values for Line Height ................................................................. 28

3.10 Embedded Font Guidelines ............................................................................................. 28 4 Creating Fixed-Layout Children’s and Comic Books ............................................................ 28 4.1 Metadata Fields Supporting Fixed-Layout Books.............................................................. 28 4.2 Content Requirements ....................................................................................................... 29 4.2.1 Requirement #1: HTML File Structure ............................................................................................................ 29

4.3 Content Recommendations ............................................................................................... 29 4.3.1 Recommendation #1: Apply CSS Reset ......................................................................................................... 29 4.3.2 Recommendation #2: Design Content for Full Screen .................................................................................... 30 4.3.3 Recommendation #3: Use Large Region Magnification Tap Targets in Children’s Books ............................... 30 4.3.4 Recommendation #4: Future Proofing Fixed-Layout Content in Children’s Books .......................................... 30

4.4 Creating Children’s Books with Multipage Background Images and Text ........................ 30 4.4.1 Using Side-by-Side Images to Form a Two-Page Spread............................................................................... 30 4.4.2 Text Blocks: Position and Alignment .............................................................................................................. 32 4.4.3 Aligning Text .................................................................................................................................................. 32 4.4.4 Region Magnification...................................................................................................................................... 32

5 Creating Fixed-Layout Graphic Novels/Manga/Comics ........................................................ 33 5.1 Asset Requirements .......................................................................................................... 33 5.2 Panel View (Region Magnification) ................................................................................... 34

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5.3 Optimizing Content for the Graphic Novel Experience ...................................................... 35 5.3.1 Optimizing Tap Targets .................................................................................................................................. 35 5.3.2 Optimizing View Panels.................................................................................................................................. 35 5.3.3 Optimizing for Wide or Tall Action Scenes...................................................................................................... 36 5.3.4 Optimizing for Large Text Blocks .................................................................................................................... 37

6 Audio and Video Guidelines .................................................................................................... 38 6.1 Embedded Video ............................................................................................................... 38 6.2 Streaming Video ................................................................................................................ 39 6.3 Embedded Audio ............................................................................................................... 39 6.4 Streaming Audio ................................................................................................................ 39 6.5 Multimedia Directory .......................................................................................................... 39 6.6 Audio Guidelines ............................................................................................................... 39 6.7 Video Guidelines ............................................................................................................... 39 6.8 Audio and Video Metadata ................................................................................................ 40 6.9 NCX File ............................................................................................................................ 41 6.10 Images with Play Controls ............................................................................................... 41 6.11 File Names Are Case-Sensitive....................................................................................... 41 6.12 Confirm Correct Mime-Type ............................................................................................ 41 6.13 File Size ........................................................................................................................... 41 6.14 Narration .......................................................................................................................... 42 6.15 Table of Contents ............................................................................................................ 42 6.16 Guidance on Media Captions .......................................................................................... 42 6.17 Custom Sample File ........................................................................................................ 43 7 Dictionary Formatting ............................................................................................................... 43 7.1 Inflections for Dictionaries ................................................................................................. 44 7.1.1 Simplified inflection syntax ............................................................................................................................. 44

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

7.1.2 Advanced inflection syntax ............................................................................................................................. 44

7.2 Custom OPF Metadata for Dictionaries ............................................................................. 45 8 Media Queries ............................................................................................................................ 45 8.1 Using Media Queries ......................................................................................................... 46 8.2 Using Media Queries for Backward Compatibility With Mobi ............................................ 48 8.3 Submitting a Media Query ................................................................................................. 49 8.3.1 Option 1: Using One CSS File. ....................................................................................................................... 49 8.3.2 Option 2: Using Different CSS Files ............................................................................................................... 50 8.3.3 Option 3: Using Style tags .............................................................................................................................. 50 8.3.4 Option 4: Using @import ................................................................................................................................ 50

9 Kindle Best Practices ............................................................................................................... 50 9.1 Testing Kindle Books ......................................................................................................... 50 10 Kindle Quality Guidelines ...................................................................................................... 51 11 Appendices .............................................................................................................................. 52 11.1 Appendix A: HTML Tags Supported in Kindle Format 8 ................................................. 52 11.2 Appendix B: CSS Selectors, Attributes, and Properties Supported in Kindle Format ..... 57

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

1 Getting Started There are several options for making your books available for the Amazon Kindle platform. Which option is best for you depends upon the nature of your publications (such as your source file format), your available resources and technical expertise, and your eBook sales model. To help you choose, here are examples of common publishing scenarios and recommendations: •

For self-publishers or authors who would like to take advantage of Amazon’s self-service tools to create Kindle Books and sell them on Amazon, see section 2.1, Amazon’s Kindle Direct Publishing Platform.



For publishers with many titles to convert and the expertise to create Kindle books in-house using Kindle Publisher Tools software, see section 2.2, Creating Kindle Books In-House Using Kindle Publisher Tools.



For publishers who do not wish to convert titles in-house or do not have the technical expertise to do so, outsourcing to a conversion house is described in section 2.3, Third-Party Conversion Services.

2 Paths to Getting Your Content on Kindle 2.1 Amazon’s Kindle Direct Publishing Platform Self-publishers can convert books into electronic format using Amazon's self-publishing tools and sell them on Amazon Kindle with Amazon's Kindle Direct Publishing Platform (KDP). KDP is a fast, easy selfpublishing system for the Amazon Kindle. Upload your content, enter sales copy and pricing information, and publish in minutes. To learn more or sign up, visit http://kdp.amazon.com.

2.2 Creating Kindle Books In-House Using Kindle Publisher Tools Publishers can create Kindle books in-house from Adobe InDesign content, HTML, XHTML, and EPUB files by using the Kindle Publisher tools. Amazon officially supports these tools to convert files to Kindle Format 8. Kindle files created with these tools are designed to be compatible with current and future Kindle devices and applications. Files created with third-party software may not work properly on current or future Kindle devices and applications. 2.2.1 Kindle Plugin for Adobe InDesign Publishers can create Kindle books in-house from Adobe InDesign content by using a free software program called Kindle Plugin for Adobe InDesign. This plug-in allows the publisher to convert content from InDesign into Kindle format. The current version of the Kindle Plugin for Adobe InDesign (v0.96) supports Kindle Format 8. Details of the options currently supported in Kindle Plugin for Adobe InDesign are available at http://kindlegen.s3.amazonaws.com/KindlePluginForAdobeInDesign_HelpAndReleaseNotes.pdf. The plug-in is available from www.amazon.com/kindleformat. Installation and help documentation for Kindle Plugin for Adobe InDesign are available at http://kindlegen.s3.amazonaws.com/KindlePluginForAdobeInDesign_HelpAndReleaseNotes.pdf. 2.2.2 KindleGen Publishers can create Kindle books in-house by using a free software program called KindleGen. This is a command line tool for building a Kindle book. KindleGen accepts source content in HTML, XHTML, or EPUB. Kindle Publishing Guidelines

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

The most recent version of KindleGen can be downloaded for free from www.amazon.com/kindleformat/kindlegen. To create books for Kindle Format 8, use KindleGen 2 or later versions. Amazon periodically releases new versions of the KindleGen software. Visit www.amazon.com/kindleformat/kindlegen to check for updates. 2.2.2.1 Source Files to Use with KindleGen To create Amazon Kindle files using KindleGen, you need: •

A single HTML file that represents the entire book; or



EPUB-compliant files. (IDPF’s EPUB spec is available at http://idpf.org/EPUB/30/spec/EPUB30overview.html)

Using the EPUB spec, you can create a Kindle book with multiple HTML files and a single OPF file that links all of them together. 2.2.2.2 Installing KindleGen IMPORTANT: Follow these steps to run KindleGen. Double-clicking the KindleGen icon does not launch this program. KindleGen for Windows (XP, Vista, 7) 1. Download the KindleGen zip file from www.amazon.com/kindleformat/kindlegen to the desktop. 2. Right-click the zip file, select Extract All, and enter the folder name as c:\Kindlegen. 3. Open a command prompt by selecting Start menu > All Programs > Accessories > Command Prompt. 4. Type c:\KindleGen\kindlegen. Instructions on how to run KindleGen are displayed. Conversion Example: To convert a file called book.html, go to the directory where the book is located, such as cd desktop, and type c:\KindleGen\kindlegen book.html. If the conversion was successful, a new file called book.mobi displays on the desktop. KindleGen for Linux 2.6 i386 or higher 1. Download the KindleGen tar.gz from www.amazon.com/kindleformat/kindlegen to a location such as the home (~) directory. 2. Extract it to ~/KindleGen. 3. Open a command prompt and type ~/KindleGen/kindlegen. Instructions on how to run KindleGen are displayed. Conversion Example: To convert a file called book.html, go to the directory where the book is located, such as cd desktop, and type ~/KindleGen/kindlegen book.html. If the conversion was successful, a new file called book.mobi displays on the desktop.

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

KindleGen for Mac OS 10.5 and above i386 1. Download KindleGen.zip from www.amazon.com/kindleformat/kindlegen. By default, the file is downloaded in the Downloads folder 2. Unzip the file. In Safari, the zip file is automatically unzipped after download. If this setting is disabled or if another browser was used, double-click the downloaded file to unzip it. 3. Click the spotlight icon in the top right corner and type Terminal. Click the application to open it. 4. To view the instructions on how to run KindleGen, locate the kindlegen program in the Finder window. Click and drag it to Terminal window where the cursor is. The cursor writes in the path and moves to the end of the line. Press Enter to view the instructions. o

Alternatively, view the instructions by typing the command cd ~/Downloads/KindleGen_Mac_i386_v2 in Terminal and then typing the command kindlegen.

Conversion Example: 1.

To convert a file called book.html, copy book.html to the desktop.

2.

In the Finder window, locate the kindlegen program. Click and drag it to the Terminal window, and drop it where the cursor is. The cursor inserts the path automatically and moves to the end of that line.

3.

In the Finder window, locate the document. Click and drag it to the Terminal window, and drop it where the cursor is. The cursor writes in the path and moves to the end of the line. Press Enter. If the conversion was successful, a new file called book.mobi displays on the desktop. o

Alternatively, convert the file by typing the command cd ~/Downloads/KindleGen_Mac_i386_v2 in Terminal and then typing the command kindlegen ~/Desktop/book.html. If the conversion was successful, a new file called book.mobi displays on the desktop.

2.2.2.3 Using KindleGen To convert an EPUB or HTML book to the Kindle Format 8, use KindleGen 2 as described below: C:> kindlegen filename.opf/.htm/.html/.epub [-c0 or -c1 or c2] [-verbose][-rebuild] [onlydeps or -nodeps] [-western] [-o ] Options: -c0: no compression -c1: standard DOC compression -c2: Kindle huffdic compression -o : Specifies the output file name. Output file will be created in the same directory as that of input file. should not contain directory path. -verbose: verbose output -rebuild: rebuilds all dependencies -onlydeps: build only needed dependencies -nodeps: do not check/build dependencies -western: force build of Windows-1252 book

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

-releasenotes: display release notes -gif: images are converted to GIF format (no JPEG in the book) -locale en: To display log messages in english. de: Zum Anzeigen von Log-Meldungen in Deutsch. fr: Pour afficher les messages de journal française. it: Visualizzare messaggi di log in italiano. es: Para mostrar mensajes de registro en español.

2.2.2.4 KindleGen Messages If KindleGen encounters issues while converting a file, it displays a warning or error. •

Errors impair the readability of the book in the Kindle Reader. It is critical to address errors before the book can be converted and published.



Warnings cause loss of non-essential functionality when the file is converted. KindleGen will introduce a work-around that will not impair the reading experience.

As conversion progresses, KindleGen displays detailed informational messages. 2.2.3 Kindle Previewer Software Kindle Previewer is graphical user interface tool that imitates how books display on Kindle devices and applications. Kindle Previewer makes it easy to preview the layout of a book and make sure its text displays properly for any orientation or font size. To produce the highest quality Kindle books, Amazon recommends this tool in combination with KindleGen. Kindle Previewer is available for the Windows and Mac OS X platforms. 2.2.3.1 Installing Kindle Previewer The most recent version of Kindle Previewer can be downloaded for free from www.amazon.com/kindleformat. Installation and help documentation can be found at http://kindlepreviewer.s3.amazonaws.com/UserGuide.pdf. Kindle Previewer for Windows (XP, Vista, 7) 1. Download Kindle Previewer for Windows from www.amazon.com/kindleformat. 2. Store the executable (KindlePreviewer.exe) to the local disk. 3. Execute KindlePreviewer.exe by double-clicking it. 4. Accept the EULA from the dialog box with details to install Kindle Previewer. 5. Kindle Previewer appears in Start > Programs > Amazon > Kindle Previewer after successful installation. Kindle Previewer for Mac OS 10.5 and above i386 1. Download Kindle Previewer for Intel Mac from www.amazon.com/kindleformat. 2. Save the zip file (KindlePreviewer.zip) to the local disk. Kindle Publishing Guidelines

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3. Double-click the zip file to unzip Kindle Previewer. 4. Drag Kindle Previewer from Downloads folder to Application folder. 5. Start Kindle Previewer. Use F1 or the Help menu to find the Kindle Previewer User’s Guide.

2.3 Third-Party Conversion Services Publishers have the option to outsource conversion of titles from a variety of formats to eBook formats. Conversion houses offer publishers solutions and services that include taking a variety of input formats and creating eBook or print-ready output. The typical input formats are: •

Word (.DOC, .DOCX), Rich Text Format (.rtf), Text (.txt)



PDF



Scan of print book



FrameMaker, InDesign, PageMaker, QuarkXPress



XML (such as DocBook, etc.)



HTML, XHTML



EPUB (also known as IDPF or OEB)

The process of converting non-reflowable content (such as PDF or scans) to reflowable content is laborintensive and requires specialized formatting knowledge. As you explore conversion house options, Amazon recommends that you confirm which source format(s) the conversion house requires to convert files for use on Kindle. The preferred outputs from conversion houses to be processed by Amazon are: • •

Books in Amazon Kindle Format (.mobi/.prc) Metadata in ONIX format (XML)

Amazon can also process content in EPUB source format. KindleGen compiles the file and runs checks for common errors. Any errors or warnings will prevent the titles from becoming available. These errors must be fixed in the EPUB file before the title is published in the Kindle store. Titles in EPUB format must be tested on Amazon software and/or hardware and must abide by the publishing guidelines in this document. Conversion houses can be of service in helping publishers supply eBook retailers with metadata. Search the web for “eBook conversion” to find a list of partners to work with.

3 General Formatting Guidelines Kindle Format 8 (KF8) is the next generation file format (replacing Mobi 7) for Kindle books and supports HTML 5 and CSS 3. Kindle Fire is the first Kindle device to support KF8. In the coming months, Amazon will upload KF8 to our latest-generation Kindle e Ink devices and our free Kindle applications. The following table outlines Kindle Format 8 features and device/application support:

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Features & Benefits

Supported on Kindle e Inkbased Device No

Supported on Kindle Applications for PC, Mac, Android, Windows Phone No

Full support for CSS to enable publishers to control all elements of the text layout, including line spacing, alignment, justification, margin, color, style, & border. Support for drop cap character at the beginning of paragraphs. Support for floating elements that includes boxed text, callouts, sidebars, & images with text wrapping. Support for numbered and bulleted lists. Support for nested tables and merged cells required by technical and textbooks. Support for background images on pages and for text on background images. Support for Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) that can be zoomed without loss of fidelity. Support for embedded fonts that allows publishers to have a custom look & feel for the book. Support for rounded corners of boxed elements. Support for drop shadow. Support for outline text. Support for multiple and repeated background images. Support for color gradient. Enables fine-grained control of attributes for text and other elements through CSS selectors. Support for fixed-layout pages for specified screen sizes.

Supported on Kindle Fire Tablet

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No No

No No

Yes Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No No No No

No No No No

Yes Yes Yes Yes

No No

No No

Yes Yes

No

No

Yes

There are important differences between writing HTML for websites and for Kindle books. To provide a good reading experience, many website design practices should be avoided when creating Kindle books. Refer to the following sections for more information. Support for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Text The Kindle family of devices has limited support for Chinese, Japanese, and Korean text. The Kindle Readers for e Ink devices and applications can render horizontal left to right Chinese, Japanese, and Korean text. They have limited font support for the CJK characters. There is no support for right to left vertical scripts and no support for Japanese Ruby script.

3.1 Text Guidelines 3.1.1 Text Guideline #1: Normal Text Must Use Defaults The normal text in a Kindle book must be all defaults. Amazon encourages content creators to use creative styles for headings, special paragraphs, footnotes, tables of contents, etc., but not for normal text. The reason for this is that any styling on normal text in the HTML would override the user’s preferred

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

default reading settings. Users report such behavior as a poor reading experience. Here are the most important points: •

Normal text must not have a forced alignment (such as left aligned or justified).



Normal text must use the default font size. Normal text should not use the tag or its equivalent in CSS.



Normal text should not be bold or italicized. Selected parts of the text can be bold or italicized. This guideline only prohibits a book that would be entirely bold, for example.



Normal text should not have an imposed font color.



Normal text must not have a white font color. Customers report this as a bad user experience.



Normal text must not have a black background color. Customers report this as a bad user experience.

3.1.2 Text Guideline #2: Use CSS for Page Breaks Do not insert blank lines of text to create empty pages. Use the CSS page-break-before and pagebreak-after attributes. 3.1.3 Text Guideline #3: Formatting Paragraphs KindleGen automatically indents the first line of every paragraph by default. To change this behavior, use the text-indent style on the tag. For example: •

- positive indent, 10% of the width of the page



PART ONE “There is audio content at this location that is not currently supported for your device. The caption for this content is displayed below.”



src tag: (Required) Identifies the embedded audio file, which must be in MP3 format.



title tag: (Optional) Identifies the description of the audio.



controls tag: (Required, unless you provide an image for use in starting the video playback) Tells the Kindle application to display controls for the embedded audio.



text content: (Required) Devices that do not support audio content display the text between the and tags. If users view this eBook on a device that does not support audio, they see this text instead. (Example: “There is content at this location that is not currently supported for your device. The caption for this content is displayed below.”)



id tag: (Optional) Must be unique to the document if it is used.

6.4 Streaming Audio Streaming audio is not supported at this time. Use embedded audio instead.

6.5 Multimedia Directory When adding audio and video files to an eBook, create an “audiovideo” directory for storing these files. When referring to the audio or video file, include the directory name (Example: “audiovideo/filename”) in the HTML.

6.6 Audio Guidelines Amazon recommends using stereo channels in the MP3 source where possible, because Kindle supports playing back audio in stereo. Use as high a bitrate as you need to hear the audio content appropriately; this is a judgment call. For good results, consider bitrates between 128 kbps and 256 kbps (kilobits per second). The maximum supported by Kindle is 320 kbps at variable bit rate.

6.7 Video Guidelines Since audio content can be part of the video content, Amazon recommends using stereo channels in your audio source where possible. Kindle supports playing back audio in stereo. Kindle Publishing Guidelines

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This is the ideal source spec: Attribute Dimensions Interlacing Color Space Video Codec Video Mode Video Bit Rate Key Frame Interval Audio Codec Audio Bit Rate Audio Sample Rate

Setting Widescreen: 704 x 396 (or any other widescreen ratio); Fullscreen: 640 x 480 Progressive 4:2:0 YUV H.264 (recommended), MPEG-2 VBR (recommended) or CBR 2500 kbps or higher recommended 2 or 4 seconds recommended MP3 256 kbps or higher recommended 48 kHz (recommended), 44.1 kHz

The following container formats are acceptable: Container MP4 MPEG-2 video file

File Extensions .mp4 .mpg, .mpeg

Mime Type video/h264 video/mpeg

MPEG-2 program stream MPEG-2 transport stream

.ps

video/mp2p

RFC RFC3984 RFC2045, RFC2046 RFC3555

.ts

video/mp2t

RFC3555

Will not work: any other video codec (such as Windows Media, Apple ProRes), AC3 audio, audio >2 channels

6.8 Audio and Video Metadata Amazon requires that publishers (or their conversion houses) provide a description of the audio and video file, and the duration of the file in minutes and seconds, in the HTML immediately after the audio and video file is specified. Example: “There is video content at this location that is not currently supported for your device. The caption for this content is displayed below.” How to create Kindle content (5:01)

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6.9 NCX File When creating eBooks with audio and video content, Amazon requires the creation of an NCX file that points to the audio and video assets. This file should list all video and audio files in reading order, with links to where they occur in the book. For descriptions of the audio and video files, reuse the same audio and video metadata. (Example: A link to the video clip in section 6.8 would say “How to create Kindle content (5:01)”.) This information should be embedded in the NavList portion of the NCX file.

6.10 Images with Play Controls It is possible to tag images so that they can be played by clicking on them. The minimum pixel width and height for such images is 45 pixels by 45 pixels. To add play controls to the image, superimpose the Amazon PLAY icon onto the lower right-hand side of any image via Photoshop or similar program. Then add the following tag to the HTML (in this example, the audio file has an id attribute of “audio1” and no controls tag): Example:

However, if you are using KindleGen version 1.2 or earlier, use the following HTML instead: Example:

The Amazon PLAY icon is available upon request.

6.11 File Names Are Case-Sensitive Kindle books are case-sensitive. When referencing audio and video files within the HTML, be careful about case sensitivity. (Example: “audiovideo/ThisFile.mp4” is different from “audiovideo/Thisfile.mp4”.) To indicate a file in a directory, use “/” characters and not “\” characters. (Example: “multimedia/ThisFile.mp4” is valid, but “multimedia\ThisFile.mp4” is not.)

6.12 Confirm Correct Mime-Type When specifying video and audio files in the OPF, make sure that they have the correct mime-types, depending on the extensions used. (Example: MP4 video files should have a mime-type of “video/mp4” and not “audio/mpeg”.)

6.13 File Size Limit the combined file sizes of all audio and video files to 600 MB or less for each title. If the files are larger than 600 MB, manually transcode them to reduce the file size(s). (The total maximum audio/video file size that can be converted from EPUB via KindleGen is 650 MB.) Limit the number of individual audio and video files within each title to 1,000 or fewer.

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6.14 Narration Amazon does not currently accept any audio or video books with read-along content, which is defined as someone reading the full text or multiple pages of text from the book in either audio or video format.

6.15 Table of Contents All books must have a TOC that begins with "List of Audio and Video." This line should be bold. On the next line, begin an indented list of hyperlinks to each audio and video file. The text of the link should include the file description, with the file duration in parentheses. Use these guidelines for all audio and video files longer than 10 seconds that a user might want to see listed. Here is an example of how the code below would display in the TOC:

List of Audio and Video This is my video (5:01) This is my audio (1:10) This is the corresponding code for the example above: ”There is video content at this location that is not currently supported for your device. The caption for this content is displayed below.” This is my video (5:01) ”There is audio content at this location that is not currently supported for your device. The caption for this content is displayed below.” This is my audio (1:10)

6.16 Guidance on Media Captions Media captions describe the audio and video files to the user. Here are some general guidelines: •

Captions should not be generic. They should describe the media content they are referencing.

These media captions are not a good user experience: 1. 2. 3. 4.

Media 1 Track 1 Audio 1 Video 1

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These media captions describe the content: 1. Introduction by the Author 2. The Making of the Movie •

Media captions cannot include file extensions (.mp3, .mp4, etc.).

6.17 Custom Sample File Amazon requires that publishers create and supply a custom sample for each Kindle Edition with Audio/Video. The sample file should include a full TOC and an audio/video list, with live links to only the content in the sample file. The sample file should include at least one of each type of media available in the full file, including both audio and video, if applicable. The sample file must have a “Buy It Now” link added to the end, or where appropriate.

7 Dictionary Formatting Mobi 7 enables the production of Kindle books that include alphabetical index searching capabilities and dictionaries that can be used in lookup functions. A dictionary is a Kindle book .prc or .mobi file. A dictionary can be used to look up words and can be read as a standalone book in its own right. The publishing tool builds indexes into a Kindle book .prc file based on the entries that are marked up in the OEB source with XML tags. One or more indexes can be built into an eBook. Production of the OEB source is out of the scope of this document: the data is generally output from a database (Access, SQL, XML, etc.), and written into the OEB/HTML file by a software program. Dictionary is only supported in Mobi 7 format. When KindleGen 2 is used to create dictionaries, it only creates the Mobi 7 version. Reference list of tags •

. . .

Marks the scope of an entry in the index •



Use the name attribute to identify an index when there is more than one index in the eBook. •

Label of entry in Index

Marks the text that appears in the index search box for that entry Note: The label of the entry is limited to 127 characters in the index search view. If the label is longer than 127 characters, the full text is visible in the flow of the book, but the index search only uses the first 127 characters.

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers •



Use the value attribute to include label entry text that should not be displayed in the OEB flow. •

The following is an example from an address book. You can search for an entry by the name of the person, by company, or by city. In the first step in the index search box, enter the company name. Selecting a company opens a second window with a list of names of people belonging to that company. John Martin Company : Amazon City : Seattle Phone number : 01010101





Use the key attribute to include alternative key text that should not be displayed in the OEB flow. •



Use this tag to indicate the list of inflections attached to a grammatical group

7.1 Inflections for Dictionaries When building dictionaries, you may have multiple inflected forms of a single root word that should access the same entry. However, adding all of these inflected forms under the orthography (pronunciation) of a single entry leads to the generation of a large index, which negatively affects performance and user experience. Kindle has a disinflection engine that uses a set of rules for disinflecting any given word to its headword. The index then has only the headword to look up. To generate the set of disinflection rules for the dictionary, the input must include some information about the inflections. There are two ways to provide this information: simplified inflection syntax and advanced inflection syntax. 7.1.1 Simplified inflection syntax Simplified inflection syntax is a very simple way of giving information about the inflections. Previous versions of the file format supported using the infl attribute in either the or the tag and specifying a comma-separated list of inflected forms. This syntax is now deprecated, as it is not as accurate when disinflecting. 7.1.2 Advanced inflection syntax Inflections are handled by the inflection index built into the dictionary by the creator software, based on the inflected forms tagged in the content using the tag. Inflections are attached to the orthography of the entry. Inflections must be specified inside an tag. If an entry has multiple orthographies, each must have its own inflections.

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

Example: record

The inflgrp and name attributes are optional. The idx:infl, idx:iform, and value attributes are required.

7.2 Custom OPF Metadata for Dictionaries Set a source language and a target language for dictionaries. If a dictionary has multiple indexes, specify the name of the primary lookup index. Example: en-us en-us Index Name goes here ...

8 Media Queries The new Kindle Format 8 (KF8) includes greater support for Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). Currently, Kindle Fire is the only KF8 compliant device, but Amazon will extend KF8 to current generation e Ink devices and apps as soon as possible. For devices without KF8 support, content creators may require more control over the Mobi 7 experience than provided by the standard conversions supported by KindleGen. To address this need, Amazon has implemented media queries as a way to apply the best CSS styles for each file format. This allows complex CSS formatting to be used for KF8 and more basic formatting to be used for the Mobi format. Media queries are part of the W3 standard. For more information, visit http://www.w3.org/TR/css3mediaqueries/ Support for two new media types enables content creators to use specific CSS based on the Mobi or KF8 file format: amzn-mobi and amzn-kf8. •

For KF8 CSS styles, use the media query @media amzn-kf8. This is only applied for the KF8 format.

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers •

For Mobi CSS styles, use the media query @media amzn-mobi. This is only applied for the Mobi format.

The @media screen and @media all styles continue to apply to both KF8 and Mobi. If the media type is not amzn-mobi, amzn-kf8, screen, or all, Kindle ignores it.

8.1 Using Media Queries The following table outlines examples of supported media queries and the CSS applied to KF8, Mobi, and other readers: Media Queries in CSS @media

amzn-mobi

CSS Applied to KF8

CSS Applied to Mobi

-

CSS Applied to Other Readers -

{

fontsize:3em;

.class1

font-weight: bold;

{ font=size:3em; font-weight: bold; } }

.class1 { font-style: italic; font-size:2em;

font-style: italic; font-size: 2em;

} @media

font-style: italic; font-size: 3em;

font-style: italic; font-size:2em;

font-weight: bold;

amzn-mobi

{ .class1 { font-size:3em; font-weight: bold; } }

@media

amzn-mobi

{ .class1

font-style: italic; font-size:2em;

{

font-style: italic; font-size:2em;

fontsize:3em;

font-size:3em !important;

font-weight:

font-weight: bold

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font-style: italic;

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

Media Queries in CSS

CSS Applied to KF8

!important;

CSS Applied to Mobi

CSS Applied to Other Readers

bold;

} } .class1 { font-style: italic; font-size:2em; }

@media not amzn-mobi {

.firstletter

firstletter

.firstletter

.firstletter

{

{

{

{

float: left; float: left; font-size: 3em;

font-size: 3em;

padding-right: .2em; margin: 10px }

}

float: left; font-size: 3em;

line-height:

line-height: 1; font-weight: bold;

font-size: 3em;

line-height:

1;

1;

font-weight: bold;

font-weight: bold;

padding-right: .2em;

padding-right: .2em;

}

margin: 10px }

margin: 10px } }

@media amzn-mobi { .firstletter { font-size: 3em; } } @media amzn-kf8 and (maxwidth > 800px)

@media (max-width > 800px)

{

{

-

p { p {

color: red;

color: red; }

} }

}

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8.2 Using Media Queries for Backward Compatibility With Mobi Media queries allow one CSS file to supply complex CSS for KF8 and basic CSS for the Mobi format. Some guidelines: •

Complex CSS can be overridden for the Mobi format by redefining the same class inside the @media amzn-mobi media query.



Per the W3C standard, media queries should either be: o

Individual queries specified after the common CSS (such as amzn-mobi); or

o

Include !important with each property. (Example: @media amzn-mobi {.class1 {font-size: 3em !important; font-weight: bold !important;}})

CSS

CSS Styles Applied to Mobi

CSS Styles Applied to KF8

p

p

{

{

p { font-style: normal; }

font-style: normal;

font-style: normal;

}

}

h

h

h { font-weight: bold;

{

}

{ font-weight: bold;

font-weight: bold;

}

}

div.example {

div.example {

div.example { margin: 10px }

margin: 10px

margin: 10px

}

}

ul {

ul {

ul { margin: 20px padding-left: 30px;

margin: 20px

}

margin: 20px

padding-left: 30px;

padding-left: 30px;

}

}

.firstletter {

.firstletter {

.firstletter { float: left; font-size: 3em;

float: 0;

float: left;

line-height: 1;

font-size: 3em;

font-size: 3em;

font-weight:

line-height: 0;

line-height: 1;

font-weight:

font-weight: bold;

bold; padding-right:

bold;

.2em; }

padding-right: padding-right: 0;

.2em; }

)

@media amzn-mobi

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CSS

CSS Styles Applied to Mobi

CSS Styles Applied to KF8

{ .firstletter { float: 0; font-size: 3em; line-height: 0; font-weight: bold; padding-right: 0; } }

8.3 Submitting a Media Query There are four options for submitting media queries: •

One CSS file;



Different CSS files;



Style tags; and



@import.

8.3.1 Option 1: Using One CSS File. Media queries can specify different CSS for Mobi and KF8 formats in the same CSS file. In the example below, a different .class1 class is specified for the Mobi format than for the other formats in the same CSS file. Example: .class1 { font-style: italic; font-size:2em; } @media amzn-mobi { .class1 { font-size:3em; font-weight: bold; } }

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8.3.2 Option 2: Using Different CSS Files Media queries can specify different CSS for Mobi and KF8 formats in different CSS files. In the example below, the Mobi and KF8 formats utilize different CSS style sheets and the common CSS styles apply to all media. Example:

8.3.3 Option 3: Using Style tags Media queries can specify different CSS for Mobi and KF8 formats directly using tags. Example:

8.3.4 Option 4: Using @import Media queries can specify different CSS for Mobi and KF8 formats directly using @import to include different CSS files. Example: @import @import url(common.css); @import url(kf8.css) amzn-kf8; @import url(mobi7.css) amzn-mobi;

9 Kindle Best Practices 9.1 Testing Kindle Books There are three ways to test your Kindle book before adding it to the Kindle store: 1. Use the Kindle Previewer. You can test your EPUB file using the Kindle Previewer software, available for both Windows and Mac OS X. The Kindle Previewer allows you to select views that represent the different devices including Kindle, Kindle Fire, Kindle for PC, and Kindle for IOS. The Kindle Fire device view displays the content in Kindle Format 8. For installation instructions, see section 2.2.3, Kindle Previewer Software. 2. Use Kindle devices and Kindle applications. You can test Mobi 7 content on a Kindle e Ink device and on Kindle applications for PC/Mac/Android. You can text KF8 content on a Kindle Fire. 3. Use KDP. The Kindle Direct Publishing Platform accepts a variety of book formats and provides preview capability on the website. To learn more or sign up, visit http://kdp.amazon.com.

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

Once you can read your book, use this checklist to confirm that your Kindle book does not contain blatant errors. (For a finer level of quality assurance, check against the complete formatting guidelines in section 3, General Formatting Guidelines): 1. Open the book for the first time or go to the cover page. o

Cover: The Kindle book should have a cover.

o

Single Cover: From the cover, flip to the next page. There should not be another image of the cover page.

2. Go to the table of contents. o

In the table of contents, each item should be clickable and should jump to the correct location in the book. There should be no page numbers in the TOC.

3. Go to any location in the book. o

Font size: Change the font size in the Kindle menu; the book font should change accordingly. Regular text should not be bold or italicized, and its alignment should not be forced.

4. Go back to the first page and flip through every page of the book. o

Images: Images should not be too small. Make sure that all text in images is legible. Large pictures should be scaled to fit the page.

o

Tables: Tables should appear correctly. Make sure that all text in tables is legible.

o

Page numbers: There should not be any references to page numbers in the book, including in the cross-references, TOC, and index.

o

Material only included with physical book: There should not be any references to material (such as a CD or DVD) that is only included with the physical book.

10 Kindle Quality Guidelines Amazon strongly recommends that you verify your exported content before converting it into a Kindle book because some content creation tools format content differently when exported to HTML. In addition, Amazon encourages you to review the entire book for: •

missing content;



wrong content;



typos;



alignment errors;



forced font throughout the entire book; and



proper paragraph spacing.

These errors negatively affect readability and may require the Amazon team to suppress the title to protect the reader’s experience.

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

11 Appendices 11.1 Appendix A: HTML Tags Supported in Kindle Format 8 HTML Tag

Description

Supported on Kindle e Inkbased Device



Specifies a comment Specifies the document type This tag identifies a document as an XML document





Yes

Supported on Kindle Applications for PC, Mac, Android, Windows Phone Yes

Supported on Kindle Fire Tablet

Yes

No

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies a hyperlink



Specifies an address element

No

No

Yes



Specifies an article

No

No

Yes



Specifies content aside from the page content

No

No

Yes



Specifies bold text

Yes*

Yes*

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes



Makes the enclosed text one font size larger than the current or default font size



Specifies a long quotation

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies the body element

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Inserts a single line break

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies a table caption

No

No

Yes



Centers text horizontally

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies a citation

Yes

Yes

Yes

Specifies computer code text Specifies attributes for table columns Specifies a definition description

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

Yes

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies deleted text

Yes

Yes

Yes



Defines a definition term

Yes

Yes

Yes



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Notes

Links can only refer to items within the same file

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

HTML Tag

Description

Supported on Kindle e Inkbased Device

Supported on Kindle Fire Tablet

Yes*

Supported on Kindle Applications for PC, Mac, Android, Windows Phone Yes*



Specifies a section in a document



Specifies a definition list

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies a definition term

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies emphasized text

Yes*

Yes*

Yes

Alters the font appearance of the text it encloses Specifies caption for the figure element. Specifies a group of media content, and its caption Specifies a footer for a section or page

Yes*

Yes*

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes



Specifies a heading level 1

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies a heading level 2

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies a heading level 3

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies a heading level 4

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies a heading level 5

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies a heading level 6

Yes

Yes

Yes

Specifies information about the document Specifies a group of introductory or navigational aids, including hgroup elements Specifies a header for a section or page

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes



Specifies a horizontal rule

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies an html document

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies italic text

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies an image

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies inserted text

No

No

Yes



Specifies keyboard text

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies a list item

Yes*

Yes*

Yes









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Notes

Yes

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

HTML Tag

Description

Supported on Kindle e Inkbased Device

Supported on Kindle Fire Tablet

Notes

No

Supported on Kindle Applications for PC, Mac, Android, Windows Phone No

Yes

Can only reference items within the same file

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes



Specifies a resource reference



Specifies marked text



Specifies a menu list



Specifies an ordered list

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies some types of output

No

No

Yes



Specifies a paragraph

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies preformatted text

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies a short quotation

No

No

Yes

Used for the benefit of browsers that don't support ruby annotations Specifies the ruby text component of a ruby annotation. Specifies sample computer code

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies a section

No

No

Yes



Specifies small text

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies media resources

No

No

Yes



Specifies a section in a document

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies strong text

Yes*

Yes*

Yes

No

No

Yes









Specifies a style definition



Create a strikethrough text

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies subscripted text

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies superscripted text

Yes*

Yes*

Yes

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Replaced by in KindleGen

Can only reference items within the same file

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

HTML Tag

Description

Supported on Kindle e Inkbased Device

Supported on Kindle Fire Tablet

Yes*

Supported on Kindle Applications for PC, Mac, Android, Windows Phone Yes*



Specifies a table



Specifies a table body

No

No

Yes



Specifies a table cell

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies a table footer

No

No

Yes



Specifies a table header

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies a table header

No

No

Yes



Specifies a date/time

No

No

Yes



Specifies the document title

Yes

Yes

Yes



Specifies a table row

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Underlines any text it encloses

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies an unordered list

Yes*

Yes*

Yes



Specifies a variable

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

Yes



Specifies a line break opportunity for very long words and strings of text with no spaces.



Specifies navigation links

No

Yes

Yes

Specifies a summary/caption for the element

No

Yes

Yes



No

No*

No



Specifies a video No

No*

No



Specified an audio content

Notes

Yes

Only on IOS devices Only on IOS devices

*Partial support (see http://www.mobipocket.com/dev/article.asp?BaseFolder=prcgen&File=TagRef_OEB.htm ) The following HTML tags are not supported in the Kindle format: • • • • •

Canvas Command Datalist Script (reserved for Amazon use only) Base

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55

Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers • • • • • • • • •

Form Eventsource KeyGen Input Embed (Only SVG is supported for Kindle Fire) Object (Only SVG is supported for Kindle Fire) Param Noscript IFrame

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11.2 Appendix B: CSS Selectors, Attributes, and Properties Supported in Kindle Format CSS Attribute

Supported on Kindle e Inkbased Device

Supported on Kindle Fire Tablet

No

Supported on Kindle Applications for PC, Mac, Android, Windows Phone No

/*Comment*/ @import

No

No

Yes

@charset

No

No

Yes

@font-face

No

No

Yes

*

No

No

Yes

E

No

No

Yes

E.class

No

No

Yes

E#id

No

No

Yes

E:link

No

No

Yes

E:visited

No

No

Yes

Margin

No

No

Yes

Padding

No

No

Yes

Width

No

No

Yes

Height

No

No

Yes

Float

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

Display

No

No

Yes

min-width

No

No

Yes

max-width

No

No

Yes

min-height

No

No

Yes

max-height

No

No

Yes

Clip

No

No

Yes

Visibility

No

No

Yes

Border

No

No

Yes

Yes

Clear

Kindle Publishing Guidelines

Amazon.com

Notes

CSS Comment Import external style sheets Declares Character encoding Allows for linking to fonts Selects all elements Matches any E element (div, span, p) Class selector ID selector Link selector (not yet visited) Link selector (visited) Sets margin properties Sets padding properties Sets width of an element Sets height of an element Specifies if a box should float on the side Specifies which side of an element where other floating elements are not allowed Specifies the type of box an element should generate Sets minimum width of an element Sets maximum width of an element Sets minimum height of an element Sets maximum height of an element Clips an absolutely positioned element Specifies whether or not an element is visible Sets all border properties

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

CSS Attribute

Supported on Kindle Fire Tablet

No

Supported on Kindle Applications for PC, Mac, Android, Windows Phone No

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

border-radius

No

No

Yes

line-height

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

Position

No

No

Yes

Top

No

No

Yes

Right

No

No

Yes

Bottom

No

No

Yes

Left

No

No

Yes

z-index

No

No

Yes

list-style

No

No

Yes

list-styleimage

No

No

Yes

list-styleposition

No

No

Yes

list-styletype

No

No

Yes

Color

No

No

Yes

border-color

border-style

border-width

border-top

Supported on Kindle e Inkbased Device

Yes

Notes

Sets the colors of all four borders Sets the style of all four borders Sets the width of all four borders Sets the top border properties

border-right

border-bottom

border-left

verticalalign

Kindle Publishing Guidelines

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Sets the right border properties Sets the bottom border properties Sets the left border properties Sets the radius for rounded corner in borders Sets the vertical space between baselines Sets vertical alignment Sets type of positioning (static, relative, absolute) Sets the top margin edge for a position box Sets the right margin edge for a position box Sets the bottom margin edge for a position box Sets the left margin edge for a position box Sets the stack order of an element Sets the properties of a list Specifies an image as the list-item marker Specifies where to place the list item market Specifies the type of list item marker Sets the color of text 58

Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

CSS Attribute

Opacity Background

Supported on Kindle e Inkbased Device

Supported on Kindle Fire Tablet

Notes

No

Supported on Kindle Applications for PC, Mac, Android, Windows Phone No

Yes

Sets the transparency of an element

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

Sets the background property backgroundattachment

Sets whether a background image is fixed or scrolls with the rest of the page No

No

Yes

backgroundcolor

Sets the background color of an element No

No

Yes

backgroundimage

Sets the background image of an element No

No

Yes

backgroundposition

Sets the starting position of a background image No

No

Yes

backgroundrepeat

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

backgroundclip

backgroundorigin

Determines the background positioning area

backgroundsize

No

No

Yes

Font

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

font-family

font-size

Sets how a background image is repeated Specifies whether an element's background, either the color or image, extends underneath its border

font-style

Kindle Publishing Guidelines

Amazon.com

Specifies the size of the background images Sets all font properties Allows for a prioritized list of font family names and/or generic family names to be specified for the selected element Specifies the size of the font Allows font style (italic or oblique) to be selected within a font-family

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

CSS Attribute

font-variant

No

Supported on Kindle Applications for PC, Mac, Android, Windows Phone No

font-weight

No

No

Yes

text-align

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

white-space

No

No

Yes

text-shadow

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

textdecoration text-indent texttransform letterspacing

Supported on Kindle e Inkbased Device

Supported on Kindle Fire Tablet

Notes

Yes

Selects a normal, or smallcaps face from a font family Specifies the weight or boldness of the font Specifies the horizontal alignment of text

word-spacing

text-overflow

word-wrap

Direction

bordercollapse borderspacing caption-side empty-cells

Kindle Publishing Guidelines

Amazon.com

Specifies the decoration to be added to the text Specifies the indentation of the first line in a text block Controls the capitalization of the text Increases or decreases the space between characters in a text Increases or decreases the space between words in a text Specifies how white space inside an element is handled Specifies the shadow effect added to text Specifies whether an ellipsis displays when text content has overflowed its given layout area Specifies whether or not the browser is allowed to break lines within words to prevent overflow when an otherwise unbreakable string is too long to fit Sets the base text direction and block-level elements and the direction that cells flow within a table row Selects the border model Specifies the distance between the borders of adjacent cells Positions the content of tablecaption at the specified side Specifies how to render borders and backgrounds around cells that have no 60

Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

CSS Attribute

Supported on Kindle e Inkbased Device

Supported on Kindle Applications for PC, Mac, Android, Windows Phone

Supported on Kindle Fire Tablet

Notes

visible content. Outline

No

No

Yes

outline-color

No

No

Yes

outline-style

No

No

Yes

outline-width

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

Width

No

No

Yes

Height

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

deviceaspect-ratio

No

No

Yes

Color

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

No

No

Yes

outlineoffset

device-width

device-height

color-index

Monochrome

Sets the outline properties Sets the color of an outline Sets the style of an outline Sets the width of an outline Sets the space between an outline and the edge or border of an element Specifies the width of the content area of an element Specifies the height of the content area of an element The width of the screen in CSS pixels at zoom factor 1.0 The height of the screen in CSS pixels at zoom factor 1.0 Describes the aspect ratio of the output device Sets the color of text Describes the number of entries in the color lookup table of the output device Describes the number of bits per pixel in a monochrome frame buffer

The following CSS selectors, attributes, and properties are not supported in the Kindle format:

• • • • • • • • • • • •

E + F (Direct adjacent) E ~ F (Indirect adjacent) E: first-child E: first-of-type E: last-child E: last-of-type E: only-child E: only-of-type E: nth-child E: nth-last-child E: nth-of-type E: nth-last-of-type

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Publishing on Kindle: Guidelines for Publishers

• • • • • •

E: first-letter E: first-line E: before E: after E::before E::afterCounter-incrementCounter-reset

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