


For example, when most paragraphs in the source document were center-aligned, Atlantis put the corresponding attributes in the definition of the "p" element selector in the eBook's CSS file: To make the eBook file more compact, Atlantis used to include the most common formatting properties found in the source document in the definitions of the element selectors of the eBook's CSS file. Formatting of element selectorsĪny eBook file generated by Atlantis contains a CSS file with all the formatting patterns used to display the eBook contents. These automatic lists will now display in eReaders in much the same way as they do in the source document. Starting with this version, Atlantis will preserve most of the original formatting of automatic lists to eBooks. As a result, automatic lists in eBooks often looked very different from how they looked in the source documents. However, older versions of Atlantis did not save the formatting properties of these list items to eBooks. Various indents, line spacing, paragraph alignments, etc.

Items of automatic lists in an Atlantis source document can be formatted in many different ways. When Atlantis saves a document as eBook, it tries to save any automatic list from the source document to an automatic HTML list (using the HTML "ul" and "ol" elements). Automatic lists in eBooksĪutomatic lists (both bulleted and numbered) are supported in Atlantis documents and eBooks. This version of Atlantis includes a number of changes to the Save as eBook feature, plus bug fixes and minor improvements.
