2017
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Introduction
- Quark digital publishing options
- Defining your goals and limitations
- Hardware, operating systems, and formats
- General design approach
- Mistakes to avoid
- Projects and Layouts
- Digital layouts
- Creating a digital layout
- Working with layouts
- Adding interactivity to digital layouts
- Working with interactivity actions
- East Asian features in Digital layouts
- Text in Digital layouts
- Fonts in Digital layouts
- Hyperlinks in Digital layouts
- Groups in Digital layouts
- Synchronizing content between orientations
- Updating missing files
- Reviewing Digital Publishing asset usage
- Working with Reflow
- Creating a TOC for ePub or Kindle
- Working with eBook metadata
- Digital layouts
- Working with output styles
- HTML5 Publications
- Exporting for ePub
- Exporting for Kindle
- The App Studio feature
- Understanding App Studio
- Creating an App Studio issue
- Creating an App Studio app
- Preparing to submit an App Studio app to Apple
- Creating your developer account
- Getting your iPad's device ID
- Creating your iOS Development Certificate
- Creating your iOS Distribution Certificate
- Registering devices
- Creating an app ID
- Setting up for push notifications
- Creating a Development Provisioning Profile
- Creating an App Store Provisioning Profile
- Creating an app description in iTunes Connect
- Setting up in-app purchases
- Preparing to submit an Android App Studio app
- Requesting an App Studio app
- Updating an App Studio app
- Preparing to submit an App Studio app to Apple
- Submitting an app to Apple
- Submitting an Android app
- Exporting as an iOS app
- Legal notices
- Index
A page stack
• Build and test your templates. If you're templating multiple publications, make
sure you think about orientation during the templating phase and do plenty of
testing before you start using those templates in production. Test your fonts,
colors, styling, and UI on all of the devices you plan to publish to. If you're
converting content that was designed for another medium, look for problems
with very small elements such as narrow and hairline rules, frames, small text,
etc.
• Build your content in an organized way. Decide on naming conventions for
styles, colors, objects, and so forth, and stick to them. Consider putting all of your
interactive items on their own layer so that you can easily show, hide, and isolate
them.
• Save the reflow view for last. Make sure your visual layout is FINAL before you
start working on reflow view.
• Test, test, test. It's worth a little tedium to avoid embarrassing yourself and having
to re-release apps and content. Make sure you test with someone other than the
people who designed the content and/or app.
DIGITAL PUBLISHING WITH QUARKXPRESS 2017 | 17
GENERAL DESIGN APPROACH