Working Group Draft 20120227
Copyright © 2012 International Digital Publishing Forum™
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Status of this Document
This is an IDPF Working Group draft that has no official status at this time. It may be updated, replaced, or rendered obsolete by other documents at any time. Its publication does not imply endorsement by the IDPF membership or the IDPF EPUB 3 Working Group.
Table of Contents
EPUB documents, unlike print books or PDF files, are designed to change. The content flows, or reflows, to fit the screen and to fit the needs of the reader. The EPUB 3.0 Specification says that “content presentation should adapt to the user rather than the user having to adapt to a particular representation of content.”
But this principle doesn’t work for all types of documents. Sometimes content and design are so intertwined they cannot be separated. Any change in appearance risks changing the meaning, or losing all meaning. Fixed-layout documents give content creators greater control over presentation, when a reflowable EPUB is not suitable for the content.
This document, EPUB 3 Fixed-Layout Documents, defines a set of metadata properties to allow declarative expression of intended rendering behaviors of fixed-layout documents in the context of EPUB 3.
EPUB 3 affords three mechanisms for representing fixed-layout content in EPUB 3 documents: as bitmap images, as SVG, and as XHTML that uses CSS absolute positioning. When fixed-layout content is necessary, the author's choice between these representations will depend on many factors including desired degree of precision, file size, accessibility, etc. This document does not attempt to dictate this choice, and a fully-conforming EPUB 3 Reading System should support all three of these options.
Name |
|
---|---|
Description |
Specifies whether the given Publication or spine item is reflowable or pre-paginated. |
Value |
|
Usage |
Package Document Package Document |
Initial |
In In |
Cardinality |
In In |
When the rendition:layout
property is specified on the Package
Document meta
element, it indicates that the paginated or
reflowable layout style (see below) applies globally for the given
Publication (i.e. for all spine items).
As ‘reflowable’ is the initial value of this property in the
meta
usage context, this value must be assumed by Reading
Systems as the global value if no meta
element carrying this
property occurs in the Package Document instance.
The rendition:layout
property may also be specified on the
Package Document spine itemref
element, and will in this case
override the global value for the
given spine item. (Refer to Specifying name-value
pairs on the spine itemref element for syntactical rules specific to
local specification.)
For any given spine item that has a value for the
rendition:layout
property, attained either through
inheritance from a global
specification or through a local
specification, the allowed values have the following meaning:
Reading Systems typically restrict or deny the application of User or User Agent stylesheets to pre-paginated documents, since as a result of intrinsic properties of such documents, dynamic style changes are highly likely to have unintended consequences. Authors should take into account the negative impact on usability and accessibility that these restrictions have when choosing to use pre-paginated instead of reflowable content. Refer to Guideline 1.4 - Provide text configuration of the W3C User Agent Accessibility Guidelines for related information.
Name |
|
---|---|
Description |
Specifies which orientation(s) the Author intends for the given Publication or spine item to be rendered in. |
Value |
|
Usage |
Package Document Package Document |
Initial |
In In |
Cardinality |
In In |
When the rendition:orientation
property is specified on the
Package Document meta
element, it indicates that the intended
orientation applies globally for the given Publication (i.e. for all spine
items).
As ‘auto’ is the initial value of this property in the meta
usage context, this value must be assumed by Reading Systems as the global
value if no meta
element carrying this property occurs in the
Package Document instance.
The rendition:orientation
property may also be specified on the
Package Document spine itemref
element, and will in this case
override the global value for the
given spine item. (Refer to Specifying name-value
pairs on the spine itemref element for syntactical rules.)
For any given spine item that has a value for the
rendition:orientation
property, attained either through
inheritance from a global
specification or through a local
specification, the allowed values have the following meaning:
Reading Systems that support multiple orientations should, unless the given value is 'auto', convey the intended orientation to the user. The means by which the intent is conveyed is implementation-specific.
Name |
|
---|---|
Description |
Specifies the intended Reading System synthetic spread behavior for this Publication or spine item. |
Value |
|
Usage |
Package Document Package Document |
Initial |
In In |
Cardinality |
In In |
When the rendition:spread
property is specified on the Package
Document meta
element, it indicates that the intended synthetic
spread behavior applies globally for the given Publication (i.e. for all
spine items).
As ‘auto’ is the initial value of this property in the meta
usage context, this value must be assumed by Reading Systems as the global
value if no meta
element carrying this property occurs in the
Package Document instance.
The rendition:spread
property may also be specified on the
Package Document spine itemref
element, and will in this case
override the global value for the
given spine item. (Refer to Specifying name-value
pairs on the spine itemref element for syntactical rules.)
For any given spine item that has a value for the
rendition:spread
property, attained either through
inheritance from a global
specification or through a local
specification, the allowed values have the following meaning, where
synthetic spread is defined as the rendering of two
adjacent pages simultaneously on the device screen.
When synthetic spreads are used, the size given via viewport/viewBox metadata represents the size of one page in the spread.
Refer to 3.4.12 The spine Element for information about declaration of
global flow directionality using the
page-progression-direction
attribute and that of local
page-progression-direction within content documents.
Refer also to Issue 205 for discussions on forthcoming specifications of
precedence rules for the page-progression-direction
attribute and the writing-mode
and direction
properties within XHTML Content Documents.
Names |
and, as defined in [Publications30]
|
---|---|
Description |
Specifies the forced placement of a Content Document in a synthetic spread |
Usage |
Package Document spine |
Cardinality |
Zero or one |
When a Reading System is rendering synthetic spreads, the default behavior is to populate the spread, which conceptually consists of two adjacent viewports, by rendering the next Content Document in the next available unpopulated viewport, where the location of “next” is determined by the given page progression direction, or by local declarations within content documents. By providing one of the page-spread-* properties on the spine itemref element, the author can override this automatic population behavior by forcing the given Content Document to be placed in a particular viewport.
The page-spread-left
and page-spread-right
properties
are defined in [Publications30]. This document
defines one additional property, rendition:page-spread-center
,
which indicates that the synthetic spread mode should be overridden such that
instead of two adjacent viewports, a single viewport must be used, and
positioned at the center of the screen. Note that the presence of
rendition:page-spread-center
does not in itself affect the viewport dimensions.
The page-spread-left
, page-spread-right
and
rendition:page-spread-center
properties apply to both
pre-paginated and reflowable content, and they only apply when the Reading
System is creating synthetic spreads.
When the metadata properties defined in this document are included in an EPUB 3
Package Document, they must be mapped to the URI
http://www.idpf.org/vocab/rendition/#
using the
prefix
attribute, as defined in EPUB Publications 3.0 vocabulary association.
<package … prefix="rendition: http://www.idpf.org/vocab/rendition/#"> … </package>
Implementors should note that future revisions of [Publications30] may establish the vocabulary represented by the URI
http://www.idpf.org/vocab/rendition/#
as a reserved vocabulary. In this case, the result will be that a) explicit
mapping declaration using the prefix
attribute will no longer be
applicable, and b) the prefix ‘rendition’ will be reserved for this vocabulary.
Future revisions of [Publications30] may also
integrate the properties defined here into the Package Document default
vocabulary. In this case the properties defined herein will be allowed to occur
in Package Documents without a prefix.
Note that Package Documents may include additional proprietary metadata properties that pertain to layout expressions (refer to Vocabulary Association Mechanisms for further information on extensibility ). Reading Systems must ignore such expressions if they behaviorally conflict with the property semantics defined in this document.
In the context of the properties defined in this document, and when specifying
property name-value pairs in the properties
attribute on the
Package Document spine itemref
element, the following syntax must
be used.
The property name and value is concatenated into a single string using a
hyphen-minus character (U+002D
) as separator. Note
that leading and trailing whitespace around the separator character is not
allowed.
For example, to express that the rendition:layout
property has the
value ‘reflowable’ for the given spine item, the string
‘rendition:layout-reflowable’ is used:
<itemref … properties="rendition:layout-reflowable"/>
This section defines how to express the intrinsic dimensionality properties of XHTML
and SVG Content Documents [ContentDocs30]. Each
spine item which has the ‘pre-paginated’ value set for its
rendition:layout
property must contain the viewport (for XHTML) or
viewBox (for SVG) rendering instructions as defined below.
For both XHTML and SVG Content Documents, the dimension (viewport/viewbox) expressions identified below define the CSS initial containing block expressed in CSS Pixels. [CSS]
Reading Systems must clip XHTML content to the initial containing block dimensions declared in the viewport meta tag/viewBox attribute, and therefore content positioned outside of the initial containing block is not going to be visible. When the initial containing block aspect ratio does not match the aspect ratio of the Reading System content display area, Reading Systems may position the initial containing block inside the area to accommodate the user interface; in other words, added letter-boxing space may appear on either side (or both) of the content.
This document does not define how the initial containing block will be placed within the Reading System content display area.
XHTML viewport dimensions are expressed using the viewport meta tag using syntax as per [MetaTags]. In this version of this document, only the width and height expressions are required to be recognized by Reading Systems.
Example:
<head> … <meta name="viewport" content="width=1200, height=600"/> … </head>
SVG viewport dimensions are defined using the viewBox attribute [SVG11].
Example:
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" width="100%" height="100%" viewBox="0 0 844 1200"> … </svg>
Fully fixed-layout content, intended to be rendered using synthetic spreads in landscape orientation, and no spreads in portrait orientation.
OPF
<meta property="rendition:layout">pre-paginated</meta> <meta property="rendition:spread">landscape</meta>
XHTML
All content documents contain:
<meta name="viewport" content="width=512, height=600"/>
Note: to leave the spread behavior up to the Reading System, the rendition:spread element is either omitted or set to ‘auto’.
Fully fixed-layout content, intended to be rendered without synthetic spreads, and locked to landscape orientation.
OPF
<meta property="rendition:layout">pre-paginated</meta> <meta property="rendition:spread">none</meta> <meta property="rendition:orientation">landscape</meta>
XHTML
All content documents contain:
<meta name="viewport" content="width=1024, height=600"/>
Reflowable content with a single fixed-layout page (title page), where the fixed-layout page is intended for right-hand spread slot if the device renders synthetic spreads.
OPF
<meta property="rendition:layout">reflowable</meta> <meta property="rendition:spread">auto</meta> … <itemref id="titlepage" properties="page-spread-right rendition:layout-pre-paginated"/>
XHTML
The content document representing the title page contains:
<meta name="viewport" content="width=684, height=1024"/>
Note that in this example, both the rendition:layout
and
rendition:spread
properties are set to their initial values,
which means that these two meta elements can be omitted without any impact on
the resulting expression.
Fully fixed-layout content where synthetic spreads — if used — must be disabled for a center plate.
OPF
<meta property="rendition:layout">pre-paginated</meta> <meta property="rendition:spread">auto</meta> … <itemref id="center-plate" properties="rendition:page-spread-center"/>
XHTML
The content document representing the center plate contains:
<meta name="viewport" content="width=1024, height=600"/>
Note that even though the center plate viewport dimension expression indicates landscape orientation, the author has omitted the orientation property, leaving it to the Reading System to decide how to handle the situation. Note also that the rendition:spread=none expression is not needed here, as the rendition:page-spread-center property already specifies semantics that dictates that synthetic spreads be disabled.
Note finally that in this example, the rendition:spread
property is
set to its initial value, and so it can be omitted without any impact on the
resulting expression.
Reflowable content with a fixed-layout two-page center plate that is intended to be rendered using synthetic spreads in any device orientation. The author has left spread behavior for the other (reflowable) parts of the publication undefined, since the global value of rendition:spread is initialized to ‘auto’.
OPF
<spine page-progression-direction="ltr"> … <itemref id="center-plate-left" properties="rendition:spread-both page-spread-left"/> <itemref id="center-plate-right" properties="rendition:spread-both page-spread-right"/> … </spine>
XHTML
The two content documents representing the center plate contains:
<meta name="viewport" content="width=512, height=600"/>
Fully fixed-layout content which includes three separate stylesheets used for three different device categories, using [MediaQueries].
OPF
<meta property="rendition:layout">pre-paginated</meta>
XHTML
<link rel="stylesheet" href="eink-style.css" media="(max-monochrome: 3)"/> <link rel="stylesheet" href="skinnytablet-style.css" media="((color) and (max-height:600px) and (orientation:landscape), (color) and (max-width:600px) and (orientation:portrait))" /> <link rel="stylesheet" href="fattablet-style.css" media="((color) and (min-height:601px) and (orientation:landscape), (color) and (min-width:601px) and (orientation:portrait)" />
Japanese manga in the right-to-left page progression direction. Each content document is a very simple HTML containing a bitmap and nothing else, and does not have associated CSS stylesheets.
OPF
<meta property="rendition:layout">pre-paginated</meta> <meta property="rendition:spread">landscape</meta> … <spine page-progression-direction="rtl"> … </spine>
Note that the page progression direction for the HTML content documents is 'ltr' rather than 'rtl'. This is because the reading system typically uses the default CSS stylesheet and the page progression direction implied by it is 'rtl'. Each spread is created by first using the right page and then the left page.
XHTML
All XHTML content documents contain:
<meta name="viewport" content="width=512, height=600"/>
The tables below describe how the vocabulary defined in this document maps to some of the pre-existing proprietary metadata vocabularies for fixed-layout expressions.
Amazon Property | IDPF Equivalent (prefixes omitted for clarity) |
---|---|
fixed-layout (true | false) |
layout (reflowable | pre-paginated) |
original-resolution (width, ‘x’, height) |
viewport (XHTML meta) |
orientation (portrait | landscape) |
orientation (portrait | landscape | auto) |
book-type (children | comic) |
not applicable |
RegionMagnification (true | false) |
not applicable, proprietary |
Sony Property | IDPF Equivalent (prefixes omitted for clarity) |
---|---|
fixed-layout (true | false) |
layout (reflowable | pre-paginated) |
orientation (portrait | landscape | auto) |
orientation (portrait | landscape | auto) |
page-spread (full | double | auto) |
rendition:spread (none | portrait | landscape | both | auto) |
overflow-scroll (true | false) |
defined in CSS |
viewport |
viewport (XHTML meta) |
Note that for page-spread
, the values for 'portrait' and 'both' would
all map to 'double', 'landscape' would map to 'auto', and 'none' would map to
'full'.
Apple currently stores some of this metadata in an XML file in META-INF.
Apple Property | IDPF Equivalent (prefixes omitted for clarity) |
---|---|
fixed-layout (true | false) |
layout (reflowable | pre-paginated) |
viewport (XHTML meta) |
viewport (XHTML meta) |
orientation (landscape-only | portrait-only | none) |
orientation (landscape | portrait | auto) |
platform name |
no equivalent |
open-to-spread (true | false) |
no equivalent |
An informative note at the end of Section 3.3.1 ("CSS 2.1") of EPUB 3 Content Documents has been a source of some confusion relative to fixed layout and EPUB 3. This appendix intends to clarify that note until the specification is updated accordingly.
The note states: “The ability of Reading Systems to paginate absolutely positioned layouts is not guaranteed, so reliance on absolute positioning is discouraged. Reading Systems might not support these property values.”
First, given its location in the CSS section of the specification, it should be noted
that this statement is only applicable to fixed-layout documents that utilize CSS.
Second, this note does not imply that the “absolute” value of the position property
is not in the EPUB 3 CSS profile; position:absolute
is in fact part of
the profile, since it is part of its baseline (CSS 2.1). Only the fixed
value is excluded from the EPUB 3 CSS Profile (as stated in normative prose above
the note).
Lastly, this note does not discourage use of CSS for absolutely positioned layouts but only reliance on such for content expected to be delivered to arbitrary Reading Systems, which as stated may not support these values. In particular, EPUB 2.x Reading Systems will likely not support these values, as they were not included in the EPUB 2 CSS Profile. Many uses of absolutely-positioned CSS will gracefully degrade if these property values are ignored, and such graceful degradation behavior (non-reliance) is encouraged.
[ContentDocs30]EPUB Content Documents 3.0
[CSS]Cascading Style Sheets Level 2 Revision 1 (CSS 2.1) Specification
[MediaQueries]Media Queries
[MetaTags]Supported Meta Tags (informative)
[Publications30]EPUB Publications 3.0