All formatting in Microsoft Word can, and should, be done with Microsoft Word Styles, rather than manually, or “by hand” (manually pressing the space bar to create a first line indent or pressing the enter key several times to create a new page).
A file that was formatted by hand may look great on the computer screen, but it will look terrible on the Kindle.
(We show you later how to replace that manual formatting with MS Word Styles)
Our next step then, in the creation of a beautiful Kindle eBook is to get rid of all manual formatting.
In a previous article, we told you how to clear out old formatting with Clear Formatting , but that won’t get rid of such things as extra spaces and extra paragraph returns, and extra tabs that we put in by hand to format our document… and it won’t get rid of stray spaces, periods, and commas, that we, or an editor, left in by accident.
We will have to go through and take out all that extra stuff the same way we put it in… by hand.
It will be easier if we can see what we are doing, so we will make the formatting marks visible, as explained here:
MS Word Show All Formatting Marks
Now that we can see all those extra marks, we can go through and take out the extra format marks. To make this easier, set your screen view to Draft or Normal, depending on your version of Word. (Main Menu|View|Draft or Normal).
MS Word Show All Formatting Marks
Now that we can see all those extra marks, we can go through and take out the extra format marks. To make this easier, set your screen view to Draft or Normal, depending on your version of Word. (Main Menu|View|Draft or Normal).
Now look closely at all those funny marks (formatting symbols) on your screen.
You will probably see a lot of extra paragraph returns, the symbol for which is [¶].
That’s what publishers call a “pilcrow”. Here is a “pilcrow” enclosed within square brackets [¶].
Can you see a pilcrow on your Word Taskbar? That’s a switch to show or hide all these formatting marks. They still can cause problems, though, even if they are hidden from view.
For our Kindle format file, we want just one paragraph return at the end of every paragraph. Space between paragraphs should be added by the MS Word Style, not with the paragraph return.
At the very least, extra paragraph returns can make your Kindle format file look messy.
At worst, a lot of extra paragraph returns can confuse MS Word to the point that it blows up your file. (That’s for any MS Word file… it has nothing to do with the Kindle.)
It’s easy to see why we must get rid of extra paragraph returns.
Some other things are not as easy to see, but just as important.
A single space just before the beginning or end of a paragraph may not even be noticeable, but will result in those uneven first-line indents you hear people moaning about.
First line indents created with the space bar or with the tab key may be OK on your computer screen, but may not be consistent on the Kindle.
It’s better to get rid of them and add first line indents with your MS Word Style.
Random extra spaces, extra periods, or extra commas won’t blow up your file, but your Kindle text will be more beautiful if you delete them.
Here is a list of the most common offenders that you can delete with a simple search and replace.
In the list below, we will search and replace (The Word command is actually “Find and Replace”) and repeat until Word reports “0 found” or “none found”.
To get rid of extra paragraph returns, that would be:
Find All ^p^p
Replace with ^p
Then just repeat until Word returns "none" or "0" (zero)
The “Special Character” that allows you to search for a paragraph return is ^p… that’s a caret followed by a p. [^p]
And... that MUST be a lower-case letter p.
And... that MUST be a lower-case letter p.
To find the “Special Character” that allows you to search for other items, do this:
Click CTRL-H
Click More at bottom of box
Click Special at bottom of box
Select the item you want from the “pick box”
Now, comes some human decision-making that we can’t leave to automatic Search and Replace.
I said before that you should never use manual formatting, but that isn’t true in the case of page breaks.
Sometimes you must use manual page breaks to get them right.
If yours are OK, just go to the next step… but if you have extra page breaks, resulting in blank pages, now is a good time to fix them.
The MS Word command “Clear Formatting”, which we used earlier, does not clear out “manual” page breaks, so we must take any extras out by hand.
To do that, search for Manual Page Breaks, then decide in each case if you really want a page break there, if not, leave “Replace with” blank and do a “Find Next”.
The Special Character for Manual Page Break is ^m.
So you would search for ^m, to check to see if those page breaks should be there or not… if not, just “find next” to go to the next page break.
It's also a good idea to look for "Section Breaks". They aren't needed in a Kindle file, and can cause problems. So, either delete them or replace them with page breaks, if needed.
The special code for "Section Break" is ^b (caret b).
It's also a good idea to look for "Section Breaks". They aren't needed in a Kindle file, and can cause problems. So, either delete them or replace them with page breaks, if needed.
The special code for "Section Break" is ^b (caret b).
Now, you are ready to get rid of problem-causing extra characters.
Replace all 2 paragraphs with 1 paragraph
Repeat until Word reports "none" or 0 found”.
Continue in the same manner with “Find and Replace” each character until Word reports that it has found them all.
Replace All: two spaces one space
Replace All: space period with period
Replace All: space paragraph with paragraph
Replace All: paragraph space with paragraph
Replace All: three periods with elipisis
Replace All: two periods with one period
Replace All: all tabs with nothing
Replace All: two commas with one comma
Replace All: space comma with comma
Replace All: comma period with period
You will see your document much as it will look to the end user… complete with paragraph breaks and page breaks.
When you page through the entire document, you will likely find page breaks where none are needed, and other places where they are needed but missing, and likely a lot of places where paragraph breaks are needed or missing… those will all be more obvious in this view.
I like to look at my entire file with page size set at regular page size first, because it's faster to page through fewer pages; but then I change page size to 3.5" x 5.1 inches and set the margin to .25 all around. That gives the closest possible to the Kindle pages size, for the final view.
When your file looks good at this step, you are ready to load Mobipocket Creator to get ready to publish your book...
Click the photo of Birds on a Tight-Rope, to go back to your to-do list, to start your final steps towards publishing your manuscript to the Amazon Kindle.
Re "Replace All: all tabs with nothing"
ReplyDeleteHow to I find a tab with Find and Replace? what symbol represents tab?
postcardged said...
ReplyDeleteRe "Replace All: all tabs with nothing"
How to I find a tab with Find and Replace? what symbol represents tab?
November 5, 2011 7:51 AM
~~~~~~~~~~~
To find a tab, use "^t" (caret t).
Be sure to use lower case t.
Use the method I described in the article to identify "Special Characters" you don't know.
Hi CJ,
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, thank you for this awesome site!!! I wasn't getting anywhere with the Kindle directions or anyone else's "how to" guides. Everything has worked out perfectly per your instructions, but I'm having some trouble with the character commands.
Where do you find the characters necessary to make the changes? I'm not sure what character to use for the "replace all two spaces one space" and so forth in regards to all the other instructions on the replacement list. I've successfully replaced all the ^p^p and ^t, but don't know the symbols that signify the other commands. The only space commands on my “Special” menu are Nonbreaking Space and Whitespace.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. :D
Hi melika,
ReplyDeleteIn the interests of trying to keep my explanation as "easy" as possible, I didn't try to show the keystrokes where they are just regular key strokes... so "replace two spaces with one space" is just find "press the space bar twice" and replace with "press the space bar once".
The same is true for multiple periods and/or multiple commas, and other punctuation marks.
You'd be surprised to find how hard it is to write a complete book... no matter how good you are... and not accidentally type extra spaces and or extra periods, commas, and others.
But... back to Special characters.
They should show up in the list when you choose "Search and Replace" (or CTRL_H) then Special at the bottom of the menu box.
What software are you using?
Hi CJ,
ReplyDeleteFantastic! I replaced the “. space space” with “. space” and it got rid of all the extra spaces after the periods--2,445 in total!
Correct me if I’m wrong, but did you have an article about how to fix the spacing between chapter headings and the first paragraph? I remember reading that somewhere. I already got rid of the extra paragraphs, so should that fix the problem? The headings are also left-aligned for some reason, even though I “justified,” “centered,” and put them in “Heading 1” style.
I know. Everything looks beautiful in Word. The panicking doesn’t start until you upload it to Mobi and see how seasick everything looks. :)
I’m actually putting out two Kindle/CreateSpace novels (republishing one and launching a new one), so this is good practice for me. The one I’m working on now is the shorter of the two, which makes it much more manageable to use as a guinea pig. :)
I’m using Windows 7/Microsoft Office 2010 on a Vaio laptop.
Melika
Thanks for reporting in, Melika.
ReplyDeleteThe best thing about Word is the worst thing about Word... it is so forgiving... sometimes it will look great even when the code isn't correct.
It's amazing how much better the pages of your book will look when you do that clean up.
One thing I don't think I talked about enough... that is to be sure to save a backup and check your file carefully at each step.
Yes, I have talked often about Headings and spacings, but don't know which one you saw.
Try again as you progress with your clean-up, and check back if the problem doesn't clear up.
Hi Cj
ReplyDeleteGreat guide. Everything worked for me, except I have one small problem. The first sentences of each of my chapters are indented by 5 spaces when I view on Kindle Previewer.
Originally, while typing the manuscript on Word, I manually indented these sentences and subsequently removed the indentations manually, however they are still appearing in Kindle Previewer despite no longer appearing visible in Word.
Looking at Paragraph Format, everything is set to zero. No changes have been made there.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Starjammer,
ReplyDeleteKindle indents by default... so it is behaving exactly as it is programmed to act.
The way to defeat that default behavior is to enter an indention of .01... the smallest indent you can enter.
That is so small that it looks like no indent.
If you try to indent by 0, MS Word thinks you made a mistake and will "help" you by adding an actual indent.
That's typical behavior of MS Word... it tries to do what it thinks the human wants... and sometimes it guesses wrong.
CJ
(I have word 2003 set to show formatting marks.) If I hit "tab" for an indent it shows the little arrow. However, if I use the ruler to set the indent, there's no format mark shown at all. So, is it okay to use the ruler for paragraph indents? I know you said Kindle just ignores your indents and sets its own, but would other e-readers be happy with my solution?
ReplyDeleteJan,
ReplyDeleteNo, I wouldn't use the ruler for that first line indent.
Although it might work, it's always best to avoid "direct" formatting if you can.
The best thing for you, I think, is to modify that paragraph Style to add the first line indent that you want.
Anything you put in that first line indent will disable the Kindle software's automatic first line indent.
Enter "disable" into the search box under the "birds on a tight-rope" photo to read an article on the subject.
And... thanks for the suggestion to create a better path to navigate through the various articles... that is high on my to-do list... and I am gradually working through.
Thanks!
CJ
Jan,
ReplyDeleteI forgot to say...
Don't use the Tab key for indents... it will cause uneven indents and make your pages look messy.
CJ