On Sat, 7 Feb 2015 18:41:39 -0500 John Culleton <John at wexfordpress.com> wrote:
> I promised to share my impressions of the new > book "Use Scribus" by Thomas Ecclestone, an > Englishman with many technical books to > his credit. I am a bit at a loss however because > I am both American and a Linux user. He is > neither. More seriously his degree is in > Engineering, mine in English. And I lay out, > typeset and index books for money. > > I cannot criticize his index because there isn't > any. A technical book without an index is > not very useful. And his layout is to my > eye amateurish. One doesn't both indent each > paragraph and yet skip a line between them. And > the indentation is sizable, about 20 points or > two ems. > > The dedication is page roman numeral one. the > next page is blank and the following page > (chapter 1) is numbered with an arabic numeral > three. That is just sloppiness. > > There is no space skipped between the chapter > head and the first paragraph, not even the line > left between paragraphs. But there is plenty of > space over the head. And yes, that first > paragraph is indented. > > Ragged right layout is a chancy choice at best > and when combined with plentiful small graphics > scattered here and there the layout is, well > distracting. > > I just opened a page at random. It was the last > page of a chapter, verso and with only one > paragraph on the page. All right so far. But the > single paragraph is centered vertically on the > page. Oy! He lays out each such last page the > same way, whether recto or verso. Is this a > British custom? > > How good is the information? Haven't got that > far. But a book on using a DTP program should > meet some minimal standard of layout > correctness and attractiveness. This book's > interior appearance is, again IMO, not up to > standard. It sets a bad example for its readers. > > The book only lists at $15.00 discounted > already to $14.17 on Amazon. And it is updated > to Scribus 1.4.4. I truly hope the content is > better than the layout. I'll read some more... > I have had a chance to browse the content. There is both good and bad. The author goes through the install process for MSWindows in great detail, taking many pages to cover it. Thus far I have not found any real howlers in the remainder. He assumes RGB color model throughout. There is a lengthy discussion about the merits of downloading Ghostscript. My recommendation is to do it in all cases and do it first. He never covers steps that I do first for paper documents, switch to one of the CMYK color palettes, and switch from web to print. Even if RGB is used a fuller palette is desirable. Instead he discusses picking a color off the color wheel. I recognize that some European printers will accept RGB formatted documents but ultimately printing is a cmyk process. One of his graphics shows parts of the Scribus basic palette which mixes the two color models and is really too brief to be of much use. Also the discussion of colors is put last, whereas I set them up first. There is a discussion of bezier curves which is surprising in a book aimed at first timers. The requirements of printers for certain pdf formats is not discussed. In the U.S. it is almost always pdf X/1-a and in Europe it may also include X/3. And then there is a lack of an index. I may create my own just to make the book more usable. Cedric Gemy's book is both older and much more expensive, but would still use it in preference over the Ecclestone book. It also neglects color palette choices however. Nobody is perfect. -- John Culleton Wexford Press Free list of books for self-publishers: http://wexfordpress.net/shortlist.html Updated PDF e-book: "Create Book Covers with Scribus 1.4.5" coming soon at http://www.booklocker.com/!
