I’m working on an e-reader for special purposes.  While I don’t want to go into 
a discussion of the point of this program and why I’m doing another, a brief 
summary may help.  As a writer, I don’t like sending my work over email or 
other insecure methods of internet transfer.  This e-reader would let me (and 
my writer friends) share our work easily with our friends while keeping it 
encrypted during transfer and even on the reader’s computer.  The file is read 
in and decrypted when displayed for reading.  This would also let me make early 
drafts expire so they can be ditched when they’re obsolete.

I still haven’t decided what language to use for this.  Initially it’ll work on 
OSX, Windows, and Linux.  I’d like to expand it to Android and iOS.  There’s a 
good chance it’d be in C++ or Java, but it would be great if I could do it in 
Python.  (I know of Kivy and other efforts that would make it easy for me to 
transport Python to at least Android.)

The problem is I need some kind of portable document format.  I know that 
implies, immediately, PDF.  However, there seems to be only one library that 
handles PDF display, and that’s Poppler.  I’m not an expert programmer (at 
least not in C++), and when I’ve asked for help from the Poppler people, 
they’ve been abrupt and less than helpful.

I’d like to be able to write in LO, then save or export my file, and have it in 
a format I can easily display on the different operating systems.

I tried saving some files in HTML.  The plain text ones were no problem at all. 
 Margins and formatting was preserved just as I needed it.  But then I tried 
one that was part of a pitch, so it had a page of text, then a page of 
pictures, basically two columns of pictures with captions below each picture.  
I loaded that in a browser and the formatting was okay on the first page, but 
was totally messed up on the 2nd page with the pictures.

As best I can tell, at this point, there is not a portable library out there 
that I can use from within a program to easily display ODT files, but that 
would be a great solution.

So what format can I use when exporting from LibreOffice, other than PDF, that 
can be easily displayed by any libraries in either Java, C++, or Python?


Thanks!



Hal
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