kittybunny
Experienced
- Joined
- May 23, 2021
- Posts
- 37
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The how-to said I had to upload in a word file and nothing else.
The least-error approach is to put the html code into your raw draft, then copy and paste the complete text into the Lit submission box, then Preview. That shows you immediately whether the code has been done correctly.Hello, my story got published today after 7 days of waiting and it does not have the italics I had. I submitted in a word file, along with a note to the reviewer that my story had italic in them. What can I do? This is my first story and I had hyped it up so much.. now all the fun is gone without it and I'm very disappointed. ㅠㅡㅠ
Not only that, but there are also blank likes where it's not supposed to have.
Check your raw text thoroughly. My guess is you've got some hidden html in your original file which is causing errors. This comes up often, and nearly always the error is in the document, not the publication process at Lit.No it's not the generic spaces, it is just blank where it's not supposed to.
I used .txt for a long time, until one day it just went blah for some unknown reason. I then started drafting in .rtf, and found it okay, provided I paid proper attention to the html. Had a couple of glitches which were my fault (errors in the code) so I now keep html to an absolute minimum. And I now always copy paste into the submission box, no matter how long the story is, because that's a foolproof way of finding hidden errors. Errors, when found, have always been mine.Many versions of Word or even rtf files don't play nicely with Lit. I never got any files to be posted - there were always complaints about formatting - so now I copy the entire doc and paste it into the textbox, with italics marked by HTML tags. Then I can check for spurious spacing, unrecognised characters and broken tags, before hitting Submit.
The how-to said I had to upload in a word file and nothing else.
The how-to said I had to upload in a word file and nothing else.
I noted what works. Apparently the how-to didn't work for you.
I just looked too - looks fine to me - italics for thoughts, normal paragraph breaks.I looked at your story --- I see plenty of italics and no strange blank lines
As far as I know, you have to manually mark the italics yourself: <i>blahblahblah</i>. I always have and they always show.
Hello, my story got published today after 7 days of waiting and it does not have the italics I had. I submitted in a word file, along with a note to the reviewer that my story had italic in them. What can I do? This is my first story and I had hyped it up so much.. With the italics, it had a purpose and a fun way of reading. now all the fun is gone without it.
Even if they fix things, it's going to take a while and by then it will not be up top in the new section anymore. I'm so so very disappointed. ㅠㅡㅠ
Not only that, but there are also blank likes where it's not supposed to have.
Supposedly the site (Laurel?) will do the formatting for you, but it takes more time that way.
It would certainly take more of Laurel's premium time, slowing down the posting times for everyone else submitting their stories.
Writers submit in .doc .docx which show the formatting. She'd then have to strip back the embedded code and convert it to html and then load. I agree with KeithD on this - if authors want to use bells and whistles in their content, they should do the html coding themselves, and not place a burden on the site.How would she even know what to do, or rather, how would the author communicate or indicate where the italics should go?
The reader app strips out all formatting, sometime even line feeds.I see plenty of italics in your story viewing it on my computer screen. If you are using the Lit Reader app on your phone, it's possible that is why you aren't seeing the italics. I think I recall in a thread from a while back that there are issues with italics in the Lit Reader app.
Laurel has a process that, just like Smashwords converts the word .doc or .docx or .rtf file into a plain text file with the proper html codes. The formatting is done in the word doc as you wirte. I don't think she does anything manually except the illustrations in an illustrated story.
Writers submit in .doc .docx which show the formatting. She'd then have to strip back the embedded code and convert it to html and then load. I agree with KeithD on this - if authors want to use bells and whistles in their content, they should do the html coding themselves, and not place a burden on the site.
Laurel has a process that, just like Smashwords converts the word .doc or .docx or .rtf file into a plain text file with the proper html codes. The formatting is done in the word doc as you wirte. I don't think she does anything manually except the illustrations in an illustrated story.