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EPUB

EPUB, short for electronic publication, is an open standard for distributing and presenting digital publications and documents, including e-books. It is designed to support reflowable text that adapts to different screen sizes, as well as fixed-layout content for magazines or comics. The format was originally developed by the International Digital Publishing Forum (IDPF); after its merger into the W3C, EPUB specifications continued under the W3C framework.

An EPUB file is a ZIP archive with a .epub extension. Inside it are content documents in

Common features include metadata, reflowable text, support for multiple languages, and media overlays for synchronized read-aloud

EPUB is the most widely used open e-book format and remains a standard for electronic publishing, competing

XHTML
or
XML,
CSS
styles,
images,
and
metadata.
The
Open
Packaging
Format
(OPF)
defines
the
manifest
of
resources
and
the
reading
order,
while
a
navigation
document
provides
the
table
of
contents.
EPUB
3.0+
adds
support
for
HTML5,
CSS3,
multimedia,
interactivity,
embedded
fonts,
accessibility
features,
and
SVG/MathML
as
needed.
Fixed-layout
EPUBs
preserve
page
designs
for
certain
genres.
narration.
EPUB
is
designed
to
be
device-agnostic
and
platform-neutral,
enabling
broad
interoperability
across
readers
and
apps.
DRM
is
not
part
of
the
EPUB
specification
itself
but
many
distributors
implement
proprietary
digital
rights
management.
with
proprietary
formats
such
as
Kindle's
MOBI/AZW.
It
remains
under
active
development
to
improve
accessibility
and
support
for
contemporary
web
standards.