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			579 lines
		
	
	
		
			31 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			579 lines
		
	
	
		
			31 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
#!/usr/bin/env python2
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# vim:fileencoding=UTF-8:ts=4:sw=4:sta:et:sts=4:ai
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__license__   = 'GPL v3'
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__copyright__ = '2010, Kovid Goyal <kovid@kovidgoyal.net>'
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__docformat__ = 'restructuredtext en'
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'''
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Contains various tweaks that affect calibre behavior. Only edit this file if
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you know what you are doing. If you delete this file, it will be recreated from
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defaults.
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'''
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#: Auto increment series index
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# The algorithm used to assign a book added to an existing series a series number.
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# New series numbers assigned using this tweak are always integer values, except
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# if a constant non-integer is specified.
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# Possible values are:
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# next - First available integer larger than the largest existing number
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# first_free - First available integer larger than 0
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# next_free - First available integer larger than the smallest existing number
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# last_free - First available integer smaller than the largest existing number
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#             Return largest existing + 1 if no free number is found
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# const - Assign the number 1 always
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# no_change - Do not change the series index
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# a number - Assign that number always. The number is not in quotes. Note that
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#            0.0 can be used here.
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# Examples:
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# series_index_auto_increment = 'next'
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# series_index_auto_increment = 'next_free'
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# series_index_auto_increment = 16.5
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#
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# Set the use_series_auto_increment_tweak_when_importing tweak to True to
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# use the above values when importing/adding books. If this tweak is set to
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# False (the default) then the series number will be set to 1 if it is not
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# explicitly set during the import. If set to True, then the
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# series index will be set according to the series_index_auto_increment setting.
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# Note that the use_series_auto_increment_tweak_when_importing tweak is used
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# only when a value is not provided during import. If the importing regular
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# expression produces a value for series_index, or if you are reading metadata
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# from books and the import plugin produces a value, than that value will
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# be used irrespective of the setting of the tweak.
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series_index_auto_increment = 'next'
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use_series_auto_increment_tweak_when_importing = False
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#: Add separator after completing an author name
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# Should the completion separator be append
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# to the end of the completed text to
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# automatically begin a new completion operation
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# for authors.
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# Can be either True or False
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authors_completer_append_separator = False
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#: Author sort name algorithm
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# The algorithm used to copy author to author_sort
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# Possible values are:
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#  invert: use "fn ln" -> "ln, fn"
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#  copy  : copy author to author_sort without modification
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#  comma : use 'copy' if there is a ',' in the name, otherwise use 'invert'
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#  nocomma : "fn ln" -> "ln fn" (without the comma)
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# When this tweak is changed, the author_sort values stored with each author
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# must be recomputed by right-clicking on an author in the left-hand tags pane,
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# selecting 'manage authors', and pressing 'Recalculate all author sort values'.
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# The author name suffixes are words that are ignored when they occur at the
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# end of an author name. The case of the suffix is ignored and trailing
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# periods are automatically handled. The same is true for prefixes.
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# The author name copy words are a set of words which if they occur in an
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# author name cause the automatically generated author sort string to be
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# identical to the author name. This means that the sort for a string like Acme
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# Inc. will be Acme Inc. instead of Inc., Acme
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author_sort_copy_method = 'comma'
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author_name_suffixes = ('Jr', 'Sr', 'Inc', 'Ph.D', 'Phd',
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                        'MD', 'M.D', 'I', 'II', 'III', 'IV',
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                        'Junior', 'Senior')
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author_name_prefixes = ('Mr', 'Mrs', 'Ms', 'Dr', 'Prof')
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author_name_copywords = ('Corporation', 'Company', 'Co.', 'Agency', 'Council',
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        'Committee', 'Inc.', 'Institute', 'Society', 'Club', 'Team')
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#: Splitting multiple author names
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# By default, calibre splits a string containing multiple author names on
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# ampersands and the words "and" and "with". You can customize the splitting
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# by changing the regular expression below. Strings are split on whatever the
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# specified regular expression matches, in addition to ampersands.
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# Default: r'(?i),?\s+(and|with)\s+'
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authors_split_regex = r'(?i),?\s+(and|with)\s+'
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#: Use author sort in Tag Browser
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# Set which author field to display in the tags pane (the list of authors,
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# series, publishers etc on the left hand side). The choices are author and
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# author_sort. This tweak affects only what is displayed under the authors
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# category in the tags pane and content server. Please note that if you set this
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# to author_sort, it is very possible to see duplicate names in the list because
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# although it is guaranteed that author names are unique, there is no such
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# guarantee for author_sort values. Showing duplicates won't break anything, but
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# it could lead to some confusion. When using 'author_sort', the tooltip will
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# show the author's name.
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# Examples:
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#   categories_use_field_for_author_name = 'author'
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#   categories_use_field_for_author_name = 'author_sort'
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categories_use_field_for_author_name = 'author'
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#: Control partitioning of Tag Browser
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# When partitioning the tags browser, the format of the subcategory label is
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# controlled by a template: categories_collapsed_name_template if sorting by
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# name, categories_collapsed_rating_template if sorting by average rating, and
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# categories_collapsed_popularity_template if sorting by popularity. There are
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# two variables available to the template: first and last. The variable 'first'
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# is the initial item in the subcategory, and the variable 'last' is the final
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# item in the subcategory. Both variables are 'objects'; they each have multiple
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# values that are obtained by using a suffix. For example, first.name for an
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# author category will be the name of the author. The sub-values available are:
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#  name: the printable name of the item
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#  count: the number of books that references this item
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#  avg_rating: the average rating of all the books referencing this item
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#  sort: the sort value. For authors, this is the author_sort for that author
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#  category: the category (e.g., authors, series) that the item is in.
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# Note that the "r'" in front of the { is necessary if there are backslashes
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# (\ characters) in the template. It doesn't hurt anything to leave it there
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# even if there aren't any backslashes.
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categories_collapsed_name_template = r'{first.sort:shorten(4,,0)} - {last.sort:shorten(4,,0)}'
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categories_collapsed_rating_template = r'{first.avg_rating:4.2f:ifempty(0)} - {last.avg_rating:4.2f:ifempty(0)}'
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categories_collapsed_popularity_template = r'{first.count:d} - {last.count:d}'
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#: Control order of categories in the tag browser
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# Change the following dict to change the order that categories are displayed in
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# the tag browser. Items are named using their lookup name, and will be sorted
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# using the number supplied. The lookup name '*' stands for all names that
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# otherwise do not appear. Two names with the same value will be sorted
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# using the default order; the one used when the dict is empty.
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# Example: tag_browser_category_order = {'series':1, 'tags':2, '*':3}
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# resulting in the order series, tags, then everything else in default order.
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tag_browser_category_order = {'*':1}
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#: Specify columns to sort the booklist by on startup
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# Provide a set of columns to be sorted on when calibre starts
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#  The argument is None if saved sort history is to be used
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#  otherwise it is a list of column,order pairs. Column is the
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#  lookup/search name, found using the tooltip for the column
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#  Order is 0 for ascending, 1 for descending
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# For example, set it to [('authors',0),('title',0)] to sort by
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# title within authors.
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sort_columns_at_startup = None
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#: Control how dates are displayed
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# Format to be used for publication date and the timestamp (date).
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#  A string controlling how the publication date is displayed in the GUI
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#  d     the day as number without a leading zero (1 to 31)
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#  dd    the day as number with a leading zero (01 to 31)
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#  ddd   the abbreviated localized day name (e.g. 'Mon' to 'Sun').
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#  dddd  the long localized day name (e.g. 'Monday' to 'Sunday').
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#  M     the month as number without a leading zero (1-12)
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#  MM    the month as number with a leading zero (01-12)
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#  MMM   the abbreviated localized month name (e.g. 'Jan' to 'Dec').
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#  MMMM  the long localized month name (e.g. 'January' to 'December').
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#  yy    the year as two digit number (00-99)
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#  yyyy  the year as four digit number
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#  h     the hours without a leading 0 (0 to 11 or 0 to 23, depending on am/pm) '
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#  hh    the hours with a leading 0 (00 to 11 or 00 to 23, depending on am/pm) '
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#  m     the minutes without a leading 0 (0 to 59) '
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#  mm    the minutes with a leading 0 (00 to 59) '
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#  s     the seconds without a leading 0 (0 to 59) '
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#  ss    the seconds with a leading 0 (00 to 59) '
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#  ap    use a 12-hour clock instead of a 24-hour clock, with "ap"
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#        replaced by the localized string for am or pm '
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#  AP    use a 12-hour clock instead of a 24-hour clock, with "AP"
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#        replaced by the localized string for AM or PM '
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#  iso   the date with time and timezone. Must be the only format present
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#  For example, given the date of 9 Jan 2010, the following formats show
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#  MMM yyyy ==> Jan 2010    yyyy ==> 2010       dd MMM yyyy ==> 09 Jan 2010
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#  MM/yyyy ==> 01/2010      d/M/yy ==> 9/1/10   yy ==> 10
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# publication default if not set: MMM yyyy
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# timestamp default if not set: dd MMM yyyy
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# last_modified_display_format if not set: dd MMM yyyy
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gui_pubdate_display_format = 'MMM yyyy'
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gui_timestamp_display_format = 'dd MMM yyyy'
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gui_last_modified_display_format = 'dd MMM yyyy'
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#: Control sorting of titles and series in the library display
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# Control title and series sorting in the library view. If set to
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# 'library_order', the title sort field will be used instead of the title.
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# Unless you have manually edited the title sort field, leading articles such as
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# The and A will be ignored. If set to 'strictly_alphabetic', the titles will be
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# sorted as-is (sort by title instead of title sort). For example, with
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# library_order, The Client will sort under 'C'. With strictly_alphabetic, the
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# book will sort under 'T'.
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# This flag affects Calibre's library display. It has no effect on devices. In
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# addition, titles for books added before changing the flag will retain their
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# order until the title is edited. Double-clicking on a title and hitting return
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# without changing anything is sufficient to change the sort.
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title_series_sorting = 'library_order'
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#: Control formatting of title and series when used in templates
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# Control how title and series names are formatted when saving to disk/sending
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# to device. The behavior depends on the field being processed. If processing
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# title, then if this tweak is set to 'library_order', the title will be
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# replaced with title_sort. If it is set to 'strictly_alphabetic', then the
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# title will not be changed. If processing series, then if set to
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# 'library_order', articles such as 'The' and 'An' will be moved to the end. If
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# set to 'strictly_alphabetic', the series will be sent without change.
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# For example, if the tweak is set to library_order, "The Lord of the Rings"
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# will become "Lord of the Rings, The". If the tweak is set to
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# strictly_alphabetic, it would remain "The Lord of the Rings". Note that the
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# formatter function raw_field will return the base value for title and
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# series regardless of the setting of this tweak.
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save_template_title_series_sorting = 'library_order'
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#: Set the list of words considered to be "articles" for sort strings
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# Set the list of words that are to be considered 'articles' when computing the
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# title sort strings. The articles differ by language. By default, calibre uses
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# a combination of articles from English and whatever language the calibre user
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# interface is set to. In addition, in some contexts where the book language is
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# available, the language of the book is used. You can change the list of
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# articles for a given language or add a new language by editing
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# per_language_title_sort_articles. To tell calibre to use a language other
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# than the user interface language, set, default_language_for_title_sort. For
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# example, to use German, set it to 'deu'. A value of None means the user
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# interface language is used. The setting title_sort_articles is ignored
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# (present only for legacy reasons).
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per_language_title_sort_articles = {
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        # English
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        'eng'  : (r'A\s+', r'The\s+', r'An\s+'),
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        # Esperanto
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        'epo': (r'La\s+', r"L'", 'L\xb4'),
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        # Spanish
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        'spa'  : (r'El\s+', r'La\s+', r'Lo\s+', r'Los\s+', r'Las\s+', r'Un\s+',
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                  r'Una\s+', r'Unos\s+', r'Unas\s+'),
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        # French
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        'fra'  : (r'Le\s+', r'La\s+', r"L'", u'L´', u'L’', r'Les\s+', r'Un\s+', r'Une\s+',
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                  r'Des\s+', r'De\s+La\s+', r'De\s+', r"D'", u'D´', u'L’'),
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        # Italian
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        'ita': ('Lo\\s+', 'Il\\s+', "L'", 'L\xb4', 'La\\s+', 'Gli\\s+',
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                'I\\s+', 'Le\\s+', 'Uno\\s+', 'Un\\s+', 'Una\\s+', "Un'",
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                'Un\xb4', 'Dei\\s+', 'Degli\\s+', 'Delle\\s+', 'Del\\s+',
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                'Della\\s+', 'Dello\\s+', "Dell'", 'Dell\xb4'),
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        # Portuguese
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        'por'  : (r'A\s+', r'O\s+', r'Os\s+', r'As\s+', r'Um\s+', r'Uns\s+',
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                  r'Uma\s+', r'Umas\s+', ),
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        # Romanian
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        'ron'  : (r'Un\s+', r'O\s+', r'Nişte\s+', ),
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        # German
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        'deu'  : (r'Der\s+', r'Die\s+', r'Das\s+', r'Den\s+', r'Ein\s+',
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                  r'Eine\s+', r'Einen\s+', r'Dem\s+', r'Des\s+', r'Einem\s+',
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                  r'Eines\s+'),
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        # Dutch
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        'nld'  : (r'De\s+', r'Het\s+', r'Een\s+', r"'n\s+", r"'s\s+", r'Ene\s+',
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                  r'Ener\s+', r'Enes\s+', r'Den\s+', r'Der\s+', r'Des\s+',
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                  r"'t\s+"),
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        # Swedish
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        'swe'  : (r'En\s+', r'Ett\s+', r'Det\s+', r'Den\s+', r'De\s+', ),
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        # Turkish
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        'tur'  : (r'Bir\s+', ),
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        # Afrikaans
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        'afr'  : (r"'n\s+", r'Die\s+', ),
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        # Greek
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        'ell'  : (r'O\s+', r'I\s+', r'To\s+', r'Ta\s+', r'Tus\s+', r'Tis\s+',
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                  r"'Enas\s+", r"'Mia\s+", r"'Ena\s+", r"'Enan\s+", ),
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        # Hungarian
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        'hun'  : (r'A\s+', 'Az\s+', 'Egy\s+',),
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}
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default_language_for_title_sort = None
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title_sort_articles=r'^(A|The|An)\s+'
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#: Specify a folder calibre should connect to at startup
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# Specify a folder that calibre should connect to at startup using
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# connect_to_folder. This must be a full path to the folder. If the folder does
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# not exist when calibre starts, it is ignored. If there are '\' characters in
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# the path (such as in Windows paths), you must double them.
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# Examples:
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#     auto_connect_to_folder = 'C:\\Users\\someone\\Desktop\\testlib'
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#     auto_connect_to_folder = '/home/dropbox/My Dropbox/someone/library'
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auto_connect_to_folder = ''
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#: Specify renaming rules for SONY collections
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# Specify renaming rules for sony collections. This tweak is only applicable if
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# metadata management is set to automatic. Collections on Sonys are named
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# depending upon whether the field is standard or custom. A collection derived
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# from a standard field is named for the value in that field. For example, if
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# the standard 'series' column contains the value 'Darkover', then the
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# collection name is 'Darkover'. A collection derived from a custom field will
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# have the name of the field added to the value. For example, if a custom series
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# column named 'My Series' contains the name 'Darkover', then the collection
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# will by default be named 'Darkover (My Series)'. For purposes of this
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# documentation, 'Darkover' is called the value and 'My Series' is called the
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# category. If two books have fields that generate the same collection name,
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# then both books will be in that collection.
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# This set of tweaks lets you specify for a standard or custom field how
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# the collections are to be named. You can use it to add a description to a
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# standard field, for example 'Foo (Tag)' instead of the 'Foo'. You can also use
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# it to force multiple fields to end up in the same collection. For example, you
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# could force the values in 'series', '#my_series_1', and '#my_series_2' to
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# appear in collections named 'some_value (Series)', thereby merging all of the
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# fields into one set of collections.
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# There are two related tweaks. The first determines the category name to use
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# for a metadata field.  The second is a template, used to determines how the
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# value and category are combined to create the collection name.
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# The syntax of the first tweak, sony_collection_renaming_rules, is:
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# {'field_lookup_name':'category_name_to_use', 'lookup_name':'name', ...}
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# The second tweak, sony_collection_name_template, is a template. It uses the
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# same template language as plugboards and save templates. This tweak controls
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# how the value and category are combined together to make the collection name.
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# The only two fields available are {category} and {value}. The {value} field is
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# never empty. The {category} field can be empty. The default is to put the
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# value first, then the category enclosed in parentheses, it isn't empty:
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# '{value} {category:|(|)}'
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# Examples: The first three examples assume that the second tweak
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# has not been changed.
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# 1: I want three series columns to be merged into one set of collections. The
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# column lookup names are 'series', '#series_1' and '#series_2'. I want nothing
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# in the parenthesis. The value to use in the tweak value would be:
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#    sony_collection_renaming_rules={'series':'', '#series_1':'', '#series_2':''}
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# 2: I want the word '(Series)' to appear on collections made from series, and
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# the word '(Tag)' to appear on collections made from tags. Use:
 | 
						||
#    sony_collection_renaming_rules={'series':'Series', 'tags':'Tag'}
 | 
						||
# 3: I want 'series' and '#myseries' to be merged, and for the collection name
 | 
						||
# to have '(Series)' appended. The renaming rule is:
 | 
						||
#    sony_collection_renaming_rules={'series':'Series', '#myseries':'Series'}
 | 
						||
# 4: Same as example 2, but instead of having the category name in parentheses
 | 
						||
# and appended to the value, I want it prepended and separated by a colon, such
 | 
						||
# as in Series: Darkover. I must change the template used to format the category name
 | 
						||
# The resulting two tweaks are:
 | 
						||
#    sony_collection_renaming_rules={'series':'Series', 'tags':'Tag'}
 | 
						||
#    sony_collection_name_template='{category:||: }{value}'
 | 
						||
sony_collection_renaming_rules={}
 | 
						||
sony_collection_name_template='{value}{category:| (|)}'
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Specify how SONY collections are sorted
 | 
						||
# Specify how sony collections are sorted. This tweak is only applicable if
 | 
						||
# metadata management is set to automatic. You can indicate which metadata is to
 | 
						||
# be used to sort on a collection-by-collection basis. The format of the tweak
 | 
						||
# is a list of metadata fields from which collections are made, followed by the
 | 
						||
# name of the metadata field containing the sort value.
 | 
						||
# Example: The following indicates that collections built from pubdate and tags
 | 
						||
# are to be sorted by the value in the custom column '#mydate', that collections
 | 
						||
# built from 'series' are to be sorted by 'series_index', and that all other
 | 
						||
# collections are to be sorted by title. If a collection metadata field is not
 | 
						||
# named, then if it is a series- based collection it is sorted by series order,
 | 
						||
# otherwise it is sorted by title order.
 | 
						||
# [(['pubdate', 'tags'],'#mydate'), (['series'],'series_index'), (['*'], 'title')]
 | 
						||
# Note that the bracketing and parentheses are required. The syntax is
 | 
						||
# [ ( [list of fields], sort field ) , ( [ list of fields ] , sort field ) ]
 | 
						||
# Default: empty (no rules), so no collection attributes are named.
 | 
						||
sony_collection_sorting_rules = []
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Control how tags are applied when copying books to another library
 | 
						||
# Set this to True to ensure that tags in 'Tags to add when adding
 | 
						||
# a book' are added when copying books to another library
 | 
						||
add_new_book_tags_when_importing_books = False
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Set the maximum number of tags to show per book in the content server
 | 
						||
max_content_server_tags_shown=5
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Set custom metadata fields that the content server will or will not display.
 | 
						||
# content_server_will_display is a list of custom fields to be displayed.
 | 
						||
# content_server_wont_display is a list of custom fields not to be displayed.
 | 
						||
# wont_display has priority over will_display.
 | 
						||
# The special value '*' means all custom fields. The value [] means no entries.
 | 
						||
# Defaults:
 | 
						||
#    content_server_will_display = ['*']
 | 
						||
#    content_server_wont_display = []
 | 
						||
# Examples:
 | 
						||
# To display only the custom fields #mytags and #genre:
 | 
						||
#   content_server_will_display = ['#mytags', '#genre']
 | 
						||
#   content_server_wont_display = []
 | 
						||
# To display all fields except #mycomments:
 | 
						||
#   content_server_will_display = ['*']
 | 
						||
#   content_server_wont_display['#mycomments']
 | 
						||
content_server_will_display = ['*']
 | 
						||
content_server_wont_display = []
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Set the maximum number of sort 'levels'
 | 
						||
# Set the maximum number of sort 'levels' that calibre will use to resort the
 | 
						||
# library after certain operations such as searches or device insertion. Each
 | 
						||
# sort level adds a performance penalty. If the database is large (thousands of
 | 
						||
# books) the penalty might be noticeable. If you are not concerned about multi-
 | 
						||
# level sorts, and if you are seeing a slowdown, reduce the value of this tweak.
 | 
						||
maximum_resort_levels = 5
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Choose whether dates are sorted using visible fields
 | 
						||
# Date values contain both a date and a time. When sorted, all the fields are
 | 
						||
# used, regardless of what is displayed. Set this tweak to True to use only
 | 
						||
# the fields that are being displayed.
 | 
						||
sort_dates_using_visible_fields = False
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Fuzz value for trimming covers
 | 
						||
# The value used for the fuzz distance when trimming a cover.
 | 
						||
# Colors within this distance are considered equal.
 | 
						||
# The distance is in absolute intensity units.
 | 
						||
cover_trim_fuzz_value = 10
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Control behavior of the book list
 | 
						||
# You can control the behavior of doubleclicks on the books list.
 | 
						||
# Choices: open_viewer, do_nothing,
 | 
						||
# edit_cell, edit_metadata. Selecting anything other than open_viewer has the
 | 
						||
# side effect of disabling editing a field using a single click.
 | 
						||
# Default: open_viewer.
 | 
						||
# Example: doubleclick_on_library_view = 'do_nothing'
 | 
						||
# You can also control whether the book list scrolls horizontal per column or
 | 
						||
# per pixel. Default is per column.
 | 
						||
doubleclick_on_library_view = 'open_viewer'
 | 
						||
horizontal_scrolling_per_column = True
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Language to use when sorting
 | 
						||
# Setting this tweak will force sorting to use the
 | 
						||
# collating order for the specified language. This might be useful if you run
 | 
						||
# calibre in English but want sorting to work in the language where you live.
 | 
						||
# Set the tweak to the desired ISO 639-1 language code, in lower case.
 | 
						||
# You can find the list of supported locales at
 | 
						||
# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-1_codes
 | 
						||
# Default: locale_for_sorting = '' -- use the language calibre displays in
 | 
						||
# Example: locale_for_sorting = 'fr' -- sort using French rules.
 | 
						||
# Example: locale_for_sorting = 'nb' -- sort using Norwegian rules.
 | 
						||
locale_for_sorting =  ''
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Number of columns for custom metadata in the edit metadata dialog
 | 
						||
# Set whether to use one or two columns for custom metadata when editing
 | 
						||
# metadata  one book at a time. If True, then the fields are laid out using two
 | 
						||
# columns. If False, one column is used.
 | 
						||
metadata_single_use_2_cols_for_custom_fields = True
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Order of custom column(s) in edit metadata
 | 
						||
# Controls the order that custom columns are listed in edit metadata single
 | 
						||
# and bulk. The columns listed in the tweak are displayed first and in the
 | 
						||
# order provided. Any columns not listed are dislayed after the listed ones,
 | 
						||
# in alphabetical order. Do note that this tweak does not change the size of
 | 
						||
# the edit widgets. Putting comments widgets in this list may result in some
 | 
						||
# odd widget spacing when using two-column mode.
 | 
						||
# Enter a comma-separated list of custom field lookup names, as in
 | 
						||
# metadata_edit_custom_column_order = ['#genre', '#mytags', '#etc']
 | 
						||
metadata_edit_custom_column_order = []
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: The number of seconds to wait before sending emails
 | 
						||
# The number of seconds to wait before sending emails when using a
 | 
						||
# public email server like gmx/hotmail/gmail. Default is: 5 minutes
 | 
						||
# Setting it to lower may cause the server's SPAM controls to kick in,
 | 
						||
# making email sending fail. Changes will take effect only after a restart of
 | 
						||
# calibre. You can also change the list of hosts that calibre considers
 | 
						||
# to be public relays here. Any relay host ending with one of the suffixes
 | 
						||
# in the list below will be considered a public email server.
 | 
						||
public_smtp_relay_delay = 301
 | 
						||
public_smtp_relay_host_suffixes = ['gmail.com', 'live.com', 'gmx.com']
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: The maximum width and height for covers saved in the calibre library
 | 
						||
# All covers in the calibre library will be resized, preserving aspect ratio,
 | 
						||
# to fit within this size. This is to prevent slowdowns caused by extremely
 | 
						||
# large covers
 | 
						||
maximum_cover_size = (1650, 2200)
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Where to send downloaded news
 | 
						||
# When automatically sending downloaded news to a connected device, calibre
 | 
						||
# will by default send it to the main memory. By changing this tweak, you can
 | 
						||
# control where it is sent. Valid values are "main", "carda", "cardb". Note
 | 
						||
# that if there isn't enough free space available on the location you choose,
 | 
						||
# the files will be sent to the location with the most free space.
 | 
						||
send_news_to_device_location = "main"
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: What interfaces should the content server listen on
 | 
						||
# By default, the calibre content server listens on '0.0.0.0' which means that it
 | 
						||
# accepts IPv4 connections on all interfaces. You can change this to, for
 | 
						||
# example, '127.0.0.1' to only listen for connections from the local machine, or
 | 
						||
# to '::' to listen to all incoming IPv6 and IPv4 connections (this may not
 | 
						||
# work on all operating systems)
 | 
						||
server_listen_on = '0.0.0.0'
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Unified toolbar on OS X
 | 
						||
# If you enable this option and restart calibre, the toolbar will be 'unified'
 | 
						||
# with the titlebar as is normal for OS X applications. However, doing this has
 | 
						||
# various bugs, for instance the minimum width of the toolbar becomes twice
 | 
						||
# what it should be and it causes other random bugs on some systems, so turn it
 | 
						||
# on at your own risk!
 | 
						||
unified_title_toolbar_on_osx = False
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Save original file when converting/polishing from same format to same format
 | 
						||
# When calibre does a conversion from the same format to the same format, for
 | 
						||
# example, from EPUB to EPUB, the original file is saved, so that in case the
 | 
						||
# conversion is poor, you can tweak the settings and run it again. By setting
 | 
						||
# this to False you can prevent calibre from saving the original file.
 | 
						||
# Similarly, by setting save_original_format_when_polishing to False you can
 | 
						||
# prevent calibre from saving the original file when polishing.
 | 
						||
save_original_format = True
 | 
						||
save_original_format_when_polishing = True
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Number of recently viewed books to show
 | 
						||
# Right-clicking the View button shows a list of recently viewed books. Control
 | 
						||
# how many should be shown, here.
 | 
						||
gui_view_history_size = 15
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Change the font size of book details in the interface
 | 
						||
# Change the font size at which book details are rendered in the side panel and
 | 
						||
# comments are rendered in the metadata edit dialog. Set it to a positive or
 | 
						||
# negative number to increase or decrease the font size.
 | 
						||
change_book_details_font_size_by = 0
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Compile General Program Mode templates to Python
 | 
						||
# Compiled general program mode templates are significantly faster than
 | 
						||
# interpreted templates. Setting this tweak to True causes calibre to compile
 | 
						||
# (in most cases) general program mode templates. Setting it to False causes
 | 
						||
# calibre to use the old behavior -- interpreting the templates. Set the tweak
 | 
						||
# to False if some compiled templates produce incorrect values.
 | 
						||
# Default:    compile_gpm_templates = True
 | 
						||
# No compile: compile_gpm_templates = False
 | 
						||
compile_gpm_templates = True
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: What format to default to when using the Tweak feature
 | 
						||
# The Tweak feature of calibre allows direct editing of a book format.
 | 
						||
# If multiple formats are available, calibre will offer you a choice
 | 
						||
# of formats, defaulting to your preferred output format if it is available.
 | 
						||
# Set this tweak to a specific value of 'EPUB' or 'AZW3' to always default
 | 
						||
# to that format rather than your output format preference.
 | 
						||
# Set to a value of 'remember' to use whichever format you chose last time you
 | 
						||
# used the Tweak feature.
 | 
						||
# Examples:
 | 
						||
#   default_tweak_format = None       (Use output format)
 | 
						||
#   default_tweak_format = 'EPUB'
 | 
						||
#   default_tweak_format = 'remember'
 | 
						||
default_tweak_format = None
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Do not preselect a completion when editing authors/tags/series/etc.
 | 
						||
# This means that you can make changes and press Enter and your changes will
 | 
						||
# not be overwritten by a matching completion. However, if you wish to use the
 | 
						||
# completions you will now have to press Tab to select one before pressing
 | 
						||
# Enter. Which technique you prefer will depend on the state of metadata in
 | 
						||
# your library and your personal editing style.
 | 
						||
preselect_first_completion = False
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Completion mode when editing authors/tags/series/etc.
 | 
						||
# By default, when completing items, calibre will show you all the candidates
 | 
						||
# that start with the text you have already typed. You can instead have it show
 | 
						||
# all candidates that contain the text you have already typed. To do this, set
 | 
						||
# completion_mode to 'contains'. For example, if you type asi it will match both
 | 
						||
# Asimov and Quasimodo, whereas the default behavior would match only Asimov.
 | 
						||
completion_mode = 'prefix'
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Recognize numbers inside text when sorting
 | 
						||
# This means that when sorting on text fields like title the text "Book 2"
 | 
						||
# will sort before the text "Book 100". If you want this behavior, set
 | 
						||
# numeric_collation = True note that doing so will cause problems with text
 | 
						||
# that starts with numbers and is a little slower.
 | 
						||
numeric_collation = False
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Sort the list of libraries alphabetically
 | 
						||
# The list of libraries in the Copy to Library and Quick Switch menus are
 | 
						||
# normally sorted by most used. However, if there are more than a certain
 | 
						||
# number of such libraries, the sorting becomes alphabetic. You can set that
 | 
						||
# number here. The default is ten libraries.
 | 
						||
many_libraries = 10
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Highlight the virtual library name when using a Virtual Library
 | 
						||
# The virtual library name next to the Virtual Library button is highlighted in
 | 
						||
# yellow when using a Virtual Library. You can choose the color used for the
 | 
						||
# highlight with this tweak. Set it to 'transparent' to disable highlighting.
 | 
						||
highlight_virtual_library = 'yellow'
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Choose available output formats for conversion
 | 
						||
# Restrict the list of available output formats in the conversion dialogs.
 | 
						||
# For example, if you only want to convert to EPUB and AZW3, change this to
 | 
						||
# restrict_output_formats = ['EPUB', 'AZW3']. The default value of None causes
 | 
						||
# all available output formats to be present.
 | 
						||
restrict_output_formats = None
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Set the thumbnail image quality used by the content server
 | 
						||
# The quality of a thumbnail is largely controlled by the compression quality
 | 
						||
# used when creating it. Set this to a larger number to improve the quality.
 | 
						||
# Note that the thumbnails get much larger with larger compression quality
 | 
						||
# numbers.
 | 
						||
# The value can be between 50 and 99
 | 
						||
content_server_thumbnail_compression_quality = 75
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
#: Image file types to treat as ebooks when dropping onto the Book Details panel
 | 
						||
# Normally, if you drop any image file in a format known to calibre onto the
 | 
						||
# Book Details panel, it will be used to set the cover. If you want to store
 | 
						||
# some image types as ebooks instead, you can set this tweak.
 | 
						||
# Examples:
 | 
						||
#    cover_drop_exclude = {'tiff', 'webp'}
 | 
						||
cover_drop_exclude = ()
 |