mirror of
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187 lines
9.2 KiB
Python
187 lines
9.2 KiB
Python
#!/usr/bin/env python
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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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# The algorithm used to assign a new book in an existing series a series number.
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# Possible values are:
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# next - Next available number
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# const - Assign the number 1 always
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series_index_auto_increment = 'next'
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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" (the original algorithm)
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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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author_sort_copy_method = 'invert'
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# Set whether boolean custom columns are two- or three-valued.
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# Two-values for true booleans
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# three-values for yes/no/unknown
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# Set to 'yes' for three-values, 'no' for two-values
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bool_custom_columns_are_tristate = 'yes'
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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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# 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 'Qt::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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# 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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gui_pubdate_display_format = 'MMM yyyy'
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gui_timestamp_display_format = 'dd MMM yyyy'
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# Control title and series sorting in the library view.
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# If set to 'library_order', Leading articles such as The and A will be ignored.
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# If set to 'strictly_alphabetic', the titles will be sorted without processing
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# For example, with library_order, The Client will sort under 'C'. With
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# strictly_alphabetic, the 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 how title and series names are formatted when saving to disk/sending
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# to device. If set to library_order, leading articles such as The and A will
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# be put at the end
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# If set to 'strictly_alphabetic', the titles will be sorted without processing
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# For example, with library_order, "The Client" will become "Client, The". With
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# strictly_alphabetic, it would remain "The Client".
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save_template_title_series_sorting = 'library_order'
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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 list is a regular expression, with the articles
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# separated by 'or' bars. Comparisons are case insensitive, and that cannot be
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# changed. Changes to this tweak won't have an effect until the book is modified
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# in some way. If you enter an invalid pattern, it is silently ignored.
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# To disable use the expression: '^$'
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# Default: '^(A|The|An)\s+'
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title_sort_articles=r'^(A|The|An)\s+'
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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. 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 name 'Darkover', then the series
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# will be named 'Darkover'. A collection derived from a custom field will have
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# 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 be named 'Darkover (My Series)'. If two books have fields that generate
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# the same collection name, then both books will be in that collection. This
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# tweak lets you specify for a standard or custom field the value to be put
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# inside the parentheses. You can use it to add a parenthetical 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. The syntax of this tweak is
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# {'field_lookup_name':'name_to_use', 'lookup_name':'name', ...}
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# Example 1: I want three series columns to be merged into one set of
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# collections. If the column lookup names are 'series', '#series_1' and
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# '#series_2', and if I want nothing in the parenthesis, then the value to use
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# in the tweak value would be:
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# sony_collection_renaming_rules={'series':'', '#series_1':'', '#series_2':''}
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# Example 2: I want the word '(Series)' to appear on collections made from
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# series, and the word '(Tag)' to appear on collections made from tags. Use:
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# sony_collection_renaming_rules={'series':'Series', 'tags':'Tag'}
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# Example 3: I want 'series' and '#myseries' to be merged, and for the
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# collection name to have '(Series)' appended. The renaming rule is:
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# sony_collection_renaming_rules={'series':'Series', '#myseries':'Series'}
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sony_collection_renaming_rules={}
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# Create search terms to apply a query across several built-in search terms.
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# Syntax: {'new term':['existing term 1', 'term 2', ...], 'new':['old'...] ...}
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# Example: create the term 'myseries' that when used as myseries:foo would
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# search all of the search categories 'series', '#myseries', and '#myseries2':
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# grouped_search_terms={'myseries':['series','#myseries', '#myseries2']}
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# Example: two search terms 'a' and 'b' both that search 'tags' and '#mytags':
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# grouped_search_terms={'a':['tags','#mytags'], 'b':['tags','#mytags']}
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# Note: You cannot create a search term that is a duplicate of an existing term.
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# Such duplicates will be silently ignored. Also note that search terms ignore
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# case. 'MySearch' and 'mysearch' are the same term.
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grouped_search_terms = {}
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# Set this to True (not 'True') to ensure that tags in 'Tags to add when adding
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# a book' are added when copying books to another library
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add_new_book_tags_when_importing_books = False
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# Set the maximum number of tags to show per book in the content server
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max_content_server_tags_shown=5
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# Set custom metadata fields that the content server will or will not display.
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# content_server_will_display is a list of custom fields to be displayed.
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# content_server_wont_display is a list of custom fields not to be displayed.
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# wont_display has priority over will_display.
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# The special value '*' means all custom fields.
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# Defaults:
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# content_server_will_display = ['*']
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# content_server_wont_display = ['']
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# Examples:
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# To display only the custom fields #mytags and #genre:
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# content_server_will_display = ['#mytags', '#genre']
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# content_server_wont_display = ['']
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# To display all fields except #mycomments:
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# content_server_will_display = ['*']
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# content_server_wont_display['#mycomments']
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content_server_will_display = ['*']
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content_server_wont_display = ['']
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# Set the maximum number of sort 'levels' that calibre will use to resort the
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# library after certain operations such as searches or device insertion. Each
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# sort level adds a performance penalty. If the database is large (thousands of
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# books) the penalty might be noticeable. If you are not concerned about multi-
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# level sorts, and if you are seeing a slowdown, reduce the value of this tweak.
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maximum_resort_levels = 5
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