In article <54ad90ceb7chris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Chris Johnson <chris@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > In article <54ad832dc1dave@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, > Dave Symes <dave@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > The problem is, even though her OvPro document has para indents, > > set with a Style, once they been through MeDDLe that's all gone as > > there doesn't seem to be a mapping in the MeDDLe Mappings that > > match. > The normal way to do it is to use CSS and define a paragraph style > with a first line indent. Standard HTML cannot do that. Thanks to Alan and Chris as well. CSS is to much like hard work... There's a simpler solution which I've been working on this week, and have got it mostly sorted... The business of converting OvPro to Html via MeDDLe is okay for simple stuff, but anything a bit more complex needs too much external hand work. So I've gone back to Serif PPX8. I tried it with one of her small OvPro documents earlier and it worked a treat. On my wide screen, I opened her Document in OvPro for Windows. (I can't express how exceedingly useful it is to have an app that functions on both RO and Windows, thank you David Pilling). I opened a Serif PagePlus X8 template file, so the two apps were displaying side by side. I copied and pasted the text from OvPro to the Serif doc, I copied the picture from OvPro to the Serif doc. I embedded the picture. I tidied up the text, which I then selected and applied an indent style that I'd already created in the template. It all looked 'perfikt' Menubar-File->Publish As->Ebook Bob's me wotsit, all done and a darn good epub arrived. Dave So past Ovpro documents can be processed easily, and I/We can continue to use OvPro for our current writings. Now it might seem a bit strange to not use Serif PPX8 for everything, but I find it a bit clunky for everyday use, so the only things I use it for are editing PDFs and now producing Epubs. Sad git that I am, OvPro is still my Document processor of choice. D. -- Dave Triffid To unsubscribe or subscribe goto: //www.freelists.org/list/davidpilling