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Tahuri MOBI Tuhinga o mua HTML

Tahurihia Tō MOBI Tuhinga o mua HTML kōnae ngawari

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Me pēhea te huri MOBI Tuhinga o mua HTML

Hipanga 1: Tukuatu tō MOBI ngā kōnae mā te whakamahi i te pātene i runga ake nei, mā te tōia me te whakataka rānei.

Hipanga 2: Pāwhiritia te pātene 'Tahuri' hei tīmata i te tahuritanga.

Hipanga 3: Tikiake i tō mea kua tahurihia HTML kōnae


MOBI Tuhinga o mua HTML Ngā Pātai Auau mō te Tahuritanga

How do I convert MOBI to HTML for editing?
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Upload the MOBI and the converter extracts the full text stream, paragraph structure, and inline formatting into an editable HTML file. Open it in Word / Pages / LibreOffice and the manuscript is ready to revise without any re-typing.
Yes — chapter starts in the MOBI (signaled by epub:type="chapter" or h1 / h2 headings) become HTML Heading 1 styles, ready for outline view or automatic TOC regeneration via Word's built-in tools.
Yes — inline character runs (italic, bold, underline, strikethrough, superscript, subscript) all map to HTML character formatting. Blockquotes become HTML "Quote" style; bullet and numbered lists become real HTML list elements (not just indented text).
Yes — every illustration in the MOBI is extracted as PNG / JPG and embedded inline in the HTML at the same anchor point as the original. Word / Pages / LibreOffice render them inline; you can right-click to resize or replace each one.
Yes — round-trip HTML → EPUB works via the reverse converter. Save the HTML after editing, then use /docx-to-epub/ (or the format-specific HTML → EPUB path) to rebuild a new ebook with your edits.
Kindle / Kobo apply their own reader CSS on top of the MOBI's embedded styles. The HTML we produce reflects the MOBI's actual encoded styling, not the reader's overrides. That's usually what you want for editing — it shows what the publisher intended.
Yes — popup-style footnotes in the MOBI become real Word / RTF footnotes in the HTML (Insert → Footnote round-tripped). Endnotes become endnotes. Cross-references stay linked between the body text and the note.
Yes — the cover image is placed on the first page of the HTML. Delete it if you only want the manuscript body; the rest of the document is unaffected.
Yes — same privacy: isolated workers, deletion within minutes, no human review. Especially relevant when working with unpublished manuscripts — uploaded MOBI files are never used to train any model.
Text-heavy MOBI files produce HTML files of similar size (within 30%). Image-heavy MOBI can balloon — DOCX / RTF re-encode images uncompressed by default. Use the "compress images" advanced option to keep the HTML small.
CSS `margin-bottom` on `<p>` in the MOBI sometimes maps to a Word "Space After" value the editor doesn't expect. Select-all and apply a paragraph style to normalize. The HTML content is correct; only the visual spacing differs.
Yes — drop multiple MOBI files in and we extract each one in parallel. Useful for migrating a long ebook backlist into editable HTML drafts. The result is a zip of one HTML per source.

MOBI

Ko te MOBI (Mobipocket) he whakatakotoranga pukapuka-e i whakawhanakehia mo te Mobipocket Reader. Ka taea e nga konae MOBI te whakauru i nga ahuatanga penei i nga tohu pukapuka, nga tohu korero, me nga ihirangi ka taea te rere, kia hototahi ki nga momo taputapu e-panui.

HTML

Ko te HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) te reo paerewa mō te hanga whārangi tukutuku. Kei roto i ngā kōnae HTML he waehere hanganga me ngā tohu e tautuhi ana i te hanganga me te ihirangi o tētahi whārangi tukutuku. He mea nui te HTML mō te whakawhanaketanga tukutuku, e āhei ai te hanga i ngā paetukutuku taunekeneke, ātaahua hoki ki te titiro.


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