Steve, I fundamentally disagree about the relevance.
LyX is a front end for LaTeX, not a document format. And it is a FANTASTIC front end, which can be twsited to do a lot of things :-)-O pandoc can produce an epub from (reasonable) LaTeX (exported from LyX), which kindlegen can translate into mobi. For LaTeX there is lwarp at https://ctan.org/pkg/lwarp which also looks interesting. XML would be a great step, and not only for epub. But that would be a fundamental change, and who's going to do it? On 2018-11-02 18:57 , Steve Litt wrote: > On Thu, 1 Nov 2018 19:41:00 +0000 (UTC) > Anders Host-Madsen <ahostmad...@yahoo.com> wrote: > >> Perhaps beating a dead horse, but I really wish there would be a LyX >> for iPad. > > Perhaps this is why LyX becomes less relevant every year. Here, in > 2018, LyX *still* cannot produce an semantically reasonable ePub, and > even the semantically unreasonable ePubs require tons of human > intervention. LyX can't produce docs easily readable on iPads and other > portable devices because no ePub (and thus no Kindle). A decade ago it > was decided to make the (then) easily parsable LyX native format into > XML, but the transition stopped halfway, so it's unparseable by XML > parsers, and yet it's miserable to parse with a Python program. > > And all this while, where's the priority? LyX for Retina displays. LyX > for iPad (like anyone is capable of pounding out 2K words per day with > an iPad). All sorts of lilly-gilding, but LyX still can't do a > reasonable job of exporting the format used by portable devices, and > LyX' native format is still a jumble unparsable by an XML parser. > > I have nothing against Apple afficianados getting their every dream, > but if there's not the programmer-power to do everything, then for gosh > sakes, first make LyX native format truly XML and produce a 1 click ePub > converter that creates **semantic** ePubs. > > SteveT >