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Chess Book Study v1.2 released!!

I am excited to release v1.2 of Chess Book Study with some important features.

  • Move Left/Right: You can now move back and forth through the moves. Just tap on the left or right half of the board or on any empty square.
  • Ebook Browser: Some of you mentioned that the ebook scanning operation in 1.0 can be slow and potentially shows a lot of pdfs (which may not be related to Chess). Now that is replaced with File browser so that you are in control!
  • Move Notation: See last move notation next to the board. This makes it easier to know at what move you left reading once you start the app again.
  • Illegal Moves: Basic illegal moves checking has been added so that you don’t inadvertently move pieces to the wrong square
  • Auto-complete castling

(Thanks to Benzi, Munroe, Luis, Jacob for their suggestions)

0 replies on “Chess Book Study v1.2 released!!”

Hi, Asim

Great! I have just installed this new version w/ its improvements. Thanks a lot. I've seen that the modified version of ebookdroid is already in the market: good decission!

The only thing that I haven't seen implemented is the fb2 file support in your ebookdroid customization. I suppose is intended to keep things simple.

I spite of that, I believe these improvements enhances a lot your app. I'm using it all the time 😉

I used to read some chess when I'm train (every day) and at night before falling asleep 😉 Your app is perfect for that purpose. Something unthinkable until you have implemented such a great idea.

I have more suggestions for future versions:

1. Taking "en passant" does not work for me. I think you should implement a rule for that specific case.
2. Being able to save moves in a pgn file at user request would be an incredible addon

Greetings

Ah, sorry about the enpassant issue. I just noticed it does not work for one side.

Will surely consider the save pgn feature.
Thanks.

Btw, which chess book are you currently reading?

Moving the pawn only one step instead of two is other simple trick to deal with this issue. I know, it is not the move in text, but it works until you fix the bug.

I'm currently reading different texts.

– Chesscafe monthly columns (they are free and excellent)
– The Chess Evolution Weekly Newsletter. It is delivered to subscribers as pgn and as pdf, and I prefer to read pdf files instead of pgn (more on that below)
– A chapter from Rowson, Seven Deadly Chess Sins. I made some photos and convert them to pdf for my personal use.

I have an obvious preference for pdf versus other formats. Why? I love books and pdf is the only format that preserves the original design. Sadly, I am not able to follow with complete accuracy a chess game and its variations without a chessboard. Otherwise, pgn readers are excellent to view moves, but disappointing to read big chunks of text.

I have been searching for a solution to my needs. The best I know is an ipad app (http://www.eplusbooks.com/index.php/home). Problem1: I have to buy an ipad only for that, and I don't like that closed iOS ecosystem. Problem2: Few titles.

Chess major publishers are currently engaged in two trends: delivering pgn/cbh versions of their books (Everymanchess) or kindle (drm protected epub) versions (Everymanchess, Gambitchess, …). Anybody bet on pdf.

Being a casual programmer myself, I have been thinking to do something. But I don't have enough time nor enough competence. You have developed the tool to read available texts. The other part of the problem is to have more texts, without resorting to piracy.

For example, the pgn file format is well documented. Some programs (scid for linux) include a converter pgn2pdf, but it is not lack of problems. It relies, as far as I remember, on the skak LaTeX package, but xskak is more versatile, and there are other recent CTAN packages to investigate. Other path would go from html (or epub xml) to pdf. Another one would be to develop a pgn reader with a completely enhanced text rendering system. So, a lot of things to think about.

At the moment your app is great for me.

A clarification:

I remember there is not a direct pgn2pdf converter in scid, as I said before, but a pgn2ltx (PGN to LaTeX) converter (At this moment I have no access to my Linux machine and I can't verify it), but the outputted *.tex file can be then converted by the user via pdflatex.

A direct converter was certainly present in a new proposed descendant of scid (scidb, currently in beta), but I have no access to the new realease of scidb anymore, because it seems that this release has compatibility problems with the recent ubuntu version installed in my computer.

Second clarification (sorry for inaccuracies in my first post):

The file format for Kindle ebooks is actually not 'epub' but 'mobi' (though it is easy to convert mobi to epub), and more recently Kindle Format 8 (with support for html5 and css3). I guess many if not all of the chessbooks available from amazon are yet in mobi format.

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