- From: Garth Conboy <garth@google.com>
- Date: Fri, 8 Dec 2017 08:10:03 -0800
- To: Andrew Sheppard <ajtsheppard@gmail.com>
- Cc: public-epubcheck@w3.org
- Message-ID: <CADExNBO8anjZw5hyHaGg4hgS7WCJDUx_57VMaz2i3nKP6jYkEA@mail.gmail.com>
How did the EPUB file get created? The first four are almost certainly files included in the OPF manifest that aren't actually in the EPUB. An automated creation tool really shouldn't have done that. But if you unzip the EPUB then hunt around for the string "Images/goodbye-books.png" you should likely find the reference and note that a file of that name isn't in the exploded directory structure (in the "Images/" subdirectory). The 2nd four are just errors in the markup -- look at the file "how-email- works.xhtml" at the lines 37, 44, 54, and 56 -- there will be a reference to a ID (e.g., "#foo") that doesn't actually exist in the XHTML markup file. Best, Garth On Fri, Dec 8, 2017 at 3:46 AM, Andrew Sheppard <ajtsheppard@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi, > > I used epubcheck to validate my book: > > java -jar epubcheck.jar book.epub > > I got these errors: > > ERROR(RSC-001): book.epub/book.epub(-1,-1): File > 'Images/goodbye-books.png' could not be found. > ERROR(RSC-001): book.epub/book.epub(-1,-1): File > 'Images/how-email-seems-to-work.png' could not be found. > ERROR(RSC-001): book.epub/book.epub(-1,-1): File > 'Images/how-email-works.png' could not be found. > ERROR(RSC-001): book.epub/book.epub(-1,-1): File > 'Images/how-gmail-works.png' could not be found. > ERROR(RSC-012): book.epub/OEBPS/how-email-works.xhtml(37,191): > Fragment identifier is not defined. > ERROR(RSC-012): book.epub/OEBPS/how-email-works.xhtml(44,175): > Fragment identifier is not defined. > ERROR(RSC-012): book.epub/OEBPS/how-email-works.xhtml(54,168): > Fragment identifier is not defined. > ERROR(RSC-012): book.epub/OEBPS/how-email-works.xhtml(56,188): > Fragment identifier is not defined. > > OK, great, but … I have no idea about how to go about fixing these errors! > Some pointers would be helpful. > > — Best regards, Andrew > > > >
Received on Friday, 8 December 2017 16:11:00 UTC