It allows people to look through your webcomic like they would in real life : panel by panel. It displays your pages through a series of zooms you defines beforehand.
To avoid writing the zooms informations by hand, Melpomene utility scripts uses SVGs as input to defines the zooms. It allows you to use any SVG editor as a "What You See Is What You Get" editor.
This repository host a small demo you can open in your browser : the [episode 35 of pepper and carrot](https://www.peppercarrot.com/en/webcomic/ep35_The-Reflection.html) (see Credits). You can open the HTML files in the `demos` folder to see Mepomene in action!
If you need to do some global scaling / offset of all zooms in HTML (if for example you reuse zooms data for multiple resolutions), you can add the following attributes to the `<div id="reader-pages" ...>` tag :
+ `data-global-zoom-offset="<x offset float value>,<y offset float value>"` : offset all positions by the provided x / y values
+ If they become negative, they get clamped to 0 and width / height get reduced to compensate
+ If they become greater than the page size, they get clamped to the page size and width / height get reduced to compensate
+ `data-global-zoom-scale="<float value>"` : scale all positions / sizes by this factor
To setup eslint, you can either install it on your system reading it's documentation, or use the provided Dockerfile to run it. This requires [docker](https://www.docker.com/).
To do so, assuming you are using linux, after installing docker, you can run from this repository root:
+ `docker build -t melpomene-eslint eslint/`, once
+ `docker run -v .:/melpomene:rw -w /melpomene --user $(id -u):$(id -g) melpomene-eslint`, every time you want to run the analysis
You can now open `eslint_report.html` to see the result.
Regarding Python, quality checking is done using [prospector](https://prospector.landscape.io/en/master/) using [mypy](https://mypy.readthedocs.io/en/stable/) as an additional checker.
Auto-formating is done using [Black](https://pypi.org/project/black/)
Dependencies are managed not using `pip` but [`pipenv`](https://pipenv.pypa.io/en/latest/).
Most examples and the documentation of Melpomene uses illustrations from David "Deevad" Revoy's "Pepper & Carrot" webcomic, which is published under CC-BY 4.0. Full licence [here](https://www.peppercarrot.com/en/license/index.html).