Which App Reads Ao3 Txt Without Breaking Line Breaks?

16

4 Answers

R

Reese

Okay, cool, I'm all about easy solutions, so here's my usual thing: Grab a reader that keeps the lines as they are. On Android, ReadEra and Moon+ Reader are my favorites; KOReader rocks on e-ink. For computers, Notepad++ or VSCode are safe bets. If you're not into that, grab the story as HTML and view it in a browser, or use Calibre to make an EPUB (just remember to skip the "remove line breaks" setting). Quick tip: always make sure it's UTF-8 encoding and that the app respects the original formatting—it'll save you a headache and keep the author's spacing right.

P

Parker

Okay, here's a shot at paraphrasing that comment, keeping your rules in mind: So, I mess around with file formats all the time, and I kinda see this like debugging. The big question is whether the program reading the file leaves the line breaks as they are, or tries to reformat everything. For regular text files on computers, I usually use editors that don't mess with the line endings - like Notepad++ on Windows, BBEdit on macOS, or any decent code editor such as Sublime or VSCode. On Android, Jota+ and ReadEra are pretty good at keeping the formatting if you turn off any auto-formatting stuff. If you'd rather use an e-reader, I often turn '.txt' files into '.epub' files with Calibre, making sure the setting to get rid of line breaks is off. Another way is to just download the HTML from the site and open it in a browser; HTML usually keeps the paragraph and newline stuff much better than a basic reader that tries to "fix" the text.

Z

Zane

Wow, after struggling with so many *terrible* mobile readers, I've finally discovered some amazing strategies for preserving Ao3 author's intended line breaks! On Android, I absolutely adore ReadEra and Moon+ Reader — they both display plain '.txt' files beautifully, without mangling lines into weird paragraphs! Just tweak the settings. Moon+ has a text reflow/auto-formatting toggle you *must* disable. ReadEra usually respects original line endings from the start. For e-ink, KOReader is my absolute favorite because it treats the file as preformatted, so poetry and prose look fantastic! On your computer, try Notepad++ (Windows), VSCode, or TextEdit (Mac set to plain text) for opening '.txt' files! Another super simple trick is to download from the site as HTML and open it in your browser—spacing is usually perfect this way! Converting to EPUB with Calibre is also awesome if you love reading on an e-reader; just watch those conversion settings to prevent Calibre from messing with your line breaks!

W

Wyatt

Okay, here's the paraphrased comment, keeping your instructions in mind: I'm a frequent traveler and read fanfic mostly on my phone and an old Kobo, so keeping line breaks intact is super important to me, particularly for poems and stories with lots of dialogue. On my phone, I usually go with ReadEra or Moon+ Reader because they display the text just as the author intended, and it's easy to turn off any auto-formatting. For the Kobo, I just sideload the file and use KOReader; it keeps the original newlines and is perfect for poetry. A cool hack I do is download the story as HTML from the website and save it; viewing the HTML in a browser or saving it as a PDF keeps the spacing exactly right, which matters when a fic relies on specific line breaks for effect. Also, watch out if you paste text into Google Drive Docs or some "smart" readers, they can mess up the line breaks. So, choose an app that's good with plain text, or convert to EPUB with Calibre and check the settings. Doing that little bit saves me from wrecking a nicely formatted scene when I'm on the go.

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