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Hi Maria,
Sorry, I don’t quite understand what you mean. By “browser title”, do you mean the title displayed in Safari/Camino/whatever? Surely that is determined by what name you gave the file on export? Please explain further, as I’m not sure I understand the problem.
Thanks!
Keith
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Scrivener doesn’t actually do anything with the HTML title tag. It just uses the standard methods for converting text into HTML. These methods are by no means perfect, but they are nothing to do with Scrivener. There is an NSTitleDocumentAttribute defined by Apple for exports, so I will see if this does anything in this regard, though really, it is a little difficult for Scrivener to know what you would like the title tag to be.
EDIT: Scrivener, in fact, uses exactly the same methods (near enough) as TextEdit for saving to HTML.
Generally, Scrivener’s HTML export is quite rough. Just as you would have to tweak an export to your preferred word processor, so you may have to tweak HTML exports for final usage, by, for instance, modifying the title tag etc.
Hope that makes sense,
Best,
Keith
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Hi Maria,
I will look at it, though I have to admit that I’m as puzzled as you, given that I haven’t coded anything for this. When I get chance, I will take a look at the HTML export - thanks for sending me your file.
All the best,
Keith
Hi Maria,
I finally got around to checking your project. Was the title you were seeing in your exported HTML file:
Reise nach Griechenland
by any chance?
And were you using MultiMarkdown -> HTML to export it?
You have “Reise nach Griechenland” set as the export title under MultiMarkdown Settings.
Let me know, because if this is the case, it’s not a bug, you just forgot to change the title.
All the best,
Keith
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Are you 100% sure you didn’t accidentally choose that option - the last one in the menu - on that particular occasion? There really is no other way it could have happened.