Dropbox was how I got my CBZ files onto the iMac to begin with, and integrating it into the UI via the Dropbox Chooser looked simple. The only feature I was unable to add was Dropbox support. Two page spread took longer, as it required a rewrite of the comic page display code.Keyboard controls were added using jquery.hotkeys, maintained by jQuery author John Resig.Fit to width and fit to height were implemented by css, and buttons were added to change the class name in jQuery.Once I had the code updated, cleaned, and understood, adding features was quick and easy: Once I began to understand the control flow, I was able to move the controls to the navbar to be cleaner and more compact. I cleaned up the copy and made small changes to familiarize myself with the source code. Once I had the code running locally, I upgraded the versions of Bootstrap and jQuery, moved the title to a navbar, and switched to a dark theme. Raymond's comic reader was only a weekend project, and had all the same interface problems as All Comics, but It was fast and open for improvements. I continued searching, and was surprised to find faster reader with a better uploader attached to an developer tutorial titled “ Building an HTML5 Comic Book Reader” by Raymond Camden. And no support for fitting images to the interface.I fought my way past the registration and uploader on All Comics only to be disappointed by: I couldn't run native applications, and Java wasn't installed, so I turned to the web. However, last month I found myself in front of a big, beautiful iMac screen, a comic I wanted to read on the desktop, and no way to view it. My favorite comic readers are Simple Comic on OS X and Perfect Viewer on Android. Link to Web Slinger Comic Book Reader Raymond's Comic Book Reader
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