## Summary
**What is the goal of this PR?**
Add Latin Extended-B glyphs for Croatian, Romanian, Pinyin, and European
diacritical variants. Fixes#921.
---
### AI Usage
While CrossPoint doesn't have restrictions on AI tools in contributing,
please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**PARTIALLY, confirmed
codepoint ranges with Claude**_
Small edits of the French translation.
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?**
Small fixes of the French translation : fixes on missing/unclear rows,
usage of technical terms better suited for an e-reader GUI, shorter
sentences.
* **What changes are included?**
See above and in the .yaml files; only translations have changed, no
code edit.
## Additional Context
* Nothing else
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**< NO >**_
---------
Co-authored-by: coderabbitai[bot] <136622811+coderabbitai[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
**What is the goal of this PR?**
I18nKeys.h and I18nStrings.h are generated by gen_i18n.py prior to each
build, so we do not need to maintain a checked-in copy of these files.
---
### AI Usage
While CrossPoint doesn't have restrictions on AI tools in contributing,
please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**NO**_
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?**
Add Vietnamese glyphs support for the reader's built-in fonts, enabling
proper rendering of Vietnamese text in EPUB content.
* **What changes are included?**
- Added 3 new Unicode intervals to `fontconvert.py` covering Vietnamese
characters:
- **Latin Extended-B** (Vietnamese subset only): `U+01A0–U+01B0` — Ơ/ơ,
Ư/ư
- **Vietnamese Extended**: `U+1EA0–U+1EF9` — All precomposed Vietnamese
characters with tone marks (Ả, Ấ, Ầ, Ẩ, Ẫ, Ậ, Ắ, …, Ỹ)
- Re-generated all 54 built-in font header files (Bookerly, Noto Sans,
OpenDyslexic, Ubuntu across all sizes and styles) to include the new
Vietnamese glyphs.
## Additional Context
* **Scope**: This PR only covers the **reader** fonts. The outer UI
still uses the Ubuntu font which does not fully support Vietnamese — UI
and i18n will be addressed in a follow-up PR (per discussion in PR
#1124).
* **Memory impact**:
| Metric | Before | After | Delta |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flash Data (`.rodata`) | 2,971,028 B | 3,290,748 B | **+319,720 B
(+10.8%)** |
| Total image size | 4,663,235 B | 4,982,955 B | **+319,720 B (+6.9%)**
|
| Flash usage | 69.1% | 74.0% | **+4.9 pp** |
| RAM usage | 29.0% | 29.0% | **No change** |
* **Risk**: Low — this is a data-only change (font glyph tables in
`.rodata`). No logic changes, no RAM impact. Flash headroom remains
comfortable at 74%.
---
### AI Usage
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**PARTIALLY**_
AI was used to identify the minimal set of Unicode ranges needed for
Vietnamese support and to assist with the PR description.
---------
Co-authored-by: danoooob <danoooob@example.com>
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?** Implements the Italian language
translation for CrossPoint Reader.
* **What changes are included?**
* Added [lib/I18n/translations/italian.yaml] with Italian translations
for all strings.
* Generated the necessary C++ files by running the [gen_i18n.py] script.
* Added myself to the [docs/translators.md] file under the Italian
section.
## Additional Context
---
### AI Usage
While CrossPoint doesn't have restrictions on AI tools in contributing,
please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**< PARTIALLY >**_
---------
Co-authored-by: Zach Nelson <zach@zdnelson.com>
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?**
Add missing `STR_SCREENSHOT_BUTTON`
## Additional Context
After the screenshot feature was added, a new translation line was
introduced
---
### AI Usage
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helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**NO **_
## Summary
**What is the goal of this PR?**
Improved typesetting, including
[kerning](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerning) and
[ligatures](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligature_(writing)#Latin_alphabet).
**What changes are included?**
- The script to convert built-in fonts now adds kerning and ligature
information to the generated font headers.
- Epub page layout calculates proper kerning spaces and makes ligature
substitutions according to the selected font.



## Additional Context
- I am not a typography expert.
- The implementation has been reworked from the earlier version, so it
is no longer necessary to omit Open Dyslexic, and kerning data now
covers all fonts, styles, and codepoints for which we include bitmap
data.
- Claude Opus 4.6 helped with a lot of this.
- There's an included test epub document with lots of kerning and
ligature examples, shown in the photos.
**_After some time to mature, I think this change is in decent shape to
merge and get people testing._**
After opening this PR I came across #660, which overlaps in adding
ligature support.
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**YES, Claude Opus 4.6**_
---------
Co-authored-by: Cursor <cursoragent@cursor.com>
## Summary
Bookerly's native TrueType hinting is effectively a no-op at the sizes
used here, causing FreeType to place stems at inconsistent sub-pixel
positions. This results in the 'k' stem (8-bit fringe: 0x38=56) falling
just below the 2-bit quantization threshold while 'l' and 'h' stems
(fringes: 0x4C=76, 0x40=64) land above it --- making 'k' visibly
narrower (2.00px vs 2.33px effective width).
FreeType's auto-hinter snaps all stems to consistent grid positions,
normalizing effective stem width to 2.67px across all glyphs.
Adds --force-autohint flag to fontconvert.py and applies it to Bookerly
only. NotoSans, OpenDyslexic, and Ubuntu fonts are unaffected.
Here is an example of before/after. Take notice of the vertical stems on
characters like `l`, `k`, `n`, `i`, etc. The font is Bookerly 12pt
regular:
**BEFORE**:

**AFTER**:

Claude generated this script to quantitatively determine that this
change makes the vertical stems on a variety of characters more
consistent for Bookerly _only_.
<details>
<summary>Python script</summary>
```python
#!/usr/bin/env python3
"""Compare stem consistency across all font families with and without
auto-hinting.
Run from repo root:
python3 compare_all_fonts.py
"""
import freetype
DPI = 150
CHARS = ["k", "l", "h", "i", "b", "d"]
SIZES = [12, 14, 16, 18]
FONTS = {
"Bookerly":
"lib/EpdFont/builtinFonts/source/Bookerly/Bookerly-Regular.ttf",
"NotoSans":
"lib/EpdFont/builtinFonts/source/NotoSans/NotoSans-Regular.ttf",
"OpenDyslexic":
"lib/EpdFont/builtinFonts/source/OpenDyslexic/OpenDyslexic-Regular.otf",
"Ubuntu": "lib/EpdFont/builtinFonts/source/Ubuntu/Ubuntu-Regular.ttf",
}
MODES = {
"default": freetype.FT_LOAD_RENDER,
"autohint": freetype.FT_LOAD_RENDER | freetype.FT_LOAD_FORCE_AUTOHINT,
}
def q4to2(v):
if v >= 12:
return 3
elif v >= 8:
return 2
elif v >= 4:
return 1
else:
return 0
def get_stem_eff(face, char, flags):
gi = face.get_char_index(ord(char))
if gi == 0:
return None
face.load_glyph(gi, flags)
bm = face.glyph.bitmap
w, h = bm.width, bm.rows
if w == 0 or h == 0:
return None
p2 = []
for y in range(h):
row = []
for x in range(w):
row.append(q4to2(bm.buffer[y * bm.pitch + x] >> 4))
p2.append(row)
# Measure leftmost stem in stable middle rows
mid_start, mid_end = h // 4, h - h // 4
widths = []
for y in range(mid_start, mid_end):
first = next((x for x in range(w) if p2[y][x] > 0), -1)
if first < 0:
continue
last = first
for x in range(first, w):
if p2[y][x] > 0:
last = x
else:
break
eff = sum(p2[y][x] for x in range(first, last + 1)) / 3.0
widths.append(eff)
return round(sum(widths) / len(widths), 2) if widths else None
def main():
for font_name, font_path in FONTS.items():
try:
freetype.Face(font_path)
except Exception:
print(f"\n {font_name}: SKIPPED (file not found)")
continue
print(f"\n{'=' * 80}")
print(f" {font_name}")
print(f"{'=' * 80}")
for size in SIZES:
print(f"\n {size}pt:")
print(f" {'':6s}", end="")
for c in CHARS:
print(f" '{c}' ", end="")
print(" | spread")
for mode_name, flags in MODES.items():
face = freetype.Face(font_path)
face.set_char_size(size << 6, size << 6, DPI, DPI)
vals = []
print(f" {mode_name:6s}", end="")
for c in CHARS:
v = get_stem_eff(face, c, flags)
vals.append(v)
print(f" {v:5.2f}" if v else " N/A", end="")
valid = [v for v in vals if v is not None]
spread = max(valid) - min(valid) if len(valid) >= 2 else 0
marker = " <-- inconsistent" if spread > 0.5 else ""
print(f" | {spread:.2f}{marker}")
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
```
</details>
Here are the results. The table compares how the font-generation
`autohint` flag affects the range of widths of various characters. Lower
`spread` mean that glyph stroke widths should appear more consistent.
```
Spread = max stem width - min stem width across glyphs (lower = more consistent):
┌──────────────┬──────┬─────────┬──────────┬──────────┐
│ Font │ Size │ Default │ Autohint │ Winner │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ Bookerly │ 12pt │ 1.49 │ 1.12 │ autohint │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 14pt │ 1.39 │ 1.13 │ autohint │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 16pt │ 1.38 │ 1.16 │ autohint │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 18pt │ 1.90 │ 1.58 │ autohint │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ NotoSans │ 12pt │ 1.16 │ 0.94 │ mixed │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 14pt │ 0.83 │ 1.14 │ default │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 16pt │ 1.41 │ 1.51 │ default │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 18pt │ 1.74 │ 1.63 │ mixed │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ OpenDyslexic │ 12pt │ 2.22 │ 1.44 │ autohint │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 14pt │ 2.57 │ 3.29 │ default │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 16pt │ 3.13 │ 2.60 │ autohint │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 18pt │ 3.21 │ 3.23 │ ~tied │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ Ubuntu │ 12pt │ 1.25 │ 1.31 │ default │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 14pt │ 1.41 │ 1.64 │ default │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 16pt │ 2.21 │ 1.71 │ autohint │
├──────────────┼──────┼─────────┼──────────┼──────────┤
│ │ 18pt │ 1.80 │ 1.71 │ autohint │
└──────────────┴──────┴─────────┴──────────┴──────────┘
```
---
### AI Usage
While CrossPoint doesn't have restrictions on AI tools in contributing,
please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? I used AI to make sure I'm
not doing something stupid, since I'm not a typography expert. I made
the changes though.
## Summary
Fix redefinition of `FILE_*` macro.
Note that there will still be 2 warning:
```
.pio/libdeps/default/WebSockets/src/WebSocketsClient.cpp: In member function 'void WebSocketsClient::clientDisconnect(WSclient_t*, const char*)':
.pio/libdeps/default/WebSockets/src/WebSocketsClient.cpp:573:31: warning: 'virtual void NetworkClient::flush()' is deprecated: Use clear() instead. [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
573 | client->tcp->flush();
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~
```
--> I assume the upstream library need to fix it
And:
```
src/activities/Activity.cpp:8:1: warning: 'noreturn' function does return
8 | }
| ^
```
Will be fixed in #1016
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? **NO**
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?**
Fix inconsistent WiFi strings in Czech translation.
* **What changes are included?**
Only a few `Wi-Fi` strings changed to `WiFi` to maintain consistency.
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**NO**_
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?** (e.g., Implements the new feature for
file uploading.)
Added Romanian translations for newly addded strings
* **What changes are included?**
Just the translations in the localisation file.
## Additional Context
* Add any other information that might be helpful for the reviewer
(e.g., performance implications, potential risks,
specific areas to focus on).
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**< NO >**_
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?** Address expected hyphenation issue
from
https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader/issues/998#issuecomment-3940533510
* Closes#998
* **What changes are included?** Add `„` (U+201E, _Double Low-9
Quotation Mark_), `‚` (U+201A, _Single Low-9 Quotation Mark_) and `‹`
(U+2039, _Single Left-pointing Angle Quotation Mark_) exceptions, other
quote types were handled correctly.
**Before**
<img width="480" height="155" alt="hyph3"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/e06b4071-2c8c-4814-965d-96fbe302a450"
/>
**After**
<img width="480" height="154" alt="hyph3-fix"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4f7f5406-e200-451c-8bee-3f410cc84bbe"
/>
## Additional Context
* Add any other information that might be helpful for the reviewer
(e.g., performance implications, potential risks,
specific areas to focus on).
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**NO**_
## Summary
**What is the goal of this PR?**
Consolidated repeated logic to fall back to REPLACEMENT_GLYPH.
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**NO**_
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?**
A Ukrainian translation for the GUI
* **What changes are included?**
Everything according to
https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader/blob/master/docs/i18n.md
## Additional Context
* Add any other information that might be helpful for the reviewer
(e.g., performance implications, potential risks,
specific areas to focus on).
Nope
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**< PARTIALLY >**_ as a
consistency validation
## Summary
* Remove miniz and move completely to uzlib
* Move uzlib interfacing to InflateReader to better modularise inflation
code
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? Yes, Claude helped with
the extraction and refactor
## Summary
* Resolve several build warnings
---
### AI Usage
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helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? No
## Summary
* This PR introduces a migration from binary file storage to JSON-based
storage for application settings, state, and various credential stores.
This improves readability, maintainability, and allows for easier manual
configuration editing.
* Benefits:
- Settings files are now JSON and can be easily read/edited manually
- Easier to inspect application state and settings during development
- JSON structure is more flexible for future changes
* Drawback: around 15k of additional flash usage
* Compatibility: Seamless migration preserves existing user data
## Additional Context
1. New JSON I/O Infrastructure files:
- JsonSettingsIO: Core JSON serialization/deserialization logic using
ArduinoJson library
- ObfuscationUtils: XOR-based password obfuscation for sensitive data
2. Migrated Components (now use JSON storage with automatic binary
migration):
- CrossPointSettings (settings.json): Main application settings
- CrossPointState (state.json): Application state (open book, sleep
mode, etc.)
- WifiCredentialStore (wifi.json): WiFi network credentials (Password
Obfuscation: Sensitive data like WiFi passwords, uses XOR encryption
with fixed keys. Note: This is obfuscation, not cryptographic security -
passwords can be recovered with the key)
- KOReaderCredentialStore (koreader.json): KOReader sync credentials
- RecentBooksStore (recent.json): Recently opened books list
3. Migration Logic
- Forward Compatibility: New installations use JSON format
- Backward Compatibility: Existing binary files are automatically
migrated to JSON on first load
- Backup Safety: Original binary files are renamed with .bak extension
after successful migration
- Fallback Handling: If JSON parsing fails, system falls back to binary
loading
4. Infrastructure Updates
- HalStorage: Added rename() method for backup operations
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _** YES**_
---------
Co-authored-by: Dave Allie <dave@daveallie.com>
## Summary
_Revision to @blindbat's #802. Description comes from the original PR._
- Replace `std::list` with `std::vector` for word storage in `TextBlock`
and `ParsedText`
- Use index-based access (`words[i]`) instead of iterator advancement
(`std::advance(it, n)`)
- Remove the separate `continuesVec` copy that was built from
`wordContinues` for O(1) access — now unnecessary since
`std::vector<bool>` already provides O(1) indexing
## Why
`std::list` allocates each node individually on the heap with 16 bytes
of prev/next pointer overhead per node. For text layout with many small
words, this means:
- Scattered heap allocations instead of contiguous memory
- Poor cache locality during iteration (each node can be anywhere in
memory)
- Per-node malloc/free overhead during construction and destruction
`std::vector` stores elements contiguously, giving better cache
performance during the tight rendering and layout loops. The
`extractLine` function also benefits: list splice was O(1) but required
maintaining three parallel iterators, while vector range construction
with move iterators is simpler and still efficient for the small
line-sized chunks involved.
## Files changed
- `lib/Epub/Epub/blocks/TextBlock.h` / `.cpp`
- `lib/Epub/Epub/ParsedText.h` / `.cpp`
## AI Usage
YES
## Test plan
- [ ] Open an EPUB with mixed formatting (bold, italic, underline) —
verify text renders correctly
- [ ] Open a book with justified text — verify word spacing is correct
- [ ] Open a book with hyphenation enabled — verify words break
correctly at hyphens
- [ ] Navigate through pages rapidly — verify no rendering glitches or
crashes
- [ ] Open a book with long paragraphs — verify text layout matches
pre-change behavior
---------
Co-authored-by: Kuanysh Bekkulov <kbekkulov@gmail.com>
## Summary
* This PR fixes decomposed diacritic handling end-to-end:
- Hyphenation: normalize common Latin base+combining sequences to
precomposed codepoints before Liang pattern matching, so decomposed
words hyphenate correctly
- Rendering: correct combining-mark placement logic so non-spacing marks
are attached to the preceding base glyph in normal and rotated text
rendering paths, with corresponding text-bounds consistency updates.
- Hyphenation around non breaking space variants have been fixed (and
extended)
- Hyphenation of terms that already included of hyphens were fixed to
include Liang pattern application (eg "US-Satellitensystem" was
*exclusively* broken at the existing hyphen)
## Additional Context
* Before
<img width="800" height="480" alt="2"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b9c515c4-ab75-45cc-8b52-f4d86bce519d"
/>
* After
<img width="480" height="800" alt="fix1"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4999f6a8-f51c-4c0a-b144-f153f77ddb57"
/>
<img width="800" height="480" alt="fix2"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/7355126b-80c7-441f-b390-4e0897ee3fb6"
/>
* Note 1: the hyphenation fix is not a 100% bullet proof implementation.
It adds composition of *common* base+combining sequences (e.g. O +
U+0308 -> Ö) during codepoint collection. A complete solution would
require implementing proper Unicode normalization (at least NFC,
possibly NFKC in specific cases) before hyphenation and rendering,
instead of hand-mapping a few combining marks. That was beyond the scope
of this fix.
* Note 2: the render fix should be universal and not limited to the
constraints outlined above: it properly x-centers the compund glyph over
the previous one, and it uses at least 1pt of visual distance in y.
Before:
<img width="478" height="167" alt="Image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f8db60d5-35b1-4477-96d0-5003b4e4a2a1"
/>
After:
<img width="479" height="180" alt="Image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1b48ef97-3a77-475a-8522-23f4aca8e904"
/>
* This should resolve the issues described in #998
---
### AI Usage
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Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**PARTIALLY**_
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?** (e.g., Implements the new feature for
file uploading.)
* The goal is to fix the title of books in the Home Screen.
Before

After:

* **What changes are included?**
## Additional Context
* Add any other information that might be helpful for the reviewer
(e.g., performance implications, potential risks,
specific areas to focus on).
---
### AI Usage
While CrossPoint doesn't have restrictions on AI tools in contributing,
please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? YES, Cursor
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?**
* improve Spanish translations
* **What changes are included?**
- Fix typos and accents (Librería, conexión, etc.)
- Translate untranslated strings (BOOTING, SLEEPING, etc.)
- Improve consistency and conciseness
- Fix question mark placement (¿...?)
- Standardize terminology (Punto de Acceso, Suspensión, etc.)
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**< YES >**_
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?** (e.g., Implements the new feature for
file uploading.)
Add support for Catalan language user interface.
* **What changes are included?**
A new i18n file catalan.yml.
## Additional Context
* Add any other information that might be helpful for the reviewer
(e.g., performance implications, potential risks,
specific areas to focus on).
---
### AI Usage
While CrossPoint doesn't have restrictions on AI tools in contributing,
please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? NO
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?** (e.g., Implements the new feature for
file uploading.)
To add upport for a romanian language user interface.
* **What changes are included?**
A new i18n file `romanian.yml`
## Additional Context
* Add any other information that might be helpful for the reviewer
(e.g., performance implications, potential risks,
specific areas to focus on).
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**< NO >**_
## Summary
* Destroy CSS Cache file when invalid
## Additional Context
* Fixes issue where it would attempt to rebuild every book open
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? No
## Summary
* In a sample book I loaded, it had 900+ CSS rules, and took up 180kB of
memory loading the cache in
* Looking at the rules, a lot of them were completely useless as we only
ever apply look for 3 kinds of CSS rules:
* `tag`
* `tag.class1`
* `.class1`
* Stripping out CSS rules with descendant, nested, attribute matching,
sibling matching, pseudo element selection (as we never actually read
these from the cache) reduced the rule count down to 200
## Additional Context
* I've left in `.class1.class2` rules for now, even though we
technically can never match on them as they're likely to be addressed
soonest out of the all the CSS expansion
* Because we don't ever delete the CSS cache, users will need to delete
the book cache through the menu in order to get this new logic
* A new PR should be done up to address this - tracked here
https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader/issues/1015
---
### AI Usage
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## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?** (e.g., Implements the new feature for
file uploading.)
When no width is set for an image, the image currently automatically
sets to the width of the page. However, with this fix, the parser will
use the height and aspect ratio of the image to properly set a height
for it. See below example:
Before:

After:

* **What changes are included?✱
Changes to the CSS parser
## Additional Context
* Add any other information that might be helpful for the reviewer
(e.g., performance implications, potential risks,
specific areas to focus on).
---
### AI Usage
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Did you use AI tools to help write this code? YES, Cursor
## Summary
Fixes https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader/issues/1011
Use double FAST_REFRESH for image pages to prevent grayscale washout,
HALF_REFRESH sets e-ink particles too firmly for the grayscale LUT to
adjust, causing washed-out images (especially large, light-gray ones).
Replace HALF_REFRESH with @pablohc's double FAST_REFRESH technique:
blank only the image bounding box area, then re-render with images. This
clears ghosting while keeping particles loosely set for grayscale.
## Additional Context
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
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## Summary
* ``renderChar`` checked ``is2Bit`` on every pixel inside the inner
loop, even though the value is constant for the lifetime of a single
glyph
* Moved the branch above both loops so each path (2-bit antialiased /
1-bit monochrome) runs without a per-pixel conditional
* Eliminates redundant work in the two inner loops that render font
glyphs to the frame buffer, targeting ``renderChar`` and
``drawTextRotated90CW`` in ``GfxRenderer.cpp``
## Additional Context
* Measured on device using a dedicated framebuffer benchmark (no display
refresh). 100 repetitions of "The quick brown fox jumps".
| Test | Before | After | Change |
|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------|---------|
| drawText UI12 | 1,337 µs/call | 1,024 µs/call | −23%|
| drawText Bookerly14 | 2.174 µs / call | 1,847 µs/call | −15% |
---
### AI Usage
While CrossPoint doesn't have restrictions on AI tools in contributing,
please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**PARTIALLY**_ Claude did
the analysis and wrote the benchmarks
## Summary
The introduction of `HalGPIO` moved the `BatteryMonitor battery` object
into the member function `HalGPIO::getBatteryPercentage()`.
Then, with the introduction of `HalPowerManager`, this function was
moved to `HalPowerManager::getBatteryPercentage()`.
However, the original `BatteryMonitor battery` object is still utilized
by themes for displaying the battery percentage.
This PR replaces these deprecated uses of `BatteryMonitor battery` with
the new `HalPowerManager::getBatteryPercentage()` function.
---
### AI Usage
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## Summary
* Increased `PNG_MAX_BUFFERED_PIXELS` from 6402 to 16416 in
`platformio.ini` to support up to 2048px wide RGBA images
* adds a check to abort decoding and log an error if the required PNG
scanline buffer exceeds the configured `PNG_MAX_BUFFERED_PIXELS`,
preventing possible buffer overruns.
* fixes
https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader/issues/993
---
### AI Usage
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## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?**
I flashed the last revision before commit f1740dbe, and chapter indexing
worked without any crashes.
After applying f1740dbe, the same chapter consistently triggered a
device reboot during indexing.
The affected chapter contains inline equation images surrounded by
styled (bold/italic) text that includes special math/symbol characters.
## Additional Context
Prior to f1740dbe, both `getTextAdvanceX()` and `getSpaceWidth()` always
measured text using `EpdFontFamily::REGULAR`, regardless of the actual
style.
Commit f1740dbe improved correctness by passing the active style so
spacing is calculated using the actual bold/italic font variant.
However, bold and italic variants have narrower Unicode coverage than
the regular font. When a character exists in the regular font but not in
the selected styled variant, `pdFont::getGlyph()` returns `nullptr`.
The updated measurement functions did not check for this and immediately
dereferenced the pointer:
`width += font.getGlyph(cp, style)->advanceX; // nullptr->advanceX`
Because `advanceX` is located at byte offset 2 within `EpdGlyph`,
dereferencing a null pointer caused the CPU to attempt a load from
address `0x00000002`, resulting in a RISC-V:
Load access fault
MCAUSE = 5
MTVAL = 2
## Fix
Added null-safety checks to both `getTextAdvanceX()` and
`getSpaceWidth()`, following the same pattern used in the rendering
path:
If the glyph is missing in the selected style → fall back to the
replacement glyph.
If the replacement glyph is also unavailable → treat the character as
zero-width.
This preserves the improved style-correct spacing while preventing
crashes.
No behavioral changes occur for characters that are supported by the
selected font variant.
---
### AI Usage
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**< YES >**_
I encounter this bug while testing 1.1.0 RC.
I pasted the serial log to Claude, which identify the bug and fixed it.
I can confirm now the chapter in question is indexed and loaded
correctly.
I've been reading "Children of Time" over the last days and that book,
annyoingly, has some tabular content.
This content is relevant for the story so I needed some really basic way
to at least be able to read those tables.
This commit simply renders the contents of table cells as separate
paragraphs with a small header describing its position in the table. For
me, it's better than nothing.
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?**
Implements really basic table support
* **What changes are included?**
* Minimal changes to ChapterHtmlSlimParser
* A demo book in test/epubs
## Additional Context
Here's some screenshots of the demo-book I provide with this PR.


---
### AI Usage
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helps set the right context for reviewers.
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_Little bit of guidance on what to touch, parts of the impl, rest
manually._
## Summary
**What is the goal of this PR?**
* Implement feature request
[#954](https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader/issues/954)
* Ensure cover images are scaled up to match the dimensions of the
screen, as well as scaled down
**What changes are included?**
* Naïve implementation for scaling up the source image
## Additional Context
If you find the extra comments to be excessive I can pare them back.
Edit: Fixed title
---
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## Summary
* What is the goal of this PR?
- Allow users to create custom sleep screen images with standard tools
(ImageMagick, GIMP, etc.) that render cleanly on the e-ink display
without dithering artifacts. Previously, avoiding dithering required
non-standard 2-bit BMPs that no standard image editor can produce. ( see
issue #931 )
* What changes are included?
- Add 4-bit BMP format support to Bitmap.cpp (standard format, widely
supported by image tools)
- Auto-detect "native palette" images: if a BMP has ≤4 palette entries
and all luminances map within ±21 of the display's native gray levels
(0, 85, 170, 255), skip dithering entirely and direct-map pixels
- Clarify pixel processing strategy with three distinct paths:
error-diffusion dithering, simple quantization, or direct mapping
- Add scripts/generate_test_bmps.py for generating test images across
all supported BMP formats
## Additional Context
* The e-ink display has 4 native gray levels. When a BMP already uses
exactly those levels, dithering adds noise to what should be clean
output. The native palette detection uses a ±21 tolerance (~10%) to
handle slight rounding from color space conversions in image tools.
Users can now create a 4-color grayscale BMP with (imagemagic example):
```
convert input.png -colorspace Gray -colors 4 -depth
```
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
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## Summary
**What is the goal of this PR?**
`hasPrintableChars` does a pass over text before rendering. It looks up
glyphs in the font and measures dimensions, returning early if the text
results in zero size.
This additional pass doesn't offer any benefit over moving straight to
rendering the text, because the rendering loop already gracefully
handles missing glyphs. This change saves an extra pass over all
rendered text.
Note that both `hasPrintableChars` and `renderChar` replace missing
glyphs with `glyph = getGlyph(REPLACEMENT_GLYPH)`, so there's no
difference for characters which are not present in the font.
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
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## Summary
**What is the goal of this PR?** (e.g., Implements the new feature for
file uploading.)
* Fixes:
https://github.com/crosspoint-reader/crosspoint-reader/issues/947
**What changes are included?**
* Check to see if there's free heap memory before processing CSS (should
we be doing this type of check or is it better to just crash if we
exhaust the memory?)
* Skip CSS files larger than 128kb
## Additional Context
* I found that a copy of `Release it` contained a 250kb+ CSS file, from
the homepage of the publisher. It has nothing to do with the epub, so we
should just skip it
* Major question: Are there better ways to detect CSS that doesn't
belong in a book, or is this size-based approach valid?
* Another question: Are there any epubs we know of that legitimately
include >128kb CSS files?
Code changes themselves created with an agent, all investigation and
write-up done by human. If you (the maintainers) would prefer a
different fix for this issue, let me know.
---
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## Summary
* GfxRender did handle horizontal and vertical lines but had a TODO for
arbitrary lines.
* Added integer based Bresenham line drawing
## Additional Context
---
### AI Usage
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## Summary
* Original implementation had inconsistent positioning logic:
- When XPath parsing succeeded: incorrectly set pageNumber = 0 (always
beginning of chapter)
- When XPath parsing failed: used percentage for positioning (worked
correctly)
- Result: Positions restored to wrong locations depending on XPath
parsing success
- Mentioned in Issue #581
* Solution
- Unified ProgressMapper::toCrossPoint() to use percentage-based
positioning exclusively for both spine identification and intra-chapter
page calculation, eliminating unreliable XPath parsing entirely.
## Additional Context
* ProgressMapper.cpp: Simplified toCrossPoint() to always use percentage
for positioning, removed parseDocFragmentIndex() function
* ProgressMapper.h: Updated comments and removed unused function
declaration
* Tests confirmed appropriate positioning
* __Notabene: the syncing to another device will (most probably) end up
at the current chapter of crosspoints reading position. There is not
much we can do about it, as KOReader needs to have the correct XPath
information - we can only provide an apporximate position (plus
percentage) - the percentage information is not used in KOReaders
current implementation__
---
### AI Usage
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helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? YES
## Summary
* **What is the goal of this PR?**
Add proper hyphenation support for the Ukrainian language.
* **What changes are included?**
- Added Ukrainian hyphenation rules/dictionary
## Additional Context
---
### AI Usage
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**NO**_
## Summary
**What is the goal of this PR?**
This change fixes an issue I noticed while reading where occasionally,
especially in italics, some words would have too much space between
them. The problem was that word width calculations were including any
negative X overhang, and combined with a space before the word, that can
lead to an inconsistently large space.
## Additional Context
Screenshots of some problematic text:
| In CrossPoint 1.0 | With this change |
| -- | -- |
| <img
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/87bf0e4b-341f-4ba9-b3ea-38c13bd26363"
width="400" /> | <img
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/bf11ba20-c297-4ce1-aa07-43477ef86fc2"
width="400" /> |
---
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## Summary
* During chapter parsing, every <img> tag triggered ZIP decompression
and an SD card write regardless of whether the image format was
supported. The mandatory delay(50) after each SD write compounded the
cost. A chapter with 6 GIF images (a common decorative element in older
EPUBs) wasted ~750 ms before any text rendering began.
* **What changes are included?**
Added an ``ImageDecoderFactory::isFormatSupported()`` check before any
file I/O in the img-handler. Only JPEG and PNG proceed to extraction;
all other formats (GIF, SVG, WebP, etc.) fall through immediately to
alt-text rendering with no SD card access.
## Additional Context
Measured impact on a representative chapter with 6 GIF decorations:
| | Before | After|
|-- | -- | --|
|Total parse time | ~882 ms | ~207 ms|
|Image handling | ~750 ms | ~76 ms|
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**NO**_
## Summary
**What is the goal of this PR?**
Compress reader font bitmaps to reduce flash usage by 30.7%.
**What changes are included?**
- New `EpdFontGroup` struct and extended `EpdFontData` with
`groups`/`groupCount` fields
- `--compress` flag in `fontconvert.py`: groups glyphs (ASCII base group
+ groups of 8) and compresses each with raw DEFLATE
- `FontDecompressor` class with 4-slot LRU cache for on-demand
decompression during rendering
- `GfxRenderer` transparently routes bitmap access through
`getGlyphBitmap()` (compressed or direct flash)
- Uses `uzlib` for decompression with minimal heap overhead.
- 48 reader fonts (Bookerly, NotoSans 12-18pt, OpenDyslexic) regenerated
with compression; 5 UI fonts unchanged
- Round-trip verification script (`verify_compression.py`) runs as part
of font generation
## Additional Context
## Flash & RAM
| | baseline | font-compression | Difference |
|--|--------|-----------------|------------|
| Flash (ELF) | 6,302,476 B (96.2%) | 4,365,022 B (66.6%) | -1,937,454 B
(-30.7%) |
| firmware.bin | 6,468,192 B | 4,531,008 B | -1,937,184 B (-29.9%) |
| RAM | 101,700 B (31.0%) | 103,076 B (31.5%) | +1,376 B (+0.5%) |
## Script-Based Grouping (Cold Cache)
Comparison of uncompressed baseline vs script-based group compression
(4-slot LRU cache, cleared each page). Glyphs are grouped by Unicode
block (ASCII, Latin-1, Latin Extended-A, Combining Marks, Cyrillic,
General Punctuation, etc.) instead of sequential groups of 8.
### Render Time
| | Baseline | Compressed (cold cache) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| **Median** | 414.9 ms | 431.6 ms | +16.7 ms (+4.0%) |
| **Pages** | 37 | 37 | |
### Memory Usage
| | Baseline | Compressed (cold cache) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| **Heap free (median)** | 187.0 KB | 176.3 KB | -10.7 KB |
| **Heap free (min)** | 186.0 KB | 166.5 KB | -19.5 KB |
| **Largest block (median)** | 148.0 KB | 128.0 KB | -20.0 KB |
| **Largest block (min)** | 148.0 KB | 120.0 KB | -28.0 KB |
### Cache Effectiveness
| | Misses/page | Hit rate |
|---|---|---|
| **Compressed (cold cache)** | 2.1 | 99.85% |
------
### AI Usage
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helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**YES**_
Implementation was done by Claude Code (Opus 4.6) based on a plan
developed collaboratively. All generated font headers were verified with
an automated round-trip decompression test. The firmware was compiled
successfully but has not yet been tested on-device.
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
## Summary
I want to preface this PR by stating that the proposed changes are
subjective to people's opinions. The following is just my suggestion,
but I'm of course open to changes.
The popups in the currently implemented version of the Lyra theme feel a
bit out of place. This PR suggests an updated version which looks a bit
more polished and in line with the rest of the theme.
I've also taken the liberty to remove the ellipsis behind the text of
the popups, as they made the popup feel a bit off balance (example
below).
With the applied changes, popups will look like this.

The vertical position is (more or less) aligned to be in line with the
sleep button. I'm aware the popup is used for other purposes aside from
the sleep message, but this still felt like a good place. It's also a
place where your eyes naturally 'rest'.
The popup has a small 2px white outline, neatly separating it from
whatever is behind it.
### Alternatives considered and rationale behind proposal
Initially I started out worked off the Figma design for the Lyra theme,
which [moves the
popups](https://www.figma.com/design/UhxoV4DgUnfrDQgMPPTXog/Lyra-Theme?node-id=2011-19296&t=Ppj6B2MrFRfUo9YX-1)
to the bottom of the screen. To me, this results in popups that are much
too easy to miss:

After this, I tried moving the popup back up (to the position of the
sleep button), but to me it still kinda disappeared into the text of the
book:

Inverting the colors of the popup made things stand out the perfect
amount in my opinion. The white outline separates the popup from what is
behind it.

This looked much better to me. The only thing that felt a bit off to me,
was the balance due to the ellipsis at the end of the popup text. Also,
"Entering Sleep..." felt a bit.. engineer-y. I felt something a bit more
'conversational' makes at all feel a bit more human-centric. But I'm no
copywriter, and English is not even my native language. So feel free to
chip in!
After tweaking that, I ended up with the final result:
_(Same picture as the first one shown in this PR)_

## Additional Context
* Figma design:
https://www.figma.com/design/UhxoV4DgUnfrDQgMPPTXog/Lyra-Theme?node-id=2011-19296&t=Ppj6B2MrFRfUo9YX-1
---
### AI Usage
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please be transparent about their usage as it
helps set the right context for reviewers.
Did you use AI tools to help write this code? _**NO**_