Mohammed Efaz d682fcbb44 feat: add named highlight colors with sync and picker ux fixes (#3741)
* fix: add highlight color label fields

* fix: add default highlight label sync fields

* fix: add highlight prefs sync helpers

* fix: add highlight color name inputs

* fix: persist and sync highlight color names

* fix: add highlight color label helpers

* fix: add long press highlight label preview

* fix: pull highlight color prefs during library sync

* test: cover highlight color label helpers

* fix: widen highlight color name inputs

* fix: show highlight names on hover and touch hold

* fix: prevent highlight name input overlap

* fix: improve highlight name input responsiveness

* fix: support drag scrolling for highlight colors

* fix: batch custom color and label updates

* fix: serialize highlight prefs saves

* fix: align color strip drag and restore color clicks

* fix: translate default highlight color labels

* refactor: remove highlight preference sync wiring

* fix: align highlight option i18n with existing pattern

* fix: remove redundant english highlight keys

* fix: support raw and normalized highlight label keys

* fix: use underscore translator in highlight options

* fix: translate custom highlight color labels in editor

* refactor: simplify highlight settings persistence

* fix: maintianer review

* refactor: simplify highlight prefs save and clean up editor

- Drop the skipUserColors/skipLabels options from handleHighlightPrefsChange
  and always persist both arrays; the flags only masked a no-op caller.
- Type handleHighlightColorsChange with Record<HighlightColor, string>
  instead of typeof so the signature reads clearly.
- Remove the always-true `|| true` guard around the custom colors section.
- Stop wrapping user-typed custom color labels with _(), matching the
  built-in color inputs and keeping the input value equal to what the
  user typed.

* refactor: couple highlight labels to their colors

Replace the parallel `highlightColorLabels: Record<string, string>` map
with label storage that lives next to each color. This removes the hex
key normalization layer and its whole class of orphan/case-drift bugs.

Data model:
  userHighlightColors: string[]                    ->  UserHighlightColor[]
                                                       ({ hex, label? })
  highlightColorLabels: Record<string, string>     ->  (removed)
                                                       defaultHighlightLabels:
                                                         Partial<Record<DefaultHighlightColor, string>>

A `migrateHighlightColorPrefs` helper runs during `loadSettings` and
handles both the shipped `string[]` layout and the draft-build
`highlightColorLabels` layout: hex-keyed labels attach to matching user
colors, name-keyed labels move into `defaultHighlightLabels`. Malformed
entries are dropped.

Editor:
  - Label inputs commit on blur (Enter also commits), so typing a long
    label no longer fires `setSettings`/`saveSettings` on every
    keystroke. A small `LabelInput` component owns the draft state and
    syncs if the prop changes externally.
  - Three explicit callbacks (`onCustomHighlightColorsChange`,
    `onUserHighlightColorsChange`, `onDefaultHighlightLabelsChange`)
    replace the previous single callback with opaque skip flags.

Picker:
  - Extracted a reusable `useDragScroll` hook (mouse only, 6px
    threshold, 120ms click suppression) from the inline state machine
    in `HighlightOptions`. The picker drops to ~280 lines.
  - Long-press preview stays touch/pen only. It now reads labels via
    `getHighlightColorLabel` (which returns `undefined` when no user
    label is set), letting the component layer decide whether to fall
    back to a translated default name.

i18n:
  - Default color names ('red' | 'yellow' | 'green' | 'blue' | 'violet')
    are registered once at module scope via `stubTranslation` and
    translated at the picker layer through `useTranslation`. User-typed
    labels are never run through `_()`, so what the user types is what
    the editor shows.

Tests:
  - `annotator-util.test.ts`: rewritten around the new helper contract
    (user label -> undefined fallback) and case-insensitive hex matching.
  - `settings-highlight-migration.test.ts`: new, covers legacy
    `string[]`, already-migrated entries, malformed hex filtering, and
    the two draft-label fold paths.

---------

Co-authored-by: Huang Xin <chrox.huang@gmail.com>
2026-04-05 18:08:55 +08:00
2026-04-04 21:23:25 +02:00
2025-01-21 07:18:00 +01:00
2024-11-11 21:25:22 +01:00

Readest Logo

Readest


Readest is an open-source ebook reader designed for immersive and deep reading experiences. Built as a modern rewrite of Foliate, it leverages Next.js 16 and Tauri v2 to deliver a smooth, cross-platform experience across macOS, Windows, Linux, Android, iOS, and the Web.

Website Web App OS
Discord Reddit AGPL Licence Language Coverage Donate Latest release Last commit Commits Ask DeepWiki

FeaturesPlanned FeaturesScreenshotsDownloadsGetting StartedTroubleshootingSupportLicense

Features

Implemented
Feature Description Status
Multi-Format Support Support EPUB, MOBI, KF8 (AZW3), FB2, CBZ, TXT, PDF
Scroll/Page View Modes Switch between scrolling or paginated reading modes.
Full-Text Search Search across the entire book to find relevant sections.
Annotations and Highlighting Add highlights, bookmarks, and notes to enhance your reading experience and use instant mode for quicker interactions.
Dictionary/Wikipedia Lookup Instantly look up words and terms when reading.
Parallel Read Read two books or documents simultaneously in a split-screen view.
Customize Font and Layout Adjust font, layout, theme mode, and theme colors for a personalized experience.
Code Syntax Highlighting Read software manuals with rich coloring of code examples.
File Association and Open With Quickly open files in Readest in your file browser with one-click.
Library Management Organize, sort, and manage your entire ebook library.
OPDS/Calibre Integration Integrate OPDS/Calibre to access online libraries and catalogs.
Translate with DeepL and Yandex From a single sentence to the entire book—translate instantly.
Text-to-Speech (TTS) Support Enjoy smooth, multilingual narration—even within a single book.
Sync across Platforms Synchronize book files, reading progress, notes, and bookmarks across all supported platforms.
Sync with Koreader Synchronize reading progress, notes, and bookmarks with Koreader devices.
Accessibility Provides full keyboard navigation and supports for screen readers such as VoiceOver, TalkBack, NVDA, and Orca.
Visual & Focus Aids Reading ruler, paragraph-by-paragraph reading mode, and speed reading features.

Planned Features

🛠 Building
🔄 Planned
Feature Description Priority
AI-Powered Summarization Generate summaries of books or chapters using AI for quick insights. 🛠
Advanced Reading Stats Track reading time, pages read, and more for detailed insights. 🛠
Audiobook Support Extend functionality to play and manage audiobooks. 🔄
Handwriting Annotations Add support for handwriting annotations using a pen on compatible devices. 🔄
In-Library Full-Text Search Search across your entire ebook library to find topics and quotes. 🔄

Stay tuned for continuous improvements and updates! Contributions and suggestions are always welcome—let's build the ultimate reading experience together. 😊

Screenshots

Annotations

TTS

DeepL

Footnote

Wikipedia

Theming Dark Mode


Downloads

Mobile Apps

Download on the App Store     Get it on Google Play

Platform-Specific Downloads

Requirements

  • Node.js and pnpm for Next.js development
  • Rust and Cargo for Tauri development

For the best experience to build Readest for yourself, use a recent version of Node.js and Rust. Refer to the Tauri documentation for details on setting up the development environment prerequisites on different platforms.

nvm install v24
nvm use v24
npm install -g pnpm
rustup update

Getting Started

To get started with Readest, follow these steps to clone and build the project.

1. Clone the Repository

git clone https://github.com/readest/readest.git
cd readest

2. Install Dependencies

# might need to rerun this when code is updated
git submodule update --init --recursive
pnpm install
# copy vendors dist libs to public directory
pnpm --filter @readest/readest-app setup-vendors

3. Verify Dependencies Installation

To confirm that all dependencies are correctly installed, run the following command:

pnpm tauri info

This command will display information about the installed Tauri dependencies and configuration on your platform. Note that the output may vary depending on the operating system and environment setup. Please review the output specific to your platform for any potential issues.

For Windows targets, “Build Tools for Visual Studio 2022” (or a higher edition of Visual Studio) and the “Desktop development with C++” workflow must be installed. For Windows ARM64 targets, the “VS 2022 C++ ARM64 build tools” and "C++ Clang Compiler for Windows" components must be installed. And make sure clang can be found in the path by adding C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2022\BuildTools\VC\Tools\Llvm\x64\bin for example in the environment variable Path.

4. Build for Development

# Start development for the Tauri app
pnpm tauri dev
# or start development for the Web app
pnpm dev-web
# preview with OpenNext build for the Web app
pnpm preview

For Android:

# Initialize the Android environment (run once)
rm apps/readest-app/src-tauri/gen/android
pnpm tauri android init
git checkout apps/readest-app/src-tauri/gen/android

pnpm tauri android dev
# or if you want to dev on a real device
pnpm tauri android dev --host

For iOS:

# Set up the iOS environment (run once)
pnpm tauri ios init

pnpm tauri ios dev
# or if you want to dev on a real device
pnpm tauri ios dev --host

5. Build for Production

pnpm tauri build
pnpm tauri android build
pnpm tauri ios build

Please refer to our release script if you experience any issues: https://github.com/readest/readest/blob/main/.github/workflows/release.yml

6. Setup dev environment with Nix

If you have Nix installed, you can leverage flake to enter a development shell with all the necessary dependencies:

nix develop ./ops  # enter a dev shell for the web app
nix develop ./ops#ios # enter a dev shell for the ios app
nix develop ./ops#android # enter a dev shell for the android app

7. More information

Please check the wiki of this project for more information on development.

Troubleshooting

1. Readest Wont Launch on Windows (Missing Edge WebView2 Runtime)

Symptom

  • When you double-click readest.exe, nothing happens. No window appears, and Task Manager does not show the process.
  • This can affect both the standard installer and the portable version.

Cause

  • Microsoft Edge WebView2 Runtime is either missing, outdated, or improperly installed on your system. Readest depends on WebView2 to render the interface on Windows.

How to Fix

  1. Check if WebView2 is installed
    • Open “Add or Remove Programs” (a.k.a. Apps & features) on Windows. Look for “Microsoft Edge WebView2 Runtime.”
  2. Install or Update WebView2
    • Download the WebView2 Runtime directly from Microsoft: link.
    • If you prefer an offline installer, download the offline package and run it as an Administrator.
  3. Re-run Readest
    • After installing/updating WebView2, launch readest.exe again.
    • If you still encounter problems, reboot your PC and try again.

Additional Tips

  • If reinstalling once doesnt work, uninstall Edge WebView2 completely, then reinstall it with Administrator privileges.
  • Verify your Windows installation has the latest updates from Microsoft.

Still Stuck?

  • See Issue readest/readest#358 for further details, or head over to our Discord server and open a support discussion with detailed logs of your environment and the steps youve taken.

2. AppImage Launches but Only Shows a Taskbar Icon

On some Arch Linux systems—especially those using Wayland—the Readest AppImage may briefly show an icon in the taskbar and then exit without opening a window.

You might see logs such as:

Could not create default EGL display: EGL_BAD_PARAMETER. Aborting...

This behavior is usually caused by compatibility issues between the bundled AppImage libraries and the systems EGL / Wayland environment.

Workaround 1: Launch with LD_PRELOAD (recommended)

You can preload the system Wayland client library before launching the AppImage:

LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/libwayland-client.so /path/to/Readest.AppImage

This workaround has been confirmed to resolve the issue on affected systems.

Workaround 2: Use the Flatpak Version

If you prefer a more reliable out-of-the-box experience on Arch Linux, consider using the Flatpak build on Flathub instead. The Flatpak runtime helps avoid system library mismatches and tends to behave more consistently across different Wayland and X11 setups.

Contributors

Readest is open-source, and contributions are welcome! Feel free to open issues, suggest features, or submit pull requests. Please review our contributing guidelines before you start. We also welcome you to join our Discord community for either support or contributing guidance.

A table of avatars from the project's contributors

Support

If Readest has been useful to you, consider supporting its development. You can become a sponsor on GitHub, donate via Stripe, or donate with crypto. Your contribution helps us squash bugs faster, improve performance, and keep building great features.

Sponsors

License

Readest is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. See the LICENSE file for details.

The following libraries and frameworks are used in this software:

  • foliate-js, which is MIT licensed.
  • zip.js, which is licensed under the BSD-3-Clause license.
  • fflate, which is MIT licensed.
  • PDF.js, which is licensed under Apache License 2.0.
  • daisyUI, which is MIT licensed.
  • marked, which is MIT licensed.
  • next.js, which is MIT licensed.
  • react-icons, which has various open-source licenses.
  • react, which is MIT licensed.
  • tauri, which is MIT licensed.

The following fonts are utilized in this software, either bundled within the application or provided through web fonts:

Bitter, Fira Code, Inter, Literata, Merriweather, Noto Sans, Roboto, LXGW WenKai, MiSans, Source Han, WenQuanYi Micro Hei

We would also like to thank the Web Chinese Fonts Plan for offering open-source tools that enable the use of Chinese fonts on the web.


Happy reading with Readest!
S
Description
Local mirror of readest/readest for EPUB review editor migration
Readme 160 MiB
Languages
TypeScript 78.3%
MDX 10.1%
Lua 3.8%
Rust 3.2%
Kotlin 1.3%
Other 3.1%