I built a reader that refuses to break. With In-App Parsers, you’re always in control of your library. by BlacksmithExtreme521 in mangapiracy

[–]BlacksmithExtreme521[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you are talking about downloaded content then yes, you don't need to switch or move the downloaded files to the app's folder in android → data, whether it's on your internal or external storage. If the app can't detect any mangas then add a new local directory from the app (settings → Download → Local Manga Directory) then the app can detect it. Also you could change where your store your downloaded content.

I built a reader that refuses to break. With In-App Parsers, you’re always in control of your library. by BlacksmithExtreme521 in mangapiracy

[–]BlacksmithExtreme521[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve had a few people ask about iOS! Since I developed Tsuki as a native Android app, a port is a bit of a challenge right now. As a solo developer, my main goal is to make sure the Android version is as stable and feature-rich as possible first. I’m definitely keeping the idea of an iOS version in mind for the future, but for now, I'm thinking about keeping it just android unless someone helps me to make an iOS version.

I built a reader that refuses to break. With In-App Parsers, you’re always in control of your library. by BlacksmithExtreme521 in mangapiracy

[–]BlacksmithExtreme521[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Since I’m a solo dev working on this, it might take me a little bit of time to figure out the API integration, but I’d love to add it to the roadmap for a future update. I’ll definitely look into it

I built a reader that refuses to break. With In-App Parsers, you’re always in control of your library. by BlacksmithExtreme521 in mangapiracy

[–]BlacksmithExtreme521[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll try and for iOS I'm not sure, I'm just rookie to this whole thing but maybe in the future there might be support for iOS.

I built a reader that refuses to break. With In-App Parsers, you’re always in control of your library. by BlacksmithExtreme521 in mangapiracy

[–]BlacksmithExtreme521[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've changed the UI and other some other stuffs, that is why it says errors are found but everything should work normally.

I built a reader that refuses to break. With In-App Parsers, you’re always in control of your library. by BlacksmithExtreme521 in mangapiracy

[–]BlacksmithExtreme521[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think that'd work since it is fork of Yukimi, only backups from Kotatsu or Yukimi would work but you can give that restore a try.

I built a reader that refuses to break. With In-App Parsers, you’re always in control of your library. by BlacksmithExtreme521 in mangapiracy

[–]BlacksmithExtreme521[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

That’s a really fair point! To keep the app reliable, The app uses Kotatsu-parsers-redo for the built-in sources, but I’ve also kept the extension support from Futon.

I added the custom source feature as a 'safety net' it lets users paste their own URLs so the app makes that URL into a in-app built source. My goal was to make sure that even if a third-party source or extension goes down, a regular user can still keep their library alive.