About BlockBookBinder

The BlockBookBinder is a simple application that gives you the power to write books faster than ever before! All you need to do is copy and paste some text into the Source panel on the right-hand side of the application, and click Compile from Source. Your text will be transformed so that it can fit onto written books in Minecraft, and you can preview the book in the Book Preview panel on the left-hand side of the application, using the navigation buttons below.

Note that your text might benefit from the Clean Source functionality, where extra new-line and other unnecessary whitespace characters are removed so that the text can be better compressed into Minecraft's limited format.

Once you've prepared a book and you want to actually copy it into Minecraft, click on Export to Minecraft. This will open up a popup with a few different buttons:

After setting any options that you want to, go ahead and press Start, and navigate back to your Minecraft window. You should hear ten beep sounds before exporting begins. If you selected auto-paste, you must make sure your mouse is hovering over the next page button in your written book before the ten seconds are up.

Once those first ten seconds pass, the first page will be loaded into your clipboard, and if auto-paste is enabled, automatically pasted into the book in your game. If auto-paste is not enabled, you'll need to manually paste each page, and then turn to the next page. You can see your progress in the popup, along with any important status updates as exporting progresses.

When all pages have been exported, you'll be prompted with a little popup, after which the export popup closes and you have the option to export again, or simply close the application if you're done.

Troubleshooting

This program works by hijacking your PC's input system to automatically transfer text to the system's clipboard, and then paste it by pressing CTRL+V for you. Because of the nature of such applications, there's no guarantee that this process will work on every computer. Here are some tips to try and get things working.


This program was written by Andrew Lalis. The source code is available on GitHub here. It is copyrighted with the MIT license, which means you can do whatever you want with it, so long as you keep the included copyright notice in any copies or modifications of the program.