EPUB (Electronic Publication)

  • Widely accepted open standard for e-books

  • Compatible with most devices including smartphones, tablets, and e-readers

  • Supports reflowable text, multimedia, and interactive elements

  • Ideal for responsive reading across screen sizes

  • Commonly used in publishing, education, and self-publishing platforms

PDF (Portable Document Format)

  • Maintains fixed layout across all devices

  • Supports text, images, hyperlinks, and annotations

  • Ideal for academic, reference, and graphic-rich books

  • Not reflowable, which may reduce readability on smaller screens

  • Universally accessible with standard PDF readers

MOBI (Mobipocket)

  • Designed specifically for mobile devices and older Kindle models

  • Lightweight format suitable for basic e-book features

  • Limited multimedia or interactive capability

  • No longer widely supported except for legacy Kindle use

  • Often replaced by AZW or EPUB in modern applications

AZW and AZW3 (Amazon Kindle formats)

  • Proprietary formats used by Amazon Kindle devices

  • Supports DRM protection, bookmarks, and annotations

  • Based on MOBI with extended features in AZW3

  • Compatible only with Kindle apps and devices

  • Used for Kindle e-book purchases and subscriptions

IBA (iBooks Author format)

  • Developed by Apple for use with iBooks on iOS and macOS

  • Supports interactive textbooks and media-rich content

  • Not compatible outside the Apple ecosystem

  • Primarily used in digital education and multimedia publishing

  • Less flexible in distribution compared to open formats