Question for Logos employee - or a very clever user
In the cross-reference section of the Passage Guide, are all Bibles with cross-reference information fields searched to fill the section?
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
Comments
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MJ. I don't claim to be clever but, I do love a challenge, so, I'll start this ball rolling. The cross reference section is keyed to your top prioritized bible. Therefore, not all bibles are searched just your favorite bible is searched. Now whether or not all bibles will render equivalent information I am not sure, I'll have to test this proposition.
Edit: you know, a better way of answering this question is to note that the books being searched is the Treasury Scripture Knowledge and the New Treasury Scripture Knowledge so all cross references are keyed to them and thus it doesn't matter what bible is your favorite bible. Right?
Meanwhile, Jesus kept on growing wiser and more mature, and in favor with God and his fellow man.
International Standard Version. (2011). (Lk 2:52). Yorba Linda, CA: ISV Foundation.
MacBook Pro MacOS Sequoia 15.2 1TB SSD
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The top portion of the cross-references include Treasury, New Treasury and personal cross-references.
The bottom portion comes from (primarily)Bibles which must have the cross-references trait set (as per Mark Barnes). I can only find which Bibles have that trait indirectly. But I can't easily tell if all such Bibles are searched or if only a subset are used.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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MJ. Smith said:
I can't easily tell if all such Bibles are searched or if only a subset are used.
Here is a statement about bible cross-references I can't tell which bibles are searched, or whether the search is restricted to those having the "cross-reference" field. A few example passages show that some cross-refs come from the TSK/NTSK, and that not every cross-ref in my preferred bible (ESV) or my Top Bibles is used.
Dave
===Windows 11 & Android 13
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MJ. Smith said:
In the cross-reference section of the Passage Guide, are all Bibles with cross-reference information fields searched to fill the section?
When I really started using Logos with L4, one of the first things I asked about was cross references. It still seems to me that Logos could provide a feature that gave us the mathematical union of cross references from a set (collection ?) of resources having cross reference data. As it is, I'm left picking and poking from TSK and my top couple of Bibles (manually), and Carson/Beale (Commentary on NT use of OT) - hoping I don't miss anything useful.
Donnie
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MJ. Smith said:
The bottom portion comes from (primarily)Bibles which must have the cross-references trait set (as per Mark Barnes). I can only find which Bibles have that trait indirectly. But I can't easily tell if all such Bibles are searched or if only a subset are used.
All Bibles that have the cross-references trait are searched for this section.
I don't know whether all Bibles with cross references have this trait; it's possible that some have been inadvertently omitted.
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Bradley Grainger (Logos) said:
I don't know whether all Bibles with cross references have this trait; it's possible that some have been inadvertently omitted.
I don't have the time to reread them now, but didn't we conclude in two threads I linked to in the thread Dave linked to above that there are many Bibles missing that trait. I think Mark posted a list somewhere of Bibles especially important to add it to.
Mac Pro (late 2013) OS 12.6.2
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fgh said:
I don't have the time to reread them now, but didn't we conclude in two threads I linked to in the thread Dave linked to above that there are many Bibles missing that trait. I think Mark posted a list somewhere of Bibles especially important to add it to.
We did indeed, and apparently there is a case open: http://community.logos.com/forums/t/70726.aspx
So, to answer MJ's question:
All Bibles with the 'contains-cross-reference-footnotes' trait are included in this section. That's only 9 Bibles, namely:
- English Standard Version
- International Standard Version, New Testament
- La Biblia de las Américas
- New American Bible: Revised Edition
- Nueva Biblia Latinoamericana de Hoy
- Reina Valera Revisada (1960)
- The Holman Christian Standard Bible
- The New King James Version
- Today’s New International Version
The Bibles missing this trait are listed below, together with the number of cross-references they contain. Whilst not all need to be added, it would be a benefit adding at least the first eight. It would make the biggest difference to Verbum users, and others who want to see cross-references to the Apocrypha, which are very thin on the ground currently:
- New International Version (2011) — 103,436
- The Greek Testament (Text and Notes) — 99,259
- New American Standard Bible: 1995 Update — 93,671
- Explanatory Notes upon the Old and New Testament: Translation — 16,635
- The Uncanonical and Apocryphal Scriptures — 6,558
- The Contemporary English Version — 6,415
- The Ecclesiastical or Deutero-Canonical Books of the Old Testament Commonly Called the Apocrypha — 2,237
- The Dead Sea Scrolls Bible — 2,150
- The Greek New Testament, Fourth Revised Edition — 704
- Complete Jewish Bible — 691
- The Beginnings of Gospel Story: A Historico-Critical Inquiry into the Sources and Structure of the Gospel according to Mark (Bible Text) — 689
- The New English Bible — 618
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 8: The Targum Onqelos to Leviticus and The Targum Onqelos to Numbers — 550
- The New International Version (Anglicised) — 408
- The Revised English Bible — 275
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 9: The Targum Onqelos to Deuteronomy — 273
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 6: The Targum Onqelos to Genesis — 240
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 15: The Targum of Job and The Targum of Proverbs and The Targum of Qohelet — 214
- The Septuagint Version of the Old Testament — 203
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 2: Targum Neofiti 1: Exodus and Targum Pseudo-Jonathan: Exodus — 199
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 7: The Targum of Onqelos to Exodus — 173
- International Standard Version — 171
- New Century Version — 155
- The Apocalypse of Ezra (2 Esdras 3–14) — 152
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 5B: Targum Pseudo-Jonathan: Deuteronomy — 141
- The NET Bible — 136
- The Wisdom of Solomon — 135
- Joel: A Translation, in Metrical Parallelisms, according to the Hebrew Method of Punctuation — 128
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 18: The Two Targums of Esther — 127
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 4: Targum Neofiti 1: Numbers and Targum Pseudo-Jonathan: Numbers — 123
- The Epistle to the Hebrews: Bible Text — 111
- The Eastern/Greek Orthodox Bible: New Testament — 110
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 12: The Targum of Jeremiah — 104
- Two Unknown Hebrew Versions of Tobit — 103
- Nova Vulgata Bibliorum Sacrorum Editio — 101
- The Original Hebrew of a Portion of Ecclesiasticus: Hebrew Text — 90
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 1A: Targum Neofiti 1: Genesis — 72
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 19: The Targum of Ruth and The Targum of Chronicles — 59
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 1B: Targum Pseudo-Jonathan: Genesis — 57
- The Original Hebrew of a Portion of Ecclesiasticus: Translation — 22
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 14: The Targum of the Minor Prophets — 21
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 5A: Targum Neofiti 1: Deuteronomy — 20
- The Lexham Greek-English Interlinear Septuagint: H.B. Swete Edition — 13
- The Old Testament in Greek according to the Septuagint — 13
- The Wisdom of Ben-Sira (Ecclesiasticus) — 12
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 11: The Isaiah Targum — 9
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 13: The Targum of Ezekiel — 9
- The Minor Prophets: Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi — 9
- The Books of the Prophets Micah, Obadiah, Joel and Jonah with Introduction and Notes — 7
- The Book of Isaiah according to the Septuagint (Codex Alexandrinus), Volume 1 (Translation from the Greek) — 6
- Hosea: Translated from the Hebrew with Notes Explanatory and Critical — 6
- Wisdom and the Jewish Apocryphal Writings — 4
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 16: The Targum of Psalms — 2
- The Earliest Gospel: A Historical Study of the Gospel according to Mark: Greek Text — 2
* I believe the first list is complete, as it comes from Logos' own metadata. The second list is restricted to resources that I own. There may be other Bibles I don't own that also have cross references, or Bibles that have cross references but don't utilise the cross-reference field [such as the TNIV]). If you want to try it for yourself, do a "By Count" search in a Bibles collection, searching the Cross Reference field for <Gen-Rev>. Go and make a coffee whilst you await results ;-).
This is my personal Faithlife account. On 1 March 2022, I started working for Faithlife, and have a new 'official' user account. Posts on this account shouldn't be taken as official Faithlife views!
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Donnie Hale said:
It still seems to me that Logos could provide a feature that gave us the mathematical union of cross references from a set (collection ?) of resources having cross reference data.
That's exactly what's happening in the passage guide. The problem is that for some reason not all appropriate resources are included.
This is my personal Faithlife account. On 1 March 2022, I started working for Faithlife, and have a new 'official' user account. Posts on this account shouldn't be taken as official Faithlife views!
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Mark Barnes said:
That's exactly what's happening in the passage guide. The problem is that for some reason not all appropriate resources are included.
Clarifying...
First, you're saying that the Cross Reference section of the Passage Guide is supposed to provide the functionality I described?
Second, are you saying that some resources that are properly marked are still being excluded from that section? Or are you saying that the section is including all properly marked resources but that for unknown reasons there are a bunch of resources that could be so-marked but are not?
Thanks,
Donnie
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Donnie Hale said:
Second, are you saying that some resources that are properly marked are still being excluded from that section? Or are you saying that the section is including all properly marked resources but that for unknown reasons there are a bunch of resources that could be so-marked but are not?
In order for a Bible to be searched for cross-references, two things have to be true:
- It must have the resource trait cross-reference set (group 1)
- It must have cross-reference fields to be accessed (group 1 and group 2)
So all the resources listed by Mark have cross-references available but only those in group 1 appear in the PG xref section.
In addition, there is no direct way to get the cross-references from group 2 into a passage list for review. The net result is that the deuterocanonicals are grossly under represented.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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Donnie Hale said:
First, you're saying that the Cross Reference section of the Passage Guide is supposed to provide the functionality I described?
Correct.
Donnie Hale said:Second, are you saying that some resources that are properly marked are still being excluded from that section? Or are you saying that the section is including all properly marked resources but that for unknown reasons there are a bunch of resources that could be so-marked but are not?
The latter. Every resource in Logos has certain 'traits' which determine how it is used. This is how Logos knows, for example, which resources to search in the "Illustrations" section of the passage guide (the trait is called "sermon-illustrations"). These traits are not displayed in Logos, but can be seen in the catalog.db file. Unfortunately, several of the Bibles that could be marked with the "contains-cross-reference-footnotes" trait, aren't. No-one has yet explained why.
This is my personal Faithlife account. On 1 March 2022, I started working for Faithlife, and have a new 'official' user account. Posts on this account shouldn't be taken as official Faithlife views!
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Adding counts - note that I don't own several of the Bibles used for cross-references.- English Standard Version - 87,140
- International Standard Version, New Testament
- La Biblia de las Américas
- New American Bible: Revised Edition - 29,384
- Nueva Biblia Latinoamericana de Hoy
- Reina Valera Revisada (1960)
- The Holman Christian Standard Bible - 72,556
- The New King James Version - 73, 597
- Today’s New International Version
The additions from my Library
- New International Version (2011) — 103,436
- The Greek Testament (Text and Notes) — 99,259
- New American Standard Bible: 1995 Update — 93,671
- Bible: Český Studijní Překlad - 66,215
- Revised Standard Version; Second Catholic Edition - 29,384
- Explanatory Notes upon the Old and New Testament: Translation — 16,635
- The Uncanonical and Apocryphal Scriptures — 6,558
- The Contemporary English Version — 6,415
- The Emphasized Bible - 4,181
- The Expanded Bible: New Testament - 2,885
- The Ecclesiastical or Deutero-Canonical Books of the Old Testament Commonly Called the Apocrypha — 2,237
- The Dead Sea Scrolls Bible — 2,150
- Biblia de Jerusalén Latinoamericana - 1,071
- The Greek New Testament, Fourth Revised Edition — 704
- Complete Jewish Bible — 691
- The Beginnings of Gospel Story: A Historico-Critical Inquiry into the Sources and Structure of the Gospel according to Mark (Bible Text) — 689
- The New English Bible — 618
- The Scriptures - 579
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 8: The Targum Onqelos to Leviticus and The Targum Onqelos to Numbers — 550
- Common English Bible - 440
- The New International Version (Anglicised) — 408
- The Revised English Bible — 275
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 9: The Targum Onqelos to Deuteronomy — 273
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 6: The Targum Onqelos to Genesis — 240
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 15: The Targum of Job and The Targum of Proverbs and The Targum of Qohelet — 214
- The Septuagint Version of the Old Testament — 203
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 2: Targum Neofiti 1: Exodus and Targum Pseudo-Jonathan: Exodus — 199
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 7: The Targum of Onqelos to Exodus — 173
- International Standard Version — 171
- New Century Version — 155
- The Apocalypse of Ezra (2 Esdras 3–14) — 152
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 5B: Targum Pseudo-Jonathan: Deuteronomy — 141
- The NET Bible — 136
- The Wisdom of Solomon — 135
- Joel: A Translation, in Metrical Parallelisms, according to the Hebrew Method of Punctuation — 128
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 18: The Two Targums of Esther — 127
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 4: Targum Neofiti 1: Numbers and Targum Pseudo-Jonathan: Numbers — 123
- The Epistle to the Hebrews: Bible Text — 111
- The Eastern/Greek Orthodox Bible: New Testament — 110
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 12: The Targum of Jeremiah — 104
- Two Unknown Hebrew Versions of Tobit — 103
- Nova Vulgata Bibliorum Sacrorum Editio — 101
- The Original Hebrew of a Portion of Ecclesiasticus: Hebrew Text — 90
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 1A: Targum Neofiti 1: Genesis — 72
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 19: The Targum of Ruth and The Targum of Chronicles — 59
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 1B: Targum Pseudo-Jonathan: Genesis — 57
- The Original Hebrew of a Portion of Ecclesiasticus: Translation — 22
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 14: The Targum of the Minor Prophets — 21
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 5A: Targum Neofiti 1: Deuteronomy — 20
- The Lexham Greek-English Interlinear Septuagint: H.B. Swete Edition — 13
- The Old Testament in Greek according to the Septuagint — 13
- The Wisdom of Ben-Sira (Ecclesiasticus) — 12
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 11: The Isaiah Targum — 9
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 13: The Targum of Ezekiel — 9
- The Minor Prophets: Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi — 9
- The Books of the Prophets Micah, Obadiah, Joel and Jonah with Introduction and Notes — 7
- The Book of Isaiah according to the Septuagint (Codex Alexandrinus), Volume 1 (Translation from the Greek) — 6
- Hosea: Translated from the Hebrew with Notes Explanatory and Critical — 6
- Wisdom and the Jewish Apocryphal Writings — 4
- The Aramaic Bible, Volume 16: The Targum of Psalms — 2
- The Earliest Gospel: A Historical Study of the Gospel according to Mark: Greek Text — 2
- The Bohairic Coptic New Testament in English - 1
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
0 - English Standard Version - 87,140
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Mark Barnes said:Donnie Hale said:
Second, are you saying that some resources that are properly marked are still being excluded from that section? Or are you saying that the section is including all properly marked resources but that for unknown reasons there are a bunch of resources that could be so-marked but are not?
The latter. Every resource in Logos has certain 'traits' which determine how it is used. This is how Logos knows, for example, which resources to search in the "Illustrations" section of the passage guide (the trait is called "sermon-illustrations"). These traits are not displayed in Logos, but can be seen in the catalog.db file. Unfortunately, several of the Bibles that could be marked with the "contains-cross-reference-footnotes" trait, aren't. No-one has yet explained why.
this is absolutely (to coin a term) mifftafying, now I see why MJ. posed the question and Mark's sage answers and citations underscore the desirability of amping up the utility of Passage Guide. I do hope that someone explains the why question posed in the prior appended remark.
Meanwhile, Jesus kept on growing wiser and more mature, and in favor with God and his fellow man.
International Standard Version. (2011). (Lk 2:52). Yorba Linda, CA: ISV Foundation.
MacBook Pro MacOS Sequoia 15.2 1TB SSD
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An aside. Mark and MJ. where are you getting your cross reference counts from?
Meanwhile, Jesus kept on growing wiser and more mature, and in favor with God and his fellow man.
International Standard Version. (2011). (Lk 2:52). Yorba Linda, CA: ISV Foundation.
MacBook Pro MacOS Sequoia 15.2 1TB SSD
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Beloved said:
An aside. Mark and MJ. where are you getting your cross reference counts from?
Mark gave the instructions above. Do a search on cross-reference, cross-references text across your entire library with the search term <Gen-Rev> and sort by count. Mark advised a coffee break. I assure you that tea also works.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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Mark Barnes said:
All Bibles with the 'contains-cross-reference-footnotes' trait are included in this section. That's only 9 Bibles, namely:
The NAB revised has 15859 passage references in footnotes, not necessarily x-refs because some are denoted 'see passage' or are part of a textual comment. But it is sparsely represented for a PG on Gen 6:1-8 e.g. the references to Sirach are omitted. I wonder if you confused this with NASB95 which has the cross-reference field (NAB does not) and is better represented in this PG.
Five of my English bibles have the cross-reference field but I don't see all their x-refs in a PG, and four also have the cross-reference trait (from your table).
Dave
===Windows 11 & Android 13
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Dave Hooton said:
But it is sparsely represented for a PG on Gen 6:1-8 e.g. the references to Sirach are omitted.
If I look at Genesis 6:1-8 in NABRE, I find three cross reference indicators: (a) in verse 2, (b) in verse 4, and (c) in verse 5. None of them refer to Sirach. There is a cross reference (d) to Sirach in verse 9, and when I extend the PG to verse 9, that cross reference is included
NABRE has a cross-reference field, (but NAB does not).
This is my personal Faithlife account. On 1 March 2022, I started working for Faithlife, and have a new 'official' user account. Posts on this account shouldn't be taken as official Faithlife views!
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Mark Barnes said:
Every resource in Logos has certain 'traits' which determine how it is used. This is how Logos knows, for example, which resources to search in the "Illustrations" section of the passage guide (the trait is called "sermon-illustrations"). These traits are not displayed in Logos, but can be seen in the catalog.db file. Unfortunately, several of the Bibles that could be marked with the "contains-cross-reference-footnotes" trait, aren't. No-one has yet explained why.
Just to understand better: are you saying that everything is there in the respective bibles and it was just an oversight on Logos' side to not insert the flag in the catalog.db? What would happen if someone were to "correct" the catalog.db trait manually in SQLlite (not that I'd recommend someone editing the SQL db on a productively used L5 installation) - would this make the cross-references usable?
Have joy in the Lord!
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NB.Mick said:
Just to understand better: are you saying that everything is there in the respective bibles and it was just an oversight on Logos' side to not insert the flag in the catalog.db?
That appears to be the case, judging by Bradley's comments above, and elsewhere.
NB.Mick said:What would happen if someone were to "correct" the catalog.db trait manually in SQLlite (not that I'd recommend someone editing the SQL db on a productively used L5 installation) - would this make the cross-references usable?
I've already tried that. It doesn't work. The flag comes via Logos' metadata service — probably when it comes it updates catalog.db and some other database that we haven't yet discovered.
This is my personal Faithlife account. On 1 March 2022, I started working for Faithlife, and have a new 'official' user account. Posts on this account shouldn't be taken as official Faithlife views!
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Mark Barnes said:
If I look at Genesis 6:1-8 in NABRE, I find three cross reference indicators: (a) in verse 2, (b) in verse 4, and (c) in verse 5. None of them refer to Sirach. There is a cross reference (d) to Sirach in verse 9, and when I extend the PG to verse 9, that cross reference is included
NABRE has a cross-reference field, (but NAB does not).
Yes, I confused those two bibles.
But I still have a lot of cross-references in PG Gen 6:1-8 that I cannot locate in any of my bibles, nor TSK/NTSK e.g. <Ge 7:23>, <Ge 41:38>, <Ex 32:14>, <Ex 33:13>, <Ex 33:16>, <Ex 34:9>.
Dave
===Windows 11 & Android 13
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Hi Dave
Dave Hooton said:These are in ESV
Dave Hooton said:<Ge 7:23>
This is in NKJV
Dave Hooton said:<Ge 41:38>
as is this
Dave Hooton said:<Ex 32:14>
This is in TNIV
Dave Hooton said:<Ex 34:9>
as it this
Do you have these Bibles?
Graham
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Dave Hooton said:
They come from the TNIV, NKJV, TNIV, ESV, ESV and TNIV respectively. <edit>Sorry, forgot to click 'Post', and by then Graham had responded.</edit>
This is my personal Faithlife account. On 1 March 2022, I started working for Faithlife, and have a new 'official' user account. Posts on this account shouldn't be taken as official Faithlife views!
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Graham Criddle said:
Thanks, Graham
I was looking for references to Gen 6:1-8 in those bibles, rather than the x-refs from Gen 6:1-8 (in those bibles)! That explains everything i.e. x-refs not used in PG. But I came up with Nu 13:31 from HCSB (in Ge 6:4) that is not listed in PG, presumably because it is not a Cross-Reference fn. Yet it gives results from TNIV without a Cross-Reference field.
Dave
===Windows 11 & Android 13
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Dave Hooton said:
Strange - I would have expected that to show up in the PG
Dave Hooton said:Yet it gives results from TNIV without a Cross-Reference field.
Not sure what you mean here - can you expand?
EDIT: Sorry - I see you have posted this as a separate Bug thread.
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MJ. Smith said:
Okay, I am clearly doing something wrong in trying to reconcile the results.
I've just looked at a few results which I get in my PG and which you aren't able to correlate.
I find that these XREFs are from TNIV.
I think you said you didn't have this - is that the case?
(Clutching at straws here - do you have it hidden?)
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Ah yes I have the TNIV - don't know how I missed that on Mark's list.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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Dave Hooton said:
Yes, that's correct. I believe an exception is made for the TNIV whereby it is assumed that all footnotes are cross-references.
This is my personal Faithlife account. On 1 March 2022, I started working for Faithlife, and have a new 'official' user account. Posts on this account shouldn't be taken as official Faithlife views!
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Mark Barnes said:
All Bibles with the 'contains-cross-reference-footnotes' trait are included in this section. That's only 9 Bibles, namely:
- English Standard Version
- International Standard Version, New Testament
- La Biblia de las Américas
- New American Bible: Revised Edition
- Nueva Biblia Latinoamericana de Hoy
- Reina Valera Revisada (1960)
- The Holman Christian Standard Bible
- The New King James Version
- Today’s New International Version
So hiding Spanish Bibles isn't such a good idea, I take it?
Mark Barnes said:Whilst not all need to be added, it would be a benefit adding at least the first eight.
A few more, please:
- The CJB
- The Aramaic Bible
- The EOB
All of these have unique perspectives and may come up with unique xrefs that can't be found elsewhere in Logos Bibles. Plus The Aramaic Bible would have been much higher up if you had added all the volumes together.
And also the ones high up on MJ's list, of course.
Mac Pro (late 2013) OS 12.6.2
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fgh said:
So hiding Spanish Bibles isn't such a good idea, I take it?
It depends on whether you like Spanish cross-references[:)]
Dave
===Windows 11 & Android 13
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