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I found out what the problem was. The left side of the context menu apparently maintains whatever one's last selection was and I just needed to change it to "Selection." I'm apparently young enough to figure it out with a little more thought, but old enough that I'll write an angry letter to the neighborhood association before just giving it a little
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So right-clicking on text within a resource brings up the context menu. Prior to the latest update, if you were right-clicking over text that was highlighted the context menu had the option to open the note or highlight anchored to that text. Now that feature seems to have disappeared. I used this feature all the time! Please tell me that I'm an old
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Technically I think it would be possible to do some robust paper-digital integration where you could have a full paper Bible and when you wrote a note in that paper Bible it would automatically be created and synced to the same place in a digital Bible. The basic idea behind this technology has been around for maybe a decade or more, if I remember correctly
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Especially his A Theory of Justice .
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That worked. Thank you.
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Thanks. "Invalid parameter - C:" is the response.
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I had two SSDs in my PC, but recently I removed the secondary SSD that had Logos installed on it in preparation for upgrading. I figured I could just install Logos on what is currently the primary SSD, but apparently there is some remnant of the program on the primary SSD that then tries to point to the install directory on the secondary drive. When
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When inserting a Bible passage into Canvas the line-spacing is something like 1.5(?). When pasting or writing one's own text in Canvas, there is no line-spacing and no ability, as far as I can see, for the user to adjust line-spacing. Maybe the line-spacing that I'm seeing with inserted Bible passages is merely due to format style being preserved from
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Yes.
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If all of that information is embedded and hidden in a hyperlink (like this ), why does it matter from the user's perspective?
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[quote user="PetahChristian"] I’ve seen a similar issue when you delete the anchor for a highlight (rather than deleting the note). It leaves a blank note that’s not attached to anything. I’d hope that a fix would be to automatically delete a note once it no longer had anything attached to it. [/quote] I don't think this makes sense
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This has been how the "Remove highlighting" button (circle with backslash) has functions since... I think the feature was introduced? I agree with you that it makes no sense to merely hide the highlight and not actually delete the note file that it creates. However, recently (at least I only noticed maybe a couple months ago) they added the option to
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I'm sure that for beginning student's it might be helpful to know that, say, 'OT' stands for "Old Testament" or 'v' stands for "verse"... but how long is this information useful to a person? Maybe their two weeks of Bible college or seminary? Aside from that, it seems like useless functionality to have it copied and pasted along with other citation
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It's possible. Suppose you want a hyper-link text in A to point to B. Just go to B and click the uppermost overflow menu icon. Select "Copy Location As: URL..." Then paste that in as a hyperlink for whatever text you want in A linking to B.
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[quote user="Mattillo"]I just found out about this set and it looks really interesting ...[/quote] IMO, there is a huge difference in quality between the various book recordings. Compare Romans with Galatians, for instance. Romans and Job are excellent. They sound like a dramatic reading of the Bible with some background sound effects thrown in (e.g
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I haven't heard the Mobile Ed course by Moo that you refer to, but having read most of his NICNT Romans commentary (2nd ed) and having listened to some other Mobile Ed courses, I can see why he wouldn't say much about it in a Mobile Ed series on Romans. Primarily, I think, the Mobile Ed courses are so shallow (and that's not meant to be pejorative here
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Please add: Atonement and the Death of Christ: An Exegetical, Historical, and Philosophical Exploration by William Lane Craig. Published by Baylor University Press
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[quote user="David Wanat"]Ive been getting a number of email notifications about Protestantism and Molinism. Since I thought Molinism was a Catholic school of thought, I was wondering what the non-Catholic interest was about. Can somebody enlighten me?[/quote] Aside from the name being derived from someone who was a Catholic, there is nothing distinctively
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People in the UK have convinced themselves that, say, non-discrimination laws aren't an instance of legislation stemming from moral conviction? ... Okay.
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Now see, if I had had the ability to create a poll in my original post with the options "I'm a sucker" vs "Good point, mobile-ed is a gimmick" I wouldn't have needed to ever revisit this thread because my point would be made and visually displayed to everyone before they had to weigh into the comments. Joking aside, my thought is that the arguments