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[quote user="Gordon"] Collections are also dynamic (as opposed to tagging) resources. When I create an author collection such as: Author:"Carson, D.A.", any subsequent resources by this author automatically go to this collection. I also find using collections easier to use in accessing my commentaries because of the PRS feature. [/quote] That's a thing
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[quote user="Graham Criddle"] I create a range of Commentary sections in a Custom Passage Guide and populate those with different Collections. Similarly you can add Collections to different sections in the Cited By Tool These are not possible just by using tagging.[/quote] It looks like you can now do that using 'mytag:'
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If you've carefully tagged all your resources, would that make creating collections redundant? I can see the benefit of creating collections for parallel resource sets, but apart from that, I think almost everywhere you can use 'mytag:...' to instantly create a collection. Am I overlooking something? Can someone share a purpose of Collections (apart
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Deuteronomy starts with a long discourse Deut. 1:6 all the way through Deut. 4:40, which is all spoken by Moses. However, Logos has only tagged Deut. 1:6 - 2:34a as being spoken by Moses ({Speaker <Person Moses>}. As a result, trying to find passages where Moses pleads (like with: <Sense to plead> AND {Speaker <Person Moses>} won't
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Thank, Dave, that worked in a split second! My own suggestion - with only an asterisk - actually did work, but as I said it took Logos ages to generate the search results, while yours did it in a second. Thanks, again!
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I highlighted passages in my NIV and now I want to somehow only display the highlighted text. How do I go about that? I tried searching in my highlights (in the notes tool), but that feature apparently only searches through the notes that are anchored to the highlighted text. I tried a Bible Search (see below), but that search never finishes (I have
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Thanks, voted!
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[quote user="Denise"]Your 2nd image is using Cascadia-Deutero for syntax. LXX only has Deutero; presumably vote for LXX syntax tagging last week (earlier, LXX Cascadia prepub failed).[/quote] That's correct, it's the only option Logos gives me for the LXX. What do you mean by 'vote for LXX syntax tagging last week'?
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What am I doing wrong? Why are the passages Gen. 22:1, Ex. 15:25, 16:4 and 20:20 (see left side of the screenshot) and others not included in the clause search on the right? I can see that Ex. 15:25 and 16:4 are not included, because the word θεός is not in the text, but clearly Gen. 22:1 should be included, as well as Ex. 20:20
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[quote user="SineNomine"]Check the Subject tagging of the 'missing' resources. If none of their subjects are "money", they won't appear in "Books from Your Library" for "Money".[/quote] Nope, that doesn't seem to be the problem: both journals that show up are not tagged 'money' they do have 'money' as their subject but then, there is another resource
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[quote user="Mike Binks"]If you give us some example we can test for you. [/quote] Here's an example: If I want to pull the Factbook on 'Money' I would expect that Logos would pull up at least all of the 9 resources in my library that have 'money' in the title. Instead, the Factbooks only refers to the two journals.
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How do I get resources in the 'Books from Your Library' section of the Factbook? Too often it says 'no results' while I for sure know that I have some books in my library that deal with the topic and even have the topic key term in the title.
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Great responses so far. I have a lot of notebooks at the moment, but it is tedious to constantly find/change notebooks if a note belongs to a particular one. That's why I tend towards going Liam's way. However, I had not yet seen someone having such an approach. Anybody else with a minimal number of notebooks? What's your experience? @Liam, why do you
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[quote user="Graham Criddle"] When I double-click a Latin word, Whitaker's Dictionary does open What are you seeing? [/quote] That was a bit silly of me. I now in fact did prioritize Whitaker, and it nicely opens up when I double-click. I was a bit narrowed in my thinking of only Latin Perseus texts, but this works perfectly well.
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Let's say you are in college and you want to use Logos for note taking. You take a course in History of Western Philosophy and each session in the course focus on a certain philosopher or stream of philosophers: two lectures on pre-socratic philosophy, one on Plato, one on Aristotle, etc. How would you go about with your note taking? Create a notebook
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What would be the best approach if you want to double-click on any Latin word in any (!) Latin text from the Perseus library, in order to open your favorite Latin lexicon? In fact, I would love that at double-clicking a Latin word in any Latin text within the Perseus collection, Logos would open up Whitaker, Dictionary of Latin Forms . But if that's
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Thank you all, for your valuable suggestions! It sounds like it will still be a whole lot of work.
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Yeah, I wish there would be a macro available to do this semi-automatically. I mean, this would be a terrible job. By the time you finish you hate your book so much that you'll never use it again ;-).
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That was a smart suggestion! Unfortunately, it doesn't export all the milestones, so you need to go through the whole process again...