I have exported it to excel,but if I click on the words or on the numbers I couldn't open the veses or any detail. Is there any solution to it?
This feature is not supported as yet Tes.
Thanks Lynden!
The export works as intended - it is not intended to export detail lines only summary information.
Why would you want to look up details in Excel as opposed to doing it in Logos? What purpose would that serve?
Actually I pushed Eli for the details as Logos makes no provision for correction of parsing errors, heteronyms, etc.
Well, people might (as MJ suggests) work the data by doing their own combination, tagging and splitup of details. They might also use this to compare concordances (e.g. from various NT books), to built percentages rather than raw numbers, to verify data that exist in other sources ("Paul uses adcabc X times in Romans but only Y times in the Pastorals"), to use any type of pivot tables, graphical output etc pp. supplied by Excel.
I understand that, but it seems to me that all of what you mention pertains to the counts, which are included in the export function. My question had more to do with Tes' complaint that it could not open any verse. I can't see why this would be needed in Excel. After all, you can already narrow your results by books (the pastorals to use your example) before you export.
My thinking was going into the direction that people might sub-classify the counts. Just a made-up example or two: One who wants to analyze the usage of doulos in Paul'l letters might wish to treat entry statements where Paul writes "Paul, apostle and servant of Christ Jesus...." differently than the other occurences in the letters. Or people might try to treat wording that Paul cites from the LXX or from then-contempory Christian worship music differently than things he formulates himself. Verifying the exact verse references given for specific word occurences by other sources. These are things I can come up with - with no theological, biblical-language and linguistic training under my belt. I'm sure that people using this academically will come up with a number of other uses.
Francis, if you explore standard academic concordance software you will find substantial support for cleaning the data including the separation of heteronyms/homoglyphs where one needs the base data to determine what bucket the account belongs in. http://www.concordancesoftware.co.uk/concordance-software-download.htm will give you an idea of what people using concordancing software expect. Remember that much of the usefulness of concordances will be in works such as the Early Church Fathers where the lemmas and tagging are not already done.
Available Now
Build your biblical library with a new trusted commentary or resource every month. Yours to keep forever.