Wordsearch-Logos Equivalent Features
Comments
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John W Gillis said:Nathan Parker said:
pretty close to the "Cross Reference Pane" I had in WS7
The "Cross References Section" from the Bible Reference Guides can be opened as a stand-alone pane then attached & synced to a Bible pane within a window to create something pretty close to the short-lived "Cross Reference Pane" that WS7 had inherited from Bible Explorer. The way Logos lays it out, you need a lot more screen real estate then the older BE/WS pane did, but it's a bit more functional.
I forgot about this. Thanks for that tip!
If some of that could be added to the "insights" panel, that would be fun as well and bring back a good memory from WS7 for me. I can see they're off to a good start with a commentary, study Bible, and some cross-references.
Dr. Nathan Parker
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In Wordsearch when we did a Bible search, there was a way to pop out a Greek or Hebrew keyboard.
In Logos, I see they added a keyboard selector in the Bible search menu that switches between default, Greek, and Hebrew. Is there a way to also see the Greek or Hebrew keyboard like there was in Wordsearch? I pulled up some keyboard layouts in Help. One of those might be it.
Thanks!
Dr. Nathan Parker
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Like the new forums! One feature I forgot to mention in my original post here was in Wordsearch, you could right-click on some Bible words and have them pronounced for you.
You can do that in Logos as well! It's also improved over what you can do in Wordsearch. The English pronunciations are in the Factbook (which you can get to from the right-click menu). There's also a book, That's Easy for You to Say, with some great pronunciations in there as well.
Dr. Nathan Parker
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Between WordSearch and Logos, WordSearch is like a "valley" whereas Logos is like a "grand canyon" in the scope of it's functionality. The problems with a "grand canyon" is that there are many ways to go to a place and sometimes one has to have a map to actually find one way to get there.
As to "That's Easy For You to Say", I believe I had that in WordSearch, and I still use it sometimes.
xn = Christan man=man -- Acts 11:26 "....and the disciples were first called Christians in Antioch".
Barney Fife is my hero! He only uses an abacus with 14 rows!
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