Of course, we all know by now, eBooks get Bible references activized, but the rest is 'as received' (kind of like Paul).
https://www.logos.com/product/225840/ancient-literature-and-philosophy-of-religion-comparative-research-in-the-wests-most-sacred-texts
Illustrates how the reference scanner appears to work. In the sample below, this is pretty much what the whole book looks like ... the scanner has activized whole paragraphs, whenever it finds a Bible reference.
Being a mystery reader, it's not immediately detectable, what goes wrong:
- Any Bible reference that has a initial numeric is a victim. And the parser seems to drop the number, as if an unrecognized font. But still correctly reference the Bible verse.
- Then it seems to scan backwards, until it can re-locate the number (which inevitably means whole paragraphs, usually finding a footnote number, or some other correct number .... which it already knows).
It doesn't appear to have any common sense checks as to how far back to scan (and insuring blanks, etc).
BTW this volume is a 'for the choir' volume, if you like such.
