I would love to have a feature where I can drill down to see sentence-level search results from a particular resource without leaving the main Logos search feature. That would make it far more useful in non-Bible resources throughout my entire library. I'm imagining something like the 'Passages' format from a 'Bible' search, or an 'Aligned' format could even be added as well.
If you imagine searching in the Bible and only getting a result like 'Joshua, 6x' and not being able to drill down into the chapter or verse... that is what it feels like with other resources where we can't see sentence-level results and are simply left with a high-level number for the whole resource.
I've attached a marked up screenshot below, and I'll try to explain this in writing as well.
When a search returns multiple results from a single resource (e.g., a single note, book, etc.), it displays the resource with one excerpt and a '6x' or something beside it. I love to have an expand/collapse feature that would allow me to drill down and see all six of those results with a sentence of context and the search term highlighted. At the moment, I have to open the resource and then do another search within that resource to bump from one result to the next. It would be much faster if I could skim the sentences in a way that is similar to how Bible searches return individual verses in the results.
My use case in particular is Notes. I have a notebook for book quotes, I create a note in it when I read print books, and I save a bullet point list of choice quotes and page numbers from the book in that note. Now when I search, I just get a result that tells me how many hits I have in that note file--but it doesn't show me what sentences my search term is used in. So, I have to open the note file. But the search term doesn't show up highlighted like a resource yet, so I still don't know where my results are. Then I can perform another search within my note and finally find results. But I wish I could see this in the main Logos search feature so that I could quickly determine which resource has the content I need, rather than having to open each individual note file or book and perform another search inside each one of them.