As the title describes, there is no way to add a Favorite (bookmark) on the mobile app on Android.
I can access 'Add to Favorites' on Android.
@Alex Bowsher
Select a Verse → When the popup appears, look for the row of icons that has 'Copy' 'Note', etc. → Scroll that row of icons to the right and tap the 'Favorite' icon → The verse is now added to your Favorites
@Frank Sauer, thanks for that. The "bookmarking" system in logos seems soooo over complicated. In the web view you can "Favorites" a page acting as a bookmark, but on mobile you have to add a line of text as a "Favorite" to be able to get back to it.
In teaching multiple studies each week, having a link to layouts would be helpful. For example, a sermon series in John has its own layout. A men's study through Romans has its own layout. A Sunday evening study in Genesis has a third layout. It would be helpful to have a link to open a specific layout. When taking notes…
I just watched this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xVY3Tk2L_kY&t=288s I can't wait for Study Assistant, but I want one more thing added to it. When it generates a smart search synopsis, I want a button at the bottom that I could click that launches another search panel showing the search results from that smart search…
The font sizes especially as you get into the larger font sizes, really lose granularity and the ability to control. They just end up "jumping" too much. (I was told they increase by 10% each time you use "control +" but the problem is that 10% becomes a very large number, the higher you get.) I would like to please ask…
I've been using Logos for a long time in my classes and to demonstrate things. I would like the ability to turn on a pointer in Logos that doesn't activate every popup or 'hover over' function, or to be able to selectively turn off those features so that the popups don't obscure text when I'm pointing at it. Currently I…
It would be wonderful when you click the "info" button on a book, that one of the sub-headings (listed alongside "citation", "copyright," etc) would give the "author blurb" found on the logos website. Seems like a simple addition when you grab an unfamiliar book or commentary to be able to get some basic info on the author…