What are these black arrows in white blocks on the left, and how can I turn them off?
It looks like a visual filter to me. Would others agree?
That looks like an image inserted into the left margin to indicate a note or highlight. Certainly, these can be turned off. I would start by turning off the toggle under Notes → Show notes and highlights to see if that takes care of it. If indeed it does, you can toggle it back on and through trial and error determine the source more specifically.
That right there makes much more sense. Nice!
It's a "highlight" option.
This is a helpful conversation.
I have these next to my text and I have a few questions:
Perhaps you have access to shared notes/highlights through a Faithlife.com group? Certainly, it is possible that you are viewing highlights that are not your own. It is also possible to stop seeing them. Figuring out how, however, might take a bit of trial and error.
Figure out which group (you are a part of) and leave that group. They will never show up again.
Available Now
Build your biblical library with a new trusted commentary or resource every month. Yours to keep forever.
This is a warning in the log, but it occurs thousands of times in my log. Logos has only been running a few minutes, and already over 3,000 lines generated in error log since startup. There are other warnings also, just not as frequent as wn.dss.dat. Other similar messages occur with wn.lxx2.dat, wn.lxx.dat, wn.gag.dat.…
Every time I return to Logos mobile on my iPad it seems to have added more adverts. Today, there is a button on the main UI called ‘ask’. Apparently I can ‘ask’ this genie three things! How a limited 3 use feature be a part of the main ui, when search is not?How do I modify the UI? How do I block/remove all features that…
Does anyone know how I might view or print a list of all my currently open books in Logos? Thanks Dave
I'm new to Logos. Within the last hour I purchased Great Books of the Western World, but I don't see how to access it.
Hello community, Let me start by saying that I do not know Greek and grammar has never been my strong suit. But knowing what the Bible says is an imperative (pun intended) for me and so here I am. Background: Someone recently told me that the Bible rarely use language that conveys emphatic and directive force like, for…