I have been a BibleWorks user since 2000 and, so, was quite sad to learn of its. I am obviously quite invested in the program, both financially and in terms of the sheer amount of time I have spent in the program. Although I have had a license for Logos for a few years now, I am only now starting to make use of the program in earnest. Logos will replace BibleWorks in my work flow. One BibleWorks feature that I have found to be indispensable over the years is the Report Generator. For those of you who are familiar with BibleWorks, is this something that can duplicated in Logos? I know that I can find the same information in Logos (the "Word By Word" feature), but I cannot find a way to format this information in manner in which I have grown accustomed.
I have attached an image from the BibleWorks site that shows the Report Generator in part. I do not currently have access to my computer with BibleWorks installed, else I would have provided a more detailed screenshot.
The Report is on the right side of the image. There you can see the Greek text and underneath that is the verse word morphology with each word on a separate line. This is what I want to be able to duplicate in Logos.
Any help is greatly appreciated.
You’ll get lots of ideas.
But it seems you don’t want the fancy exegetical guide, word by word.
A reverse interlinear is close. But horizontal, not vertical. Hmmm.
The Word by Word feature is very powerful and I may have to adjust to it. I was trying to find a way to keep to the work flow with which I am familiar.
I am very impressed with Logos; it is far more powerful and complex that I had imagined.
Mark Fuss:... you can see the Greek text and underneath that is the verse word morphology with each word on a separate line.
Older library may have Lexham Syntactic Greek New Testament Expansions and Annotations. Syntax search resources may also be useful to visually show word relationships (with Logos Greek Morphology codes plus literal translation):
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Mark Fuss:I am very impressed with Logos; it is far more powerful and complex that I had imagined.
My favorite feature is visual filter highlighting so can "see" range of Greek verbal expression. Logos wiki has => Examples of visual filters
Thread => more inductive symbols has screen shots showing Precept visual filters combined with Greek Morphology.
Thread => TIP: singular or plural pronoun? (visual filter) has screen shots showing propositional outlines combined with visual filters
I wonder if this combination is helpful to you
Would this combination help at all?
I have used both Logos and BW for a long time. I have never used the report generator in BW other than trying it when it was introduced.
The report generator adds this information as a note or editor file to be saved. Logos generates much of the same information, but not as a note file. There are many ways to approach getting the same information as shown above. For me the Exegetical Guide, Text Comparison and Lexicons in a layout provides similar information. You can link things together so as you move through the pericope the information moves with you.
Here is a screen shot of Rom 8.29 focused on "predestination."
The exegetical guide will provide the information on each greek lemma in the verse as shown below.
ESV is my default English text.
Text Comparison shows various texts you can set to your liking.
Let me know if you have any questions.
Thanks to all for the wonderful suggestions. I will take the time to play with all of them. In time, I am sure that I will come up with something that will work. BW spoiled me with the Report Generator feature . I just need to get accustomed to the Logos way of doing things.
Mark,
There is all the information at your fingertips with any of these setups. Here are a few more screenshots:
Again, my most heartfelt thanks for all of the suggestions. As I stated in my last post, I just need to keeping learning Logos and how to best put its power to work. The one feature of the BibleWorks Report Generation that made it so helpful to me but that I forget to mention is being able to print the report and use it in that way. I typically use paper and pen for my note taking, so printing the report fit right into my workflow. I look forward to learning and working with Logos.
Mark Fuss:Again, my most heartfelt thanks for all of the suggestions. As I stated in my last post, I just need to keeping learning Logos
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Mark Fuss: ... The one feature of the BibleWorks Report Generation that made it so helpful to me but that I forget to mention is being able to print the report and use it in that way. I typically use paper and pen for my note taking, so printing the report fit right into my workflow. I look forward to learning and working with Logos.
... The one feature of the BibleWorks Report Generation that made it so helpful to me but that I forget to mention is being able to print the report and use it in that way. I typically use paper and pen for my note taking, so printing the report fit right into my workflow. I look forward to learning and working with Logos.
Not sure you wanted to know how, but if so, printing is by resource or tool panel (eg Exegetical Guide). For any such panel, the box in the top-left has a menu. About half-way down is Print / Export.
I'm guessing, given your enjoyment for paper, that you'll have to pick 'one' (though like BW, the Exegetical Guide allows picking, choosing, and ordering sections ... the Add button on the right).
I suppose most of the information could be copied, pasted into a note in logos (or word processor outside of) and then printed. In seminary my favorite roommate always printed everything and used 20000 bits of paper with quotes, or other things he wanted to remember written and printed all over them. It seemed as though he had to put in a lot more effort with his method. PLUS our apartment looked like this:Absolutely covered in sticky notes, and note book paper. He just didn't like computers. To each their own I suppose :)
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@Mark Fuss, a few years ago I made the same transition you're making, from using BibleWorks for all textual work to using Logos for that work. Logos has a slightly different approach here. It "generates reports" in its guides. The Exegetical Guide is probably the closest approximation, and you can watch a training video on that tool here:
https://www.logos.com/logos-pro/exegetical-guide
The tool looks up lexemes automatically, provides links to textual-critical information, shows where your passage is discussed in grammars, and does other great stuff. And the guide is editable, just like the BibleWorks Report Generator. You can customize any of our guides, in fact. But I'd start with the Exegetical Guide if you like the Report Generator in BW.