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[quote user="MJ. Smith"] [quote user="Louis St. Hilaire"]In other words, the Logos lectionary is organized like one of those annual paperback "missalettes", [/quote] Sorry, but I must disagree with you. The missalettes are printed for particular regions - you can't use a British missalette or a Canadian missalette or an Australian missalette in the
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What it takes is a data type, and, given the variations among liturgical calendars, a satisfactory solution would probably require a data type for every lectionary (and convertibility between those data types if we wanted to support any correspondence between different lectionaries). Something like this might be possible--and might eventually be the
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The current functionality isn't specific to Sundays. It displays the readings for the current day, if there are any, but if there aren't any, it displays the next set of readings. Thus, a lectionary that has readings for every day works like you would expect.
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Lectionaries perform this way by design as did the Lectionary Report in LDLS on the assumption that you're using Logos to prepare for the upcoming Sunday (for preaching or personal reflection). However, you make a good point. Liturgically, Sunday comes at the head of the week. At least in the Latin Rite, this is still reflected in the use of the Sunday
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This volume should have been included in the product. I'm not sure what went wrong here, but we'll resolve this as soon as we can. Thanks for your patience with this.
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Dave, William, fgh: We'll have to look closer at all of these, but my initial guess is that some (or all) of the cases you mention are simply mis-classified. [quote user="fgh"] I would also appreciate if dictionaries, lexicons, grammars, and the like, were listed as lang:greek/hebrew/etc, and not just English. Title:greek will never find a Greek/Swedish
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[quote]Thanks for the information. I had to re-start Logos 4 to see the new resource structure. I'm a bit confused about the change. The library categorization has the type Lexicon, Encyclopedia, and Dictionary, with many resources in them. But the resources themselves still reflect the original types. For example, see the figure, where many resources
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Today, Logos will be introducing two new resource types in Logos 4 to better handle different kinds of "dictionary"-like resources. Resources in your library that currently have the type "Dictionary" will be automatically re-categorized via the metadata service into three more specific types: Dictionary Modern language dictionary. These resources typically
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This appears to simply have been an oversight caused by the mixed nature of the contents of the book. We'll get it fixed as soon as possible. Thanks for catching it.
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We actually have a lectionary resource for the 1979 Book of Common Prayer Daily Office Readings in the works. It should be available soon. I should also clarify that, for lectionaries that are not in the public domain, Logos also has to obtain permission from the copyright holder before producing the resource. This often holds up projects even when
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It looks like the problem here is not a bug with loading metadata but that we missed a step in publishing this particular update. We now have better systems in place for confirming these corrections before they get moved to "addressed", so we'll avoid this kind of problem in the future. The series on this volume will be fixed as soon as possible.
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[quote user="Rosie Perera"]Does this mean that once the ECF is completely tagged then other works which cite authors who only appear in ECF will automatically have links that work. Or will all those other resouces have to be retrofitted to have tagging that points to the Apostolic Fathers data type in order for them to become links? I'm sure this would
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I'm not sure that pre-pub pages generally list whether or not something will be available on for iPhone. Lives of the Saints is public domain, so it will be available for iPhone.
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[quote user="Louis St. Hilaire"] It looks like the Biblical Things tag for Tabernacle should have been applied here, but wasn't. I'll make sure this gets corrected and have the tagging in these books reviewed for other possible problems. Thanks for your help. [/quote] On closer review, it looks like I was mistaken. In this particular instance, the problem
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Since this thread is concerned with the problems with media tagging in the Zondervan resources rather than the separate issue of the status of the LCV, I've answered your concern on the thread I mentioned earlier.
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I'm re-hijacking this thread to bring it back on topic to address Mike Binks' concern with the status of the LCV, which was raised on this thread . [quote user="Mike Binks"] [quote user="Louis St. Hilaire"]The list of dictionary articles is separate--being generated from Logos Controlled Vocabulary entries. ZEB hasn't been tagged with LCV yet, so it
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[quote user="Mike Binks"] I was looking up Elijah in 'Biblical People' using the Mac Alpha. The only dictionary that came up on the list was the NBD. I expected more hits than that and in particular THE ZONDERVAN ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF THE BIBLE. Is this related to the discussions on this thread and do you know when work on tagging the Zondervan collection
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Just to be clear, it's not a repackaging of the editions of these works in ECF in any sense, but a distinct set of English editions.
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Yes, if you already have ECF, there's some overlap, but they are different translations, and ECF does not include Evagrius.
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[quote user="Dave Hooton"]Louis Hilair, I'm afraid you haven't made a good impression for metadata accuracy when you misquote my name! [/quote] Oops. Sorry . Irony noted. [quote user="Dave Hooton"]As we understand how resources of both these types can now be user-selected for use in Passage Guide may I suggest that all "Study Bibles" titles be classed