Gary,

No argument from me!

Missing a finger is a Fact, but losing a finger is an Event. I rather think
a newspaper report usually would be a Source to the Event, rather than the
Fact.

Ron Ferguson
http://www.fergys.co.uk/

-----Original Message-----
From: Olds-Wills-Anderson-Simonson Hodges-Harris-Liikala-Jukkara
Sent: Tuesday, February 22, 2011 2:42 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Facts, Events and Sources

Good summary Mike. Death is an event (having its own data area), a
funeral is an event, an award ceremony is an event, blue eyes are a
fact, a missing finger is a fact, all of these can be substantiated by
a source (certificate, newspaper article, medical statement, personal
knowledge, etc).  While being in the newspaper for some may seem like
an event or fact----the newspaper entry is merely reporting on the
event/fact taking place resulting in the article.  Your 'if it's on
paper it's a source' applies to every application I can think of; I've
used the same rule for years.

Some may choose to enter a census, a newspaper article, or any number
of other 'sources' as events/facts because of the way they appear when
printed or sorted----that's a formatting preference----and possibly a
limitation of the program----but never-the-less they remain 'sources'.
Gary

On Tue, Feb 22, 2011 at 4:23 AM, Mike Fry <[email protected]> wrote:
Portions removed.
> A Source is not an Event, but it can be proof of a Fact or an Event e.g. a
> census. Generally, a piece of physical evidence is involved. Thus, Rons'
> assertion that an image of a Census form is a Source and not a Fact or and
> Event
> and the obvious consequence that an Obituary should also be a Source and
> not a
> Fact or an Event.
>
> My general rule of thumb is: if it's a piece of paper (digital images and
> transcriptions not withstanding) it's a Source! Sources contain evidence
> of
> Facts and Events.
>
> --
> Regards,
> Mike Fry
> Johannesburg




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