Bruce,

As I understand it, you have the two the wrong way round! Your first example
defines a Splitter and the second a Lumper.

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


From: Bruce Jones
Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2011 6:23 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Adding text details to a source/citation

Here is how I understand it, using two death certificates (Bill & Bob) from
the same state as an example:

An extreme Lumper will create two Master Sources, one for Bill and a second
for Bob
The text from Bill's death certificate goes into Bill's Master Source Text.
The text from Bob's death certificate goes into Bob's Master Source Text.
There will not be anything in the Detail Source Text field for either one
(would there even be a Source Detail?).

An extreme Splitter will create one Master Source for all death certificates
from that state (or country).
The text from Bill's death certificate goes into Bill's Source Detail Text.
The text from Bob's death certificate goes into Bob's Source Detail Text.
The Master Source Text will only contain information that is common to ALL
death certificates from that state.

Many of us fall somewhere between these two extremes and therefore, the
answer is not as clear.
Just remember that the Master Source Text should only contain information
that is common to ALL references to this Master Source
The Source Detail Text should only contain information that is NOT common to
all references to the Master Source

Anyway, that is how I see it.


On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 1:38 AM, Jenny M Benson <[email protected]>
wrote:

On 19/05/2011 03:12, julia l wrote:
> Every time I add a source, I am always tripped up whether to put
> details of the document in the source text field or the details text
> field. Once the difference between the two and how do you use them?

It rather depends on the nature of the Source and the nature of the details!

When you refer to "source" and "details" above I presume you are
referring to Master Source and Source Detail.  Unless you are an extreme
splitter and each of your Master Sources relates to only one item of
information, what you enter in Master Source Text will appear in the
citation for every record which uses that Source.  I usually use that
field to quote the description of a website or a particular database.

What you write in the Text field of the Source Details will appear in
only the citations that use the Master Source with those particular
Details - the name of the individual, the dates, the page of the book,
the Census reference or whatever.  Here I copy or transcribe the exact
information I am citing, or sometimes just an extract of it.


On a related note, in his recent webinar Geoff copied all the details
from a Death Certificate into the Source Detail Text field and explained
that he did this so that the full information would be available even if
the attached scan was not, for example if he sent someone a gedcom.  I
thought this was a very good point, one which had not occurred to me
before.  (Just one of *many* things I learned from that webinar!)
--
Jenny M Benson








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