Al,

1) I am not clear why you propose to download both sides of your family 
separately, unless you currently have them set up that way. Both sides are 
clearly linked – presumably by your parents and hence can constitute a single 
file. So, personally I would download the lot as a single file (if possible). 
In any event I would link them into a single file after downloading. With 
Legacy it is much easier to split a file rather than link two or more.

2) Because of size considerations images of eg. censuses may not display well 
when directly used from Legacy. Please take into consideration copyright 
considerations when publishing images. To publish, for example, English 
censuses, would be a breach of Crown Copyright.

Unfortunately, I lost the installation password for my User Guide when I lost 
all my emails on my HD crashing , so I am afraid that my answer may not be that 
for which you are looking. Whilst images can be included in reports etc. 
documents contained in the Multimedia Files option in various formats eg. PDF, 
TXT, DOC cannot. I am not certain that this is what is meant by the page you 
quote.

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

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


From: Al M
Sent: Saturday, November 05, 2011 12:31 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [LegacyUG] Basic Legacy Family Tree Question(s)

I am not a ‘newbie’ to genealogy but am new to Legacy Family Tree.  Over 
approximately 18 years, I have traced my paternal family line to 1610 and my 
maternal family line to 1744.  I have approximately 1500 (and it is growing) 
individuals identified and have images of hundreds of documents such as the 
census, land records, wills, marriage applications, citizenship applications, 
registration cards, cemetery plat plans, maps, court records, history book 
references, etc ..  All of this information is contained in an Excel file that 
I designed.  All associated documents are either embedded or linked into this 
file.  The Excel file is an easily used/readily visible file but is not 
sufficiently compatible with the myriad of relationships that I have 
encountered and the volume of material is such that I have now resorted to the 
Legacy package to be able to put the information into a searchable, consistent 
format and to generate various trees and reports.  Not being familiar with 
these types of family tree packages, this brings me to two questions:

1)      Is it better to load all information into one family file:  from 1610 
down to present day (13 generations), including many, many branches along the 
way and then take a similar route up the other side of the family to 1744?  Or 
is it better to break it up into random family trees that are, in reality, all 
connected?

2)      Page 277 of the Legacy User Guide says that “documents and other types 
of files that are attached in this manner will not be included on report or web 
sites.  They are simply for documentation purposes.”  I have no intentions of 
putting my files on a website but the bulk, by far, of my information is 
documents of various types along with some photos, most in jpg.  The documents 
are in various formats.  I want those documents in the reports and included in 
e-books or printed books, dvds, etc.  Do I understand this guide properly?

Thanks for your consideration.



Al Mieswinkel




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