Leon, regarding your first option, you say that “1 click on triple bar on left 
side of data entry screen assigns the clipboard source to all the fields for 
that person.”  

 

When I try this, the clipboard source is copied into only one field – the field 
where the arrow is then located.  I understood you to be saying that if I 
proceeded in the manner you suggested, the clipboard source would be copied 
into every field where data had been entered for that person.  Is that correct? 
 If so, what do you think I’m doing wrong?

 

From: LegacyUserGroup [mailto:legacyusergroup-boun...@legacyusers.com] On 
Behalf Of Leon Chapman
Sent: Wednesday, July 26, 2017 11:03 AM
To: Legacy User Group <legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com>
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Citing a Source

 

You MUST cite each piece of data for every person.

 

You can do the sourcing in a few different ways.

1. Source each person and their data as you enter them using 1 master source & 
clipboard - this is what I would do.  This is pretty easy - create the master 
source and copy it to the clipboard.  Enter each person’s data and 1 click on 
triple bar on left side of data entry screen assigns the clipboard source to 
all the fields for that person.  So, basically, it is 1 more click on data 
entry to assign the source to that persons data.

 

2. Create a blank Legacy database and enter all the new people and then create 
1 master source

  A. Then, source everyone and all their data using advanced sourcing.   

  B.  Import these people into your main database (Note:  you will need one 
common person in both databases to aid with the import/merging of people.

 

3. You can enter all the new people without any sourcing

   A.  Create 1 master source for these people

   B.  Tag all Descendants from the oldest person (sister) that gave you the 
information (Tag all of the new people with Tag 1)

   C.  Use Advanced Sourcing (From Tools) and assign the new source to everyone 
with a Tag 1 and all their data fields.

 

 

Any of these options work, but Options 2 and 3 require a little more knowledge 
of importing / merging / Tagging / Sourcing.  If you have less that about 15-20 
people, I would use option 1.  When you more than 20 people, then option 2 or 3 
will be much easier to accomplish the sourcing of everyone’s information.

 

Good luck.


Leon Chapman
chap...@gmail.com <mailto:chap...@gmail.com> 



 

On Jul 26, 2017, at 7:36 AM, Dennis Birke <dpbi...@gmail.com 
<mailto:dpbi...@gmail.com> > wrote:

 

I’ve been using Legacy for several years, but I’m only beginning to cite 
sources.  So, I’m still trying to figure out the best way to handle citations.  
Here is the situation I’m currently grappling with:

 

Until recently, my family database did not include information about the 
descendants of one of my great-grandfather’s sisters.  I recently connected 
with the daughter of the sister and she has provided me with fairly complete 
information about all of the sister’s descendants – about 40 people when you 
include spouses.  (You can imagine my delight in getting this treasure trove of 
information in one fell swoop!)

 

Since this information was fairly hard to come by, I’d like to cite the source 
(i.e., personal correspondence from the daughter).  But, it feels like 
“overkill” to generate a citation to this source for each of four or five 
fields of data for each of about 40 people.  That’s a lot of repetitive work 
(even when using the clipboard) and that will generate a lot of duplicate 
footnotes in a descendants report (which is the type of report I most 
frequently generate).  So, I have been considering preparing one citation 
(probably connected with the sister) saying something like:  “Unless otherwise 
noted, all cited information regarding [Sister X} and her descendants was 
obtained from [Name of daughter] by letter dated ____.”  

 

The problem I see with this approach is that for certain kinds of reports, the 
single citation tied to the sister may not be included in the report and there 
will be nothing cited for a the many descendants.  

 

How would those of you familiar with citation practices handle this situation?

 

Thanks for any assistance you can provide.

-- 

LegacyUserGroup mailing list
 <mailto:LegacyUserGroup@legacyusers.com> LegacyUserGroup@legacyusers.com
To manage your subscription and unsubscribe  
<http://legacyusers.com/mailman/listinfo/legacyusergroup_legacyusers.com> 
http://legacyusers.com/mailman/listinfo/legacyusergroup_legacyusers.com
Archives at:
 <http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com/> 
http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com/

 

-- 

LegacyUserGroup mailing list
LegacyUserGroup@legacyusers.com
To manage your subscription and unsubscribe 
http://legacyusers.com/mailman/listinfo/legacyusergroup_legacyusers.com
Archives at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com/

Reply via email to