On Fri, 10 Mar 2006 09:14:29 -0500, "Coddgenealogy"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>  In other words, one needs to keep a copy of the old website on a local
>disk, generate the entire website in another directory, and compare the
>contents of all old files to all new files to find just the
>substantively changed ones?

Yes.

>But all new files have at least one minor change by default, the date
>of creation at the bottom of each page.

There is an option in Legacy to remove program generated footers.

>  Assuming the file comparison procedure can be made to work, if I set
>"reuse RIN's" to Off, added individuals will get new pages, old
>individuals that link to them will be changed as well, so that's ok.
>Deleted individuals will still have their web pages on the server, but
>nothing would link to them. Merged individuals would have to be handled
>on a case by case basis, I guess. In some cases, there would be no
>problem.

If you can handle added and deleted pages, then I don't think merges
will be a problem.

>I realize that after major
>surgery, the whole website has to be uploaded, for but for minor tweaks
>to a basically stable site, there ought to be some way to shortcut the
>process.

Keep in mind that something as minor as changing the punctuation in a
Master Event Sentence can cause whatever program you use to flag nearly
everything as "different".

Good luck!

-- 

Dennis M. Kowallek
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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