I do this same thing. First I start w/Family TreeMaker then moved to Legacy.

In either case, the pc software is the master and the web database (PostgreSQL w/php fron end) is just used for sharing.

www.bluewolverine.com/genealogy

Stephen Woodbridge wrote:
As an alternate to this approach,

I maintain my genealogy in FalimyTree maker and dump a GEDCOM file that gets loaded into a database. This is then used to serve genealogy pages. The database is a drop and reload when I have new data. and I maintain the INDI ids to preserve continuity of bookmarks.

http://swoodbridge.com/family/Woodbridge/

The application hides people that are living unless you have a family login. There is some risk that someone could hack it, but then they can dumpster dive also.

-Steve

Jim Seymour wrote:
Mike Hamilton wrote:
I did some preliminary work on exactly this quite some years back. I think I can claim to know the Paul's (excellent) Gedcom module pretty
well, having used it to generate custom charts, etc.

Well, then...  I may start hitting you up for some advice...  :-)

But there's a huge problem to which I could find no answer; what happens when somebody makes a change? These should update the Gedcom file, which would often have a flow-on effect to the rest of the Wiki, which would need regenerating.

In my case, this is not a problem.  The GEDCOM file is merely a one-time
transport mechanism.  Once the pages are up, my Wiki will become the
official repository.

In other words, this conversion is a one-way trip.

I used MediaWiki, but I see that DokuWiki "makes sure the datafiles remain readable outside the Wiki and eases the creation of structured
texts", so it looks a much better choice.

Yes, this is the main reason I chose DokuWiki.  The pages are stored as
plain text files.  When I first got the Wiki running, I generated most
of the initial pages by converting them from HTML pages (using a quick
one-shot perl script).

Sorry I couldn't give Jim a more positive and useful response

Not a problem.  I'll be spending some time on this project this weekend.
When I'm done, I'll try to include a page on my wiki about the
conversion process (in case others might find it useful in the future).



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