In short, it is a map to the KJV. But only where different. It handles merges, splits and one to one.
Going to between any two uses the map to KJV as an intermediate. — DM Smith From my phone. Brief. Weird autocorrections. > On Jan 10, 2018, at 9:21 PM, John Dudeck <john.dud...@sim.org> wrote: > > Troy wrote: > > > 3) v11ns intend to be mapped. The objective is to provide the ability > > to see any verse in one Bible and show that same portion (e.g., Jn.3.16, > > "For God so loved...") for the same work (e.g., The Gospel of John) in > > another Bible. The above example in #2 of using V3 of a Psalm for two > > different purposes (= two different portion from the same work: 1) the > > beginning of the Psalm text just after the headers; 2) the third line > > into the Psalm text-- both labeled as V3 in two different Bibles using > > the same v11n) prohibits the objective to uniquely identify a portion of > > text and be able to map it distinctively to another Bible. > > A few days ago I posted a question asking how tv11n works in Sword. I never > got an answer. Would somebody explain, or put it on the wiki and post a link, > as to how and where this mapping is defined? So far, all I see is a list of > the number of verses in each chapter, and the order of books. But there must > be something that defines the mapping between equivalent verses of different > v11n's. > > I have worked extensively with verse mapping in Logos, creating verse maps > for several different bibles. In a Logos verse map, every verse has a list of > all the references for that verse in all other versifications. If a whole > book matches verse for verse with another v11n, it just references that v11n, > but if there is even one verse different from any existing v11n, every verse > has to be spelled out. > > What I need to know is how this is done in Sword. > > Thanks. > > John Dudeck > Programmer at Editions Cle Lyon, France > john.dud...@sim.org j...@editionscle.com > -- > How do you tell if someone is a real photographer? You ask them to answer > this question. Suppose you were walking through the woods and you came upon > a clearing. In that clearing is a lake and in the lake is a man is obviously > drowning. Now you only have time to do one of the following - save his life > or take a photo. Now here's the question: Which lens should you use? > > _______________________________________________ > sword-devel mailing list: sword-devel@crosswire.org > http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel > Instructions to unsubscribe/change your settings at above page
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