Paula,
You have good questions.  The focus group is like a saved search logic whereas 
tagged records actually have a value set in a field of the record.  Tags are 
static and search logic is dynamic.  If I tag all descendants of an ancestor 
today and see that there were 500 individuals tagged, then tomorrow add another 
20 descendants to that tree, there will still be 500 tagged...not 520.  But if 
I make a focus group of that ancestor and his descendants...it will have 500 
today and 520 tomorrow when that focus group is used to find those records.  
Whether you tag the results of the search is a separate issue.  And, like Alan 
said, the usage of the focus group varies with your needs.
Ron Taylor

--- On Sat, 2/25/12, Paula Ryburn <paula.ryb...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:

From: Paula Ryburn <paula.ryb...@sbcglobal.net>
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Focus groups vs. tagging
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Date: Saturday, February 25, 2012, 9:45 AM

I was looking forward to clarification on how & why to use focus groups instead 
of tagging, but so far I am unconvinced, as both answers posted thus far seem 
to include the step of tagging somewhere in their process anyway.  Or have I 
misread the two replies?
It seems focus groups and tagging (or really the search process to determine 
who to tag) operate the same way, but tags have the advantage of allowing you 
to move through the resulting list of tagged people easily... using the "next 
tagged" arrow at the bottom of the family view.  Just because individuals are 
in a focus group, doesn't give you quick access to those individuals for the 
purposes of, say, fixing an error.
On the other hand, I have recently learned I can fix a
 whole lot of things straight from the Search Results, which would require 
neither tags nor a focus group.
In pondering further as I typed, I suppose the advantage to defining a focus 
group comes when you are routinely exporting or reporting, because the list of 
individuals to include is dynamically built -- saving you the steps of 
re-running the search and tagging the results to be sure to include newly-added 
individuals, then exporting / reporting on tagged individuals.
"It depends" on your purpose for identifying a set of individuals... 
right? --Paula in Texas
Researching:  Adair Baker Beasley Benson Betz Bigley Blagrave Burton Chapman 
Clement Clough Coppernoll Costine Daulton Dinwiddie Doody Ellis Exline Field 
Floran Floyd Gates Goodale Gordon Gump Hale Harbaugh Hind Hopkins Hughes Hurdle 
Jones Klein Koyle Laswell McDonald Misner Passwaters Pelton Roberts Roche 
Ryburn Sanford
 Short Singer Sullivan Weller Williams

From: Ron Taylor <doit4...@yahoo.com>
To: LegacyUserGroup@LegacyUsers.com
Sent: Sat, February 25, 2012 9:15:13 AM
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Focus groups vs. tagging


A tag is an actual field in the individual or marriage record which can be used 
in a search to locate those records with the tag on or off. 

A focus group is a collection of criteria that can be used as the logic to 
filter a sub-set of the database dynamically and is not the actual records.  
The results of a search for records in the focus group could be tagged but as 
more records are added to the database, the new ones will not be automatically 
tagged when they satisfy the criteria in the focus group.  A fresh search for 
the focus group would identify every record in that filter.

One function of the focus group is to export a portion of the database.  
Records filtered by the focus group can easily be pushed out to a separate file 
which can then be sent to another researcher with only those records that are 
of interest for
 him/her.  I find it very useful in Legacy to execute a detailed search for the 
focus group, tag the search results, and then in the Legacy Export...check the 
radio button "All records with an individual tag of:", set the tag number, and 
then check the three boxes under that selection.  Those boxes are labelled: 
"Export all Spouses of Tagged Individuals", "Export all Children of Tagged 
Individuals", and "Export all Parents of Tagged Individuals".  By checking 
those three optional boxes, not only are all the records in the focus group 
exported but also the individuals connected to them which essentially exports 
complete group sheets that include the tagged set.

In summary...a tag is temporary data and a focus group is a collection criteria 
used to filter records.  Focus groups can be saved and re-loaded for various 
purposes.  You could have a focus group for collaboration with Aunt Margaret 
and another for data sharing with
 Grandma Johnson.  I'm sure others have even more imaginative uses for these 
tools.

Ron Taylor








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