Look for his sample page in "An Awful Ahnentafel" article. He shows examples
of just about every kind of relationship.

First generation numbering: If I am 1.0, then my father is 2.0, my mother
3.0; my grandfather is double my father 4.0, my grandmother is one more 5.0;
my great grandfather is double my grandfather 8.0, my grandmother 9.0. I am
third in my family. My oldest sibling's number is half of my father's
number, so it is "1" like mine. Because she is the first child, she becomes
1.1, my second sibling 1.2. Normally my number would be 1.3 but I keep 1.0
to show I am a direct line descendant. The next child in my father's family
is 1.4.

Descendent numbering: Another number is added to the end of my number or
those of my siblings. My first child is 1.01. His first child is 1.011. My
grandchild's first child becomes 1.0111; the second child is 1.0112. My
oldest sister's first child is 1.11 and so forth.

Second generation numbering: My father is the seventh of twelve children in
his father's family. He would be 2.7 but because he is direct line, the
number 7 is skipped but again the .0 holds his place in the chronology. The
next sibling becomes 2.8. Letters of the alphabet are used after the 9th
child. The tenth child is 2.A; eleventh 2.B; twelfth child 2.C. Without the
letters the tenth child would be 2.10 which makes him look like he's part of
the next, generation.

Collateral line numbering: My aunt is the fifth child in my father's family
2.5. Her first child is 2.51; second child is 2.52; and third child is 2.53
and so forth. Children for her first child become 2.511, 2.512, 2.513.
Because there are three digits after the point I know the person is a child
of a child of my aunt who is my father's fifth sibling. If I were to list
all of her descendants, it could look like 2.5631.

My grandfather's first sibling is 4.1. Her children are 4.11, 4.12, 4.13,
4.14... Her grandchildren from the first child are 4.111, 4.112, 4.113...

My great grandfather's first sibling is 8.1. Her children are 8.11, 8.12,
8.13...

My great great grandfather's first sibling is 16.1. Her children are 16.11,
16.12, 16.13...

Long lines: Each generation number doubles. My 7th great grandfather's
number is 512.0. His first child is 256.1. This numbering system can handle
many more generations and their collateral lines, and I can tell how each
person connects to me without opening their file.

This is really just a nutshell's worth.

Sue

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Jennifer
Crockett
Sent: Thursday, December 02, 2004 12:06 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Renumbering MRINS--Use Dollarhide's system

Hi Sue

I must confess my eyes glazed over when I saw all those ones and zeros
in Dollarhide's binary system.

Also, he is talking about pedigree ancestors. What about second and
third cousins, great aunts etc? I need a system of numbering to include
them too.
Carol asked a question below about intermarriages. I would also be
interested to know if the binary system would cope with that.

Jennifer



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sue
Ellen Eggett
Sent: Thursday, 2 December 2004 4:43 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Renumbering MRINS--Use Dollarhide's system

Because numbering systems are mostly for our own use anyway, I've made a
few
minor changes from William Dollarhide's numbering system to suit my
special
needs. In some instances I have given a person two numbers separated by
a
slash. I then immediately know by the two numbers that the person is
connected into my tree more than once.

When I look at the name list in Legacy with the option of the unique ID
#'s
showing rather than the RIN I can readily identify a direct line son,
father, and grandfather who have the very same name. The father's number
is
always double the son's number. Add one number to the father's number to
create the mother's number. (Father=2; mother=3) This way the father is
always an even number and the mother is always an odd number. I know
that
Legacy can bold direct line ancestors in the name list, but in addition,
I
know that anyone with a point zero (.0) is obviously a direct ancestor.
When
I am doing merges within my own records, I can readily tell people apart
because they have this "code" number. When a child is named the same as
an
earlier sibling who died, the number lets me know that they are two
individuals. If I am merging someone else's data with mine, I can always
be
certain of which record is my original because of his unique number.

For those who have not read how the numbering system works, this may
seem
confusing. I suggest that anyone who is unhappy with the random RIN and
MRIN
numbers take time to read Dollarhide's articles. He gives an excellent
sample page that I kept by my computer for easy reference while learning
and
doing it. I changed over to this way of numbering a little bit at a
time. My
husband looked at what I did and said, "Hey, I think I can write a
program
that will do that automatically." :(

Sue

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Carol
Wait
Sent: Wednesday, December 01, 2004 2:22 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Renumbering MRINS--Use Dollarhide's system

Sue,
How would this work with a lot of inter marriages?  Some of my family is
so convoluted it's hard to follow, so the easiest way for me to follow
the generations down
is to use Tree Draw and make charts.
Carol






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