I realize we're on #3 already, I just wanted to say "thanks" for this
set of "SWORD 10*" emails.
And I hope our Wiki Czar find the time to translate these into a nice
series of intro/tutorials that we can maintain and update as some of
us use these to dive deeper into the codebase that has support
On Thu, Dec 2, 2010 at 3:08 AM, Ben Morgan wrote:
> Hi Greg,
> I wasn't suggesting that each user maintain a stylesheet, but if the
> application lets users supply their own, such a stylesheet could be created
> and distributed (it could even potentially target individual modules).
So then you wa
On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 9:25 AM, Ben Morgan wrote:
> Hi Greg,
> I agree the mechanism is simple enough; the ramifications are potentially
> not. Personally, I would mostly prefer that modules cannot provide their own
> stylesheets. On the web, every site has its own style; in print, each Bible
> ha
of decision!
> For the day of the LORD is near
> in the valley of decision.
>
> Giôên 3:14 (ESV)
>
>
>
> On Thu, Dec 2, 2010 at 9:48 AM, Greg Hellings
> wrote:
>>
>> One of the commentaries I have has a book header (in this instance it
>> is for 1 Pete
One of the commentaries I have has a book header (in this instance it
is for 1 Peter) which is held in the module in the key "1 Peter 0:0".
Behavior concerning that introduction varies with different
applications.
1) example/cmdline/lookup 'A Commentary on I Peter' '1 Peter 0:0'
This works perfect
, Dec 1, 2010 at 1:24 PM, DM Smith wrote:
> Was it a bug or a usage problem. If it is a bug, I'll submit a bug report in
> Jira for it.
>
> On 12/01/2010 01:38 PM, Greg Hellings wrote:
>>
>> This is not true. He was answered on IRC.
>>
>> On Wed, Dec 1,
This is not true. He was answered on IRC.
On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 12:34 PM, David Haslam wrote:
>
> No-one has answered Peter yet. O Come all ye experts!
>
> David
> --
> View this message in context:
> http://sword-dev.350566.n4.nabble.com/cipherraw-tp3045962p3067825.html
> Sent from the SWORD
On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 8:13 AM, Jonathan Morgan wrote:
> Speaking as a BPBible developer, I would tend to prefer C++ filters to
> XSLT. Here are some reasons why:
> 1. It works now (well, OK, it doesn't always work as well as one might like,
> but it does work).
It works for our historical colle
On Wed, Dec 1, 2010 at 7:40 AM, Jonathan Morgan wrote:
> From an application developer's point of view, I'm not convinced that per
> module CSS is a good idea. Here are some reasons:
> 1. I'm not convinced of "well-defined use of HTML+CSS classes". Some things
> may be well-defined, but I know B
s library from which we could take hints and its XSL as
well.
--Greg
On Tue, Nov 30, 2010 at 6:09 PM, Greg Hellings wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 30, 2010 at 1:08 PM, Troy A. Griffitts
> wrote:
___
sword-devel mailing list: sword-devel@crosswire.or
On Tue, Nov 30, 2010 at 1:08 PM, Troy A. Griffitts wrote:
> Having finally returned from a hectic 2 weeks of conferences, and lots
> to do before leaving for Christmas, I'm not sure I'm up for a heated,
> passionate debate about technologies right now, but by all means, please
> commence the publi
gex library and being asked to undertake my current
task for Wycliffe. I can easily provide you what I have if you think
it would be of use.
--Greg
On Tue, Nov 30, 2010 at 4:30 PM, Chris Little wrote:
>
>
> On 11/30/2010 6:58 AM, Greg Hellings wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, Nov 29, 2010
On Tue, Nov 30, 2010 at 9:18 AM, Peter von Kaehne wrote:
>
>> Von: Greg Hellings
>
>> However, a few problems arise. Namely, I have no control over the
>> display of the text in my target applications (Xiphos and Bibletime)
>> when I use OSIS. You, being in th
On Mon, Nov 29, 2010 at 10:36 PM, Chris Little wrote:
> OSIS 212 modules
> ThML 156 modules
> Plaintext 42 modules
> GBF 30 modules
> TEI 22 modules
And Xiphos' repository has another 41 ThML and 7 OSIS (I also see 1
plain, 1 TEI and 1 GBF) which makes it 219 OSIS and 197 ThML. My
InstallMgr rep
On Tue, Nov 30, 2010 at 2:14 AM, Trevor Jenkins
wrote:
> On Mon, 29 Nov 2010, Greg Hellings wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Nov 29, 2010 at 9:30 PM, DM Smith wrote:
>> > ROFL is semantic markup. It is a level 1 heading. Given that this
>> > is one of HTML's title markup,
On Mon, Nov 29, 2010 at 9:30 PM, DM Smith wrote:
> ROFL is semantic markup. It is a level 1 heading. Given that this is
> one of HTML's title markup, one probably can deduce that it is a title. Note
> that IE, FireFox, Opera, Safari are not consistent in how they render .
>
Ah, but it wasn't my
On Mon, Nov 29, 2010 at 12:57 PM, Trevor Jenkins
wrote:
> On Mon, 29 Nov 2010, Greg Hellings wrote:
>
>> And ThML continues to be used to create Bible modules because it is the best
>> tool for module creators who care about their presentation more than some
>> semant
OP's question has been answered at least twice in this thread. xml2gbs is
the wrong utility. I don't even remember if that is the proper utility for
anything or if it has been superseded, but it is definitely the wrong
utility for him.
I gave more extensive directions on using ThML in my earlier e
On Monday, November 29, 2010, DM Smith wrote:
> On 11/29/2010 12:30 PM, Greg Hellings wrote:
>
>
> And ThML continues to be used to create Bible modules because it is the best
> tool for module creators who care about their presentation
>
>
>
> The problem I have with
And ThML continues to be used to create Bible modules because it is the best
tool for module creators who care about their presentation more than some
semantic dream world of markup.
To create a ThML Bible or commentary you will need to use the imp format and
then just markup within the verses wit
On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 5:27 AM, David Haslam wrote:
>
> I'm using IMP2VS to make a module, and used this code to display the 22
> acrostic headings in Psalm 119. Example:
> $$$Psalms 119:9
> type="acrostic">BET. ¿Con qué limpiará el joven
> su camino? Con guardar tu palabra.Xiphos displays the m
On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 8:21 AM, Peter von Kaehne wrote:
> On 17/11/10 13:42, DM Smith wrote:
>>
>> On Nov 17, 2010, at 7:06 AM, Peter von Kaehne wrote:
>>
>>> BTW are these canonical titles or are they added in to show what is lost in
>>> translation?
>>
>> WRT OSIS, canonical is not meant to be
For better or worse, no one with both the knowledge of the engine and the
time to contribute extensively likes using DOM or XSLT nor established XML
libraries. You are far from the first person to suggest this route.
In other news, JSword converts all modules to OSIS XML and then processes
them t
On Sat, Nov 13, 2010 at 9:20 AM, David Haslam wrote:
>
> "As of July 2010, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facebook Facebook has more
> than 500 million active users, which is about one person for every fourteen
> in the world."
As of September Facebook passed Google as the most used website in th
David,
I don't believe that osis2mod preserves these titles. If it does,
then it would preserve them in Genesis 0:0 or maybe [ Testament 1
Heading ]. And only newer versions of osis2mod would use it. By
default, most front ends do not usually display either of those
sections for Bibles unless t
I have had some success in the past with manipulating RSS feeds in
JavaScript and certainly know my way around widgetizing a website.
I could pretty quickly whip up a few client-side modifications to the page
if we want. The whole aggragate feed could be dynamically pulled and
assembled, including
A part of my sanity goes away every time someone asks any question
about the quality of mod2osis when they've been around these forums
before.
http://tinyurl.com/23vewgb
In particular look at number 5 on that list.
The mod2osis as included in the engine does not even produce
well-formed XML let
On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 5:06 AM, Jonathan Morgan wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 7:48 AM, Greg Hellings
> wrote:
>>
>> On Sun, Nov 7, 2010 at 8:28 AM, Jonathan Morgan
>> wrote:
>> > A lot here depends on evaluation of pros and cons. I personally support
&
Developers All,
I have updated the Doxygen documentation available on
http://www.crosswire.org/~ghellings/ to include the 1.6.2 release
versions as well as the latest Subversion as of last night.
I have also created a few little Bash scripts to make updating the
documentation trivial for me. I k
On Sun, Nov 7, 2010 at 8:28 AM, Jonathan Morgan wrote:
> A lot here depends on evaluation of pros and cons. I personally support
> HTTP, zipped modules, and one central file (like mods.d.tar.gz) to give a
> list of all the books and where to find them for at least some of the
> following reasons.
On Thu, Nov 4, 2010 at 10:04 PM, Troy A. Griffitts wrote:
> On 11/05/2010 02:41 AM, Greg Hellings wrote:
>> ... would require some effort to be
>> put into the SWIG bindings to provide especially a missing binding for
>> the STL multimap class.
>
> Yeah, in C++ it i
A year or so ago I wrote the shell of a (PHP) website which would allow a
user to browse various selected modules, "purchase" one, create a unique
encryption key for that user and encrypt the module for them.
It would then give the user a single download which could be installed with
a Python/Qt a
On Fri, Nov 5, 2010 at 10:25 AM, Troy A. Griffitts wrote:
> Thanks for the suggestion Weston,
>
> I had no idea WebDAV allowed programmatic traversal of remote content.
> That's great to know!
>
> I wonder at the value of depending on WebDAV to solve our problem though.
Every hosting provider I k
On Fri, Nov 5, 2010 at 8:02 AM, Peter von Kaehne wrote:
> I think Troy, the concern is correct.
>
> For the publisher with some decent IT muscle and budget a proper repo must be
> better, but for the small town church with a website and a couple of modules
> to share - zip and http is a must.
>
On Thu, Nov 4, 2010 at 8:22 PM, DM Smith wrote:
>
> On Nov 4, 2010, at 8:47 PM, Robert Hunt wrote:
>
>> Looking at http://crosswire.org/wiki/Main_Page (and elsewhere), I don't see
>> any documentation for the Sword module format. Is it documented anywhere
>> other than in the code or by dissecti
Troy,
There are a variety of versification schemes which can be specified
when you import the module. Based on your selection, the tool will
append extra verses to the "nearest" verse (I use the term 'nearest'
in a sort of nebulous undefined way, since it varies based on where
you are in the impo
I thought diatheke was officially classified as abandonware?
--Greg
On Thu, Oct 28, 2010 at 10:18 AM, David Haslam wrote:
>
> Diatheke is currently version 4.5, but you'd hardly think so if you visited
> http://www.crosswire.org/sword/diatheke/
> http://www.crosswire.org/sword/diatheke/
>
> That
Just some notes on the applications overall before I get to
performance testing (I realize this is more proof-of-concept, so I
present these as things which someone who wants to transform this into
a production app might take into account)
Downloading is very slow, even over my 4G connection with
On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 11:43 PM, David wrote:
> On Tuesday, September 21, 2010 01:50:11 pm Peter von Kaehne wrote:
>> Hi guys,
>>
>> I just saw this here in Wikimedia commons:
>>
>> http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1c/Ampel.svg
>>
>> It is an svg file which has java script integrat
I have no reason to think that Bibletime does not support these modules. I'm
not at my machine, so I don't know for sure, but I believe it does.
--Greg
On Oct 22, 2010 10:24 AM, "DM Smith" wrote:
> On 10/22/2010 11:08 AM, Barry Drake wrote:
>> On Fri, 2010-10-22 at 04:54 -0700, Chris Little wrote
Troy,
That appears to have solved the problem. I now have module content
all the way through Revelation 22:21.
--Greg
On Wed, Oct 20, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Troy A. Griffitts wrote:
> On 10/20/2010 11:18 PM, David Haslam wrote:
>>
>> Troy,
>>
>> It's late evening here, too late for me to test anythi
get
> some more info from people already experimenting with this.
>
> does it happen when creating non-compressed modules (ModDrv=RawText)?
>
> The other issues we're waiting on I think involved Greg Hellings. Greg,
> any progress on nailing down the issue you're having
I will be home in about 2 hours and able to test then.
--Greg
On Oct 20, 2010 4:37 PM, "Troy A. Griffitts" wrote:
> OK Karl, David, Greg,
>
> Out of suspicion from your zLD comment, I added a delete (which should
> have been there anyway) for the module in imp2mod before exiting.
>
> If David or
David,
On Wed, Oct 20, 2010 at 8:33 AM, David Haslam wrote:
>
> Thanks Greg,
>
> Getting another CrossWire volunteer to reproduce the issue is usually more
> than half the battle.
>
> Aside: Sometimes, I have almost felt that my observations had fallen on deaf
> ears.
Both happily and sadly I no
David,
I have confirmed your problem with Revelation importing. Using the
WEB as you did I executed
$ mod2imp WEB > WEB.imp
$ imp2vs WEB.imp -z -o ~/.sword/modules/texts/ztext/web2/
$ diatheke -b WEB2 -k jude.1.7
Jude 1:7: Even as Sodom and Gomorrah, and the cities around them,
having, in the sa
On Wed, Oct 20, 2010 at 6:29 AM, Troy A. Griffitts wrote:
> Do you have a mods.d/ folder or mods.conf file in your current working
> directory when you run the utilities?
>
> CWD takes precedence over most other settings.
I just tried running the commands from within my ~/.sword folder.
Here is t
On Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 5:14 PM, Matthew Talbert wrote:
>> I made those adjustments after the default settings failed to locate the
>> modules in my user home directory. After clearing the environment variable
>> and setting /etc/sword.conf back to /usr/local/sword, the command line tools
>> still
, "Matthew Talbert" wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 5:46 PM, Greg Hellings
wrote:
>> [Install]
>> DataPath=/home/greg/.sword
>
> Why this instead of /usr/share/sword? What you're basically making
> sword do is repetitively look in the same directories which
[Install]
DataPath=/home/greg/.sword
SWORD_HOME is set to the same value.
On Oct 19, 2010 4:42 PM, "Matthew Talbert" wrote:
>> And I'm not installing the library to .sword, rather I'm installing
modules
>> there both by hand and with installmgr. Sorry for the confusion.
>
> Do you have /etc/sword
Fixing that problem with the autotools shouldn't be overly difficult, but I
don't know if it is desired.
And I'm not installing the library to .sword, rather I'm installing modules
there both by hand and with installmgr. Sorry for the confusion.
--Greg
On Oct 19, 2010 3:49 PM, "Matthew Talbert"
Sword keeps stressing me out whenever I try to build with autotools on a new
system.
I did not have ICU installed, because I don't care about its functionality.
Rather than default to not build with ICU or error and tell me I need to
expressly specify --without-icu, configure quietly said it was a
David,
I have a basic Python script that I use with the mod2osis work I've
done that which programmatically compares two modules, verse by verse,
to be sure that their contents are identical.
At present it only compares them with all their default settings (so
it might not grab notes, etc and wou
On Tue, Oct 5, 2010 at 6:45 PM, Peter von Kaehne wrote:
> On 05/10/10 17:30, Caleb Barr wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> Brand new here -- I'd like to get at some of this data, but I don't know
>> C++. I heard rumors that there was a way to do it with Python?
>
> There are bindings.
Here's a sample of h
On Sun, Oct 3, 2010 at 11:28 PM, Chris Little wrote:
>
>
> On 10/3/2010 6:19 PM, Robert Hunt wrote:
>> 4/ Would your program be interested in taking advantage of such XML
>> lists?
>> 5/ If not, would another format be helpful?
>
> XML is fine; we can make converters. Our interest in usin
I believe in
its current state, at least for the one in my bzr branch, it does round-trip
KJV properly, though I am not one hundred percent certain of that. I have a
simple little Python script that I use to compare verse-by-verse through an
entire pair of modules to make cert
Bin,
On Thu, Sep 30, 2010 at 10:34 PM, Ben Morgan wrote:
> Ok, that seems to work with BPBible now. However, it also seems to hard code
> the path to libsword's dylib to be in the build directory, which could be a
> problem (though I don't know too much about this linking stuff on MacOSX):
> otoo
Robert just pointed out to me some issues with building the CMake
bindings which may have been affecting those of you who reported
errors to me over the past few weeks. The fix is now at the top of
SVN head, if those who have had problems would like to update to the
latest HEAD and try building ag
hes. Could you
>>> substitute, for example, the hyphen from General Punctuation (‐)?
>>> This would give the proper appearance, without conflicting with the 'normal'
>>> hyphen separator.
>>>
>>> I think this is at core a user input problem. Tell
All of this discussion about whether the hyphen is the proper
character that should have been used or whether some holy, blessed
POSIX/Unicode committee deemed - is valid for use as a letter or
whether it can only be punctuation is probably interesting. But it's
probably not interesting to Robert,
OP was not talking about a transliteration from the sounds of his email, but
rather the original language where the hyphen is a letter.
You are equivalently proposing an English speaker to not use the letter s in
the Bible names list. It might be comprehensible but it would be horrible
usability a
breviations?"
>
> BTW, the standard English locale seems to already have some one letter
> abbreviations, such as "N" for "Numbers" and "P" for "Psalms".
>
> Jon
>
> On Mon, Sep 20, 2010 at 12:22 AM, Greg Hellings
> wrote:
>
Book abbreviations are part of the translations of SWORD, are they
not? If they are, it should be relatively easy to allow users to edit
and add them to their heart's content by providing a programmatic
method to allow them to edit the localization files. That would allow
the user to set their ow
On Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 9:44 AM, Peter von Kaehne wrote:
> Thanks to Matthew who has got me onto the idea to use a DVCS for module
> creation. This is a very useful idea particularly if the underlying
> texts are messy and need gradual adjustment at a variety of places.
>
> So, I fell for git, lar
On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 2:03 PM, Dmitrijs Ledkovs
wrote:
> On 14 September 2010 19:46, Troy A. Griffitts wrote:
>> Thanks for the email link Greg. Yeah, the submitted changes in question
>> from project A were filter updates, and we do specifically state in that
>> email that filter updates are
ible team. I've asked a few times since I made the changes and
haven't seen any comments from them on here. Either they don't use
SVN HEAD in their development, or they haven't noticed any breakage.
--Greg
>
> Troy
>
> On 9/14/2010 6:49 PM, Greg Hellings wr
On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 12:43 PM, Troy A. Griffitts
wrote:
> Understood going forward.
>
> There were a few factors which made this a slightly non-standard situation.
> First, this wasn't exactly a bug fix. It was a workaround for a bug in a
> version of libcurl. I was hoping libcurl would be
Peter,
I have brought this up before, relating it to the Jerusalem Bible,
which does something similar. Instead of using A, B, C, etc, they
simply will number a verse as "2:7, 1:3" to reflect both popular types
of versification or they will go "1:1, 1:2, 1:2a, 1:2b, 1:2c, 1:3,
1:4" to indicate ad
Greetings, Peter,
On Thu, Sep 9, 2010 at 5:52 PM, Peter von Kaehne wrote:
> Several questions re XSLT:
>
> How can I select on (bits of/features of) content of the actual text
> node - e.g. the text being capitalised?
Depending on the version of XSLT being used, there are certain
functions that
On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 12:47 PM, Manfred Bergmann
wrote:
>
> Am 02.09.2010 um 18:18 schrieb Dmitrijs Ledkovs:
>
>> On 2 September 2010 17:28, Matthew Talbert wrote:
>>> On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 5:31 AM, Manfred Bergmann
>>> wrote:
I don't know but isn't it contra productive and actually
On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 12:19 AM, Chris Little wrote:
> No, there is nothing specifically image-oriented about the element.
> That Sword filters always interpret it as an image is irrelevant to my
> point.
>
> Moving forward, we can mandate that (for Sword) non-image data embedded with
> be tagg
On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 4:15 PM, Robert Hunt wrote:
> On 27/08/10 08:23, Greg Hellings wrote:
>>
>> The first step is deciding on a markup method. I like the sound of
>> DM's, but I don't see why it couldn't be handled in OSIS already? A
>> verse could
On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 2:13 PM, David Haslam wrote:
>
> Matthew,
>
> Well that's going to be the case anyway. Each SWORD (or JSword) front-end
> application would need to implement a media player for playing the ancillary
> resource when the user wishes.
I think this is pretty well understood.
On Tue, Aug 24, 2010 at 11:15 AM, David Haslam wrote:
>
> Peter,
>
> If you look at the mailing list archives for April 2010, you will find John
> Austin's message that announced xulsword.
>
> Subject: Announcing a new SWORD front end called Xulsword
>
> On the Nabble mirror of this list, you can
List,
I would like to announce that, in current SVN, is a small amount of
modifications to the SWIG bindings which allow both the Python and the
Perl bindings to be built. They can be built with both CMake and
Autotools. To make them, perform the following steps, based on your
toolset of choice.
rote:
> Looks like I just missed you in #sword. Do you have this published in
> a bzr branch somewhere?
>
> By the way, nice work on cmake. The whole process seems quite a bit
> faster than autotools.
>
> Matthew
>
> On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:17 PM, Greg Hellings
wrote:
&
Dear List,
I have edited the bindings and the Perl test script, such that the
Perl bindings now compile with CMake under SWORD. I believe that the
changes I made will also allow compilation under autotools, but as
always, YMMV on that. I'll get that tested once I have a chance to
merge all my ch
Greetings y'all,
I have added support to the CMake build system in SWORD so that you
can build the Python bindings. If you enable it, then the SWIG
wrapper will be compiled automatically during the normal "make" phase
and all you have to do is chdir into bindings/swig/python and type
"python setu
Fellas,
I finally tracked down the missing steps in the CMake build having to
do with linking against ICU. The files have been pushed up to SVN as
r2536.
--Greg
___
sword-devel mailing list: sword-devel@crosswire.org
http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/l
Johan,
On Fri, Jul 30, 2010 at 8:04 AM, Johan Marais (joha...@absa.co.za)
wrote:
> Peter,
>
> Before spending time and energy on something I know very little about (OSIS),
> I want to use my existing module.
>
> Does this mean that it is not possible to change the colour of the text in
> the fi
Fellow SWORDers - I am happy to report that David Trotz and I have
completed the transfer of the swordreader.org domain over to me. The
website should still be up and functioning.DNS might be cached
near you with the old values for anywhere from the next 10 minutes to
the next 24 hours. You w
Manfred,
On Sun, Jul 18, 2010 at 9:06 AM, Manfred Bergmann
wrote:
> Hi.
>
> I'm trying to push ObjC bindings. I tried committing now at least 10 times
> but every time I get a timeout somewhere.
> I remember I had similar experiences when I tried to pull whole JSword a
> while ago where a coupl
Tom,
We understand your need for discretion. We try to take into account
those in closed countries in our work, as we want them to remain safe
also. Your question has a number of avenues of answer, depending on
your level of technological comfort.
The most basic is to get the SWORD engine, or l
On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 8:39 PM, troypulk wrote:
> The error lies in the mod2osis and how it renders the .xml
Actually this is not the case. Chris Little and I got to the bottom
of this over IRC today and it was actually a problem with how the
older versions of osis2mod stored the new module as
OSIS and import experts,
So I'm working on the elusive Holy Grail of dumping out valid OSIS
from the engine into an XML file of the module. What I am currently
getting from the engine has two parts that fail to validate as OSIS
when I'm working with the KJV module. Namely, those Psalms that have
On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 8:37 AM, David Haslam wrote:
>
> I was somewhat amused by the sentence that reads, "I'd suggest the following
> is the best compromise between humans and people. "
>
> Notwithstanding, should spans of verse be punctuated by a hyphen or by the
> ndash character?
Personally
On Tue, Jun 15, 2010 at 9:46 AM, Dmitrijs Ledkovs
wrote:
> On 15 June 2010 14:27, Greg Hellings wrote:
>> On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 5:52 PM, Dmitrijs Ledkovs
>> I have included build/configuration files for a number of the
>> different iPhone SDK packs with help from
>&
On Mon, Jun 14, 2010 at 5:52 PM, Dmitrijs Ledkovs
wrote:
> WOW
>
> I'm not quite sure but it's either CMake is amazing or Xcode is
> amazing or both of them totally rock. And probably Gregory for doing
> awesome job in doing this port.
Dmitrijs, glad to hear you're finding it useful! You're the
On Tue, May 11, 2010 at 6:32 PM, Dmitrijs Ledkovs
wrote:
> On 11 May 2010 22:16, Weston Ruter wrote:
<- Snip ->
>> More on why dual licensing is a good idea:
>> http://benalman.com/news/2010/02/on-licensing-my-code/
>>
>
> Dual licensing is a bad idea cause it further spreads license prof
Troy - mod2osis in the state that exists in the source tree will not even
produce well-formed XML, and nothing even close to valid OSIS the last time
I looked at it. Some time back I produced a patch that would at least
render valid OSIS for the KJV module and, I hoped, any other module that
enter
I see the domain is schedule to expire in 8 days, so quick stepping is
important! The only contact information I have for David Trotz is his
@crosswire address. If someone else has a more up-to-date contact for
him, please let me know. I just asked my registrar to transfer the
domain and it is (
Before we travel too far down the road of reinventing the wheel, there
are definitely bookmark formats floating around already which have
some amount of standardization. See the XML Bookmark Exchange
Language http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XBEL and that page's related
links to XOXO and OPML.
--Greg
No, you would have to export to a text file and then reimport.
--Greg
On Sun, Feb 28, 2010 at 5:44 AM, Wolfgang Schultz
wrote:
> Thank you,
>
> is zmod2mod possible with the tool?
>
> wolfgang
>
> Universal Bible API
> http://bibleworkplace.sourceforge.net/ubapidoc/
>
> http://www.zykloide.de
>
SWORD team,
For anyone interested in following along with the play-by-play of my
work on the CMake build system for SWORD, I have setup a preliminary
Wiki page: http://www.crosswire.org/wiki/CMake. Of course, it
requires a certain familiarity with Bazaar (just to get the sources)
and I try to giv
List,
I was looking through the results of the different examples that are
packaged with SWORD, primarily looking at threaded_search versus
search. The results are significantly different. Searching the AB
for "God", I get 0 results from threaded_search and 2958 from search.
Searching the ACV I
knowledge in
such things can follow along my development, which is on Launchpad in
the branches for libsword (bzr branch
lp:~greg-hellings/libsword/cmake-port). Currently the system builds
and installs the library and headers with detection for ZLib, ICU,
CLucene and cURL and allows you to
On Sun, Jan 3, 2010 at 11:25 AM, Peter von Kaehne wrote:
> David Haslam wrote:
>> Does anyone know what activities are being pursued by Bible translators and
>> publishers in the realm of transliteration?
>>
>> I just came across this online tool for transliteration of Korean script to
>> the Lati
Visual Studio 9 reporting in:
I don't have our SWORD version of ICU on-hand, nor is it particularly
important to those of us over here in the BibleTime community, since
we use Qt for our transliteration.
regex.c throws a number of warnings of the type:
..\..\..\src\utilfuns\regex.c(3877) : warnin
David,
Yes, it was the BI-NT that I was referring to. I found the direct
export to the Office 2003 XML format to be easy *enough* to work with.
If I had those two weeks back to work on it again, I'd probably write
it in JavaScript with jQuery and direct people to use Chrome, but
what's done is d
On Wed, Dec 23, 2009 at 10:43 AM, SonWon wrote:
> I'll be moving from WM to Android next year when my contract expires om my
> current phone.
>
> I see WM dieing. Microsoft has not properly maintained the platform and
> they have hidden calls in their DLLs which programmers are not allowed to
> u
Chris,
On Wed, Dec 16, 2009 at 12:41 PM, Chris Little wrote:
> I'm seeing quite different load times & speed. (I'm running 3.0.1 on an
> iPhone 3G with 16GB.)
>
> The first time I launched PocketSword, it did take quite a while to load,
> possibly on the order of 10s. After that, it takes about 3
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