Not exactly sure what you mean by filtering dictionary keys. If you mean what I
mean then it can filter.
Actually Eloquent is also still under active development. My time is only very
limited at the moment so I can only do smaller things.
Manfred
Sent from my iPhone
Am 15.08.2012 um 00:55 sch
I've attached two files, iu.conf and iu-utf8.conf for inclusion in
locales.d. Please feel free to add them as appropriate. I would
appreciate a note once you make a decision one way or the other so I
can adjust my expectations accordingly.
~A
iu-utf8.conf
Description: Binary data
iu.conf
Des
On Aug 14, 2012 10:28 PM, "DM Smith" wrote:
>
> Not quite native. Like BibleDesktop, it doesn't quite look like a Mac
application. Much of the look and feel problems that BD has so does BT.
>
> I'm glad I have a fast mac. For whatever reason, it is slower than I
would have expected for a C++ appli
Not quite native. Like BibleDesktop, it doesn't quite look like a Mac
application. Much of the look and feel problems that BD has so does BT.
I'm glad I have a fast mac. For whatever reason, it is slower than I would have
expected for a C++ application.
Criticism aside, it seems quite stable an
It's a native mac client, not a web GUI, so probably slightly off-topic,
but Don't forget the *beta* version of Bibletime-Mac that has performed
flawlessly(*) for me for the last 8 months.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/bibletime/files/BibleTime%202/
F
There's one under development: STEP by Tyndale House. See:
http://www.crosswire.org/~chrisburrell/
Don't know how current it is. Certainly has a ways to go.
The other choices for Mac are Bible Desktop, AlKitab, and FireBible (a plugin
for FireFox).
Not sure what you mean by filter keys in larg
Hi,
is there any modern web ui available to work with Sword modules?
I'm on mac now and all Eloquent has shortcomings (can't filter the keys in
large dictionaries, for example) and does not seem to be under active
development any more.
A web fronted would be ideal for me as I could use it on M
On 08/13/2012 11:02 PM, Chris Little wrote:
> On 08/13/2012 11:09 PM, David Haslam wrote:
>> The relevant paragraph is,
>>
>> "In USFM, character level markup can be nested (embedded) within a paragraph
>> element, or another character element, but (depending on the way in which
>> the markers are
On 08/13/2012 11:09 PM, David Haslam wrote:
The relevant paragraph is,
"In USFM, character level markup can be nested (embedded) within a paragraph
element, or another character element, but (depending on the way in which
the markers are written) does not necessarily cancel out the previous
mark