Yes ! It's DBD, but the folder named dbd this why I did the mistake.
Thanks.
Le 12/08/2017 à 12:02, DM Smith a écrit :
> Try DBD not dbd. I think it is case sensitive. Using the [NAME] at the top of
> the conf.
>
> DM
>
>> On Aug 12, 2017, at 6:58 AM, Cyrille wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> Le 12/08/2017 à 1
Try DBD not dbd. I think it is case sensitive. Using the [NAME] at the top of
the conf.
DM
> On Aug 12, 2017, at 6:58 AM, Cyrille wrote:
>
>
>
> Le 12/08/2017 à 11:03, David Haslam a écrit :
>> Sword utilities generally assume the current directory is the sword path.
> I use now "mod2imp dbd
Le 12/08/2017 à 11:03, David Haslam a écrit :
> Sword utilities generally assume the current directory is the sword path.
I use now "mod2imp dbd" no result, but dbd is in
/usr/share/sword/modules... In the good place!! Need I the administrator
rights to execute mod2imp? I tested with a bible modu
Sword utilities generally assume the current directory is the sword path.
(I have a symbolic link to the folder where the utils are stored in my PC.)
The command line argument for mod2imp is just the module name
(case-sensitive).
You don't need to use the option -r OSIS, as you wish to see the c
You wrote BDB, but I think you want to write DBD?
Ok, I tested mod2osis without success.
Now with mod2imp if I run:
mod2imp .sword/modules/lexdict/zld/devotionals/dbd/dbd.ztx -r OSIS
It gives me the return:
mod2imp: Couldn't find module:
.sword/modules/lexdict/zld/devotionals/dbd/dbd.ztx
I use ..
You'd probably gain enough knowledge by installing BDB and running *mod2imp*
on it with the output directed to a file.
David
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