On Sun, Mar 1, 2009 at 1:39 PM, Peter von Kaehne <ref...@gmx.net> wrote: > I have worked now several hours on the wiki comparison page.
... > d) Bookmarks/tags/lists - all these appear essentially similar as a > concept, but with some drastic differences in terms of access, usability > and sub features. No application has a complete superset of all others > in terms of subfeatures in this field. As a concept, bookmarks appear to > me a version of lexicon (or possibly a structured GenBook)_- at least > this is how many frontends have gone (some like BibleSword even bring a > lexicon like preloaded bookmark list)- but none actually have gone the > whole hog and have created a user editable LexDict module with their > book marks. Take this as a hint :-) I have had this on my todo list for at least half a year, because it is much closer to optimal for a large subset of the tasks I am looking at. If you look at how Firefox implements bookmarks, they are stored as an HTML file, which is very similar. A few comments: 1. Depending on how you choose to do it, this could be very fragile if the user edits the Genbook (I of course have ways around this in mind, but they are somewht vague at present). 2. LexDict is a very bad idea because it will require topics to be listed in lexicographical order, whereas IMHO it should be stored in the order the user chooses to order them (maybe they have some special reason for ordering them that way?), though certainly ordering it alphabetically could be handy in some circumstances, and searchability is important. Also, previous discussions on sword-devel suggested a preference for hierarchical verse lists (which I don't mind supporting, but don't think incredibly useful), and that also maps better to a GenBook. Jon _______________________________________________ sword-devel mailing list: sword-devel@crosswire.org http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel Instructions to unsubscribe/change your settings at above page