Here it is: http://www.biblesupp...us-vs-paultopx/
Nice to know it's still here somewhere, but how's anyone going to find it? I did a Search on "samdahl" and it found nothing. Did I do something wrong to make it inaccessible?
There have been 19 items by dysert (Search limited from 24-May 23)
Posted by dysert on 14 April 2015 - 10:29 AM in e-Sword Questions & Answers
Here it is: http://www.biblesupp...us-vs-paultopx/
Nice to know it's still here somewhere, but how's anyone going to find it? I did a Search on "samdahl" and it found nothing. Did I do something wrong to make it inaccessible?
Posted by dysert on 14 April 2015 - 10:24 AM in New e-Sword Downloads
File Name: Samdahl, Don - Jesus vs. Paul.topx
File Submitter: dysert
File Submitted: 14 Apr 2015
File Category: Reference Books (topx)
Author: Don SamdahlThis short paper compares and contrasts Jesus' teachings with Paul's teachings on the following areas:
Posted by dysert on 14 April 2015 - 10:20 AM in e-Sword Questions & Answers
Can someone help? This morning I uploaded a new e-Sword module called "Samdahl, Don - Jesus vs. Paul.topx". I can't find it anywhere. It's like the module just disappeared. Is it here somewhere and I just don't know how to find it, or should I upload it again? Thanks.
Posted by dysert on 07 January 2015 - 02:37 PM in Modules In Progress
Finished and uploaded.
Posted by dysert on 03 January 2015 - 10:27 AM in New e-Sword Downloads
File Name: Barrett, George - The temptation of Christ
File Submitter: dysert
File Submitted: 03 Jan 2015
File Category: Reference Books (topx)
Author: George BarrettCommentary on Christ's three temptations in the Wilderness plus several chapters about temptation in general.
Posted by dysert on 14 December 2014 - 06:44 AM in e-Sword Questions & Answers
If the dctx module is protected like the Official modules of e-Sword or made by Rick Meyers then is there no legal way to open it.
For all the other dctx modules ToolTip "module tab" dictionary menu read dictionary file
Look for \cf and \i and \b
And save if latter as a RTF file
Got it! Thanks. It never even occurred to me to look at that menu item to open a file. Thanks!
Posted by dysert on 14 December 2014 - 05:45 AM in e-Sword Questions & Answers
http://www.biblesupp...ooltip-tool-nt/
hi see this tool to read/ open a module that is not copyrighted
thanks
Thanks, but I have ToolTip and make modules from it. What I'm looking for is something to go the other way, i.e., can open, say, a .dctx file, and allow me to edit the module and/or convert it back to .rtf. Does such a thing exist? (The ToolTip tool does not open the .dctx module I recently downloaded.)
Posted by dysert on 13 December 2014 - 06:10 AM in e-Sword Questions & Answers
Sometimes I come across a module that needs some touch-up (e.g., there are still rtf codes visible in the module). Is it possible to revert the module back to .rtf so that I could use the ToolTip tool to clean it up?
Posted by dysert on 10 December 2014 - 01:53 PM in Modules In Progress
Working...
Posted by dysert on 10 December 2014 - 06:44 AM in Module Requests
Ok. I'm awake now and I think I know what's going on. I have started on a .topx module but am getting an error when trying to save it. (Is there a topic for module makers and/or to report errors when running the ToolTip Tool?) The error is:
Posted by dysert on 10 December 2014 - 02:19 AM in Module Requests
There are a few "tricks". Larry is right, the bottom line is you have to OCR the text. And then proof that text against the original. The "trick" is the tools you use. Even with good tools, it's time consuming. With bad tools, it's unmanageable long term.
For the text I digitized, I bought the books myself and scanned them to get a higher resolution scan. Archive.org scans are ok for reading, but for digitizing text, you want a higher resolution scan IF the text is small (like with a commentary--not so much a 75 page devotional book with large print). A PDF scan is just a digital picture of each page. The better picture you take (high res scan) the easier the text will be to interpret.
The text interpretation is best done, in my experience, with Abby Finereader Pro. It's the most efficient with the least errors. I like how you can go page by page in a split screen mode, with the original PDF page on the left side and the digitized text on the right side. Words that Abby is uncertain of, or words that don't match a spell check are highlighted for your review. You can click a word in the digitized half of the screen, and that word's location is highlighted on the PDF side of the screen.
That's the trick: 1) scan resolution and 2) decent OCR software. You can do it without either, it's just a question of time--how much time it's going to take.
But isn't the bottom line that you end up re-typing the whole book into a word processing program? If you're re-typing everything to get an electronic copy, then the quality of your OCR software doesn't seem all that important to me. Or are you saying that the OCR image becomes the e-Sword module? I'm obviously missing some fundamental point.
Posted by dysert on 09 December 2014 - 01:22 PM in Module Requests
So I've been looking over several Raw data files. For almost all of them (that I've looked at) it seems they are little more than a .jpg and an OCRd .pdf file. Surely we don't re-key the .pdf file in order to make a module?! What's the trick?
Posted by dysert on 08 December 2014 - 06:30 AM in Module Requests
Ok. Maybe I'm all wet, but I was kinda thinking along these lines:
Well, right now I'm still at Step 1. Are all the "waiting" modules at the link that Katoog provided?
Posted by dysert on 08 December 2014 - 04:25 AM in Module Requests
Is there a body of material "out there" that is waiting for someone to make e-Sword modules for? I'm willing to make modules if that need exists.
Posted by dysert on 26 November 2014 - 07:09 AM in e-Sword Questions & Answers
http://www.biblesupp...ibrary-manager/
This is the app for doing what you want. But eSword does not order things in the way you might expect It has A at bottom left and proceeds up as a card index would do it. I tend to look top left and go down, viewing the tabs as if they were on a sheet of paper.
Jon
That's a cool utility and provides the capability of reordering without going out to Windows to do it. Nicely done.