Using Frames - the parts of the window
Hints: how to get more text on screen at a time
Searching for a word or phrase:
Cross-referencing to the manuscript image files:
Your browser's window is divided into regions called
frames. All the frames can be re-sized: if you let the cursor hover exactly on
the border between two frames, it will change to a re-sizing cursor which you
can drag to reposition the border.
What the Frames do:
At the top of the browser's window is the Wordlist Navigator frame. Click on a letter to go quickly to the words beginning with that letter. If a letter of the alphabet is missing from the Navigator frame, that is because the original text contained no words beginning with that letter.
At the left of the browser window is the Wordlist frame, containing an alphabetic list of all words which are used in the source text. Clicking on a Headword in the Wordlist frame will make the Concordance frame scroll automatically to display all the instances of that Headword, together with a line of context for each.
The Concordance appears in the upper of the two large frames to the right of the Wordlist. If you have clicked on a Headword in the Wordlist frame, the Concordance frame will have scrolled automatically to that Headword. Beside each Headword is a count of the number of times it occurs, and below it are all the actual occurrences, each in a line of context. To the right of each context line are References. Clicking on a Reference will make the Text frame scroll automatically to display the relevant part of the source text.
The text from which the concordance was made appears in the Text frame, the lower of the two large frames to the right of the Wordlist. You can use the scroll bars to move around in the text. Clicking on a Reference in the Concordance frame will make the Text frame scroll automatically to display the relevant part of the source text.
A Web Concordance puts a lot of text onto the screen.
You may find yourself wishing you could see more text at once and had to scroll
around less.
There
are several ways to improve things:
The browser’s “Find” button is the
principle tool for searching for any character, word or phrase in the
Concordance. While the Wordlist navigator in the
top frame is a quick way of scrolling the Wordlist frame
and the Concordance frame to words beginning with the letter you want, anything
more complicated than casual browsing requires the “Find” button
Simple word search:
You
can use your browser's “Find” button to carry out a search in any
frame. The “Find” button (CTRL+F) will usually search in the
frame you last clicked in. Different browsers sometimes handle this
differently and it can sometimes be difficult to get the search to occur in the
right frame To let the system find a word for you in a single operation, first
load the entire Wordlist by clicking on “Show Undivided List”
(top of Wordlist frame) or by
clicking beside “Start New Search”
in the top (Navigator) frame. Either of these
“buttons” will always put the cursor, and subsequent search into
the Wordlist frame which is where most searches
begin.
This
is the most common and basic means of using any Concordance. You begin
with a word you wish to find. After getting the cursor into the
“Wordlist”, type “CTRL + F” to
bring up the search window, then type the word you want to find. If the
word is present, the wordlist will scroll to that word. Click on that
word and in the Concordance frame (top right), you
will see all instances of that word with a line of context. You can then
scroll through all instances of that word, clicking on the reference code at
the extreme right. This causes the lower right hand window to scroll to the
exact spot in the text where the line you’ve clicked on appears.
This allows you to see the full context.
Should
there be any doubt as to the accuracy of the text, you can view the original
manuscripts for each volume from the top "Navigator" frame. This will
load the Adobe pdf file for the particular volume.
Note, the Text and Workbook files are huge, 50-60 Mb and take minutes on a high
speed and hours on a dial-up to load. Once loaded into Adobe, you can save the
file on your local disk for future reference. This will load a picture of the
original manuscript so that you can check the accuracy for yourself.
All
the frames are “cut and pastable” so you
can copy anything you see into a word-processor or text editor. If you
wish to compare the text side by side with the manuscript pictures, it’s
easy if you copy the section in question into Wordpad,
then display the wordpad window next to the frame
showing the manuscript photocopy.
Sometimes
we need to search for two words that occur in the same context unit (a context
unit in this version is the search word plus the five words before and after
it) We may wish to look up “real
world” along with “world that is real” or any instance when
both words show up in the same context unit. The term “real
world” is a good example. We find that there are 2157 instances of
“world” and 857 instances of “real” in the Urtext if we search for either
word. That’s a long list to search through manually. In
either list we will, however, find all instances of “real
world.” So we can choose either word, and start our search in the Wordlist.
Let’s start with “real” since it will generate fewer
hits and see all instances pf that word in the Concordance frame (upper
right). We can then click in that frame and search just within the hits
on “real” to search for “world”.
So
do the simple word search in the Wordlist (as
above) for “real.” Move the cursor to the Concordance frame
and left click. Type Ctrl+F to bring up the
“Find” button and type “world” and then press
Return. The cursor will jump to the first instance of “real
world” and sequentially clicking “Find Next” in the Find
dialogue box will show you them all, one by one. When you find one you
want to check in the full text, just click to the right on the reference in the
reference box.
In
addition to the phrase “real world” of course, this method
will locate any instance in which both the words “real” and
“world” occur in the same sense unit.
In
the event you have an exact phrase, locate the cursor in the Text
frame by clicking there, and activate your
browser’s “Find Button” (usually Ctrl+f).
Begin typing the precise phrase. In
Firefox as
you type, the next exact match of what you have typed will be highlighted. Continue typing the search string until
you have found what you are looking for.
Note: the punctuation must be exact and if the
phrase spans a page break, you will not get a match across that break.
Each
page of the original manuscript is indicated in the Text and the Concordance references
(those little numbers on the right in the middle upper screen). The
number consists of a letter representing the Volume, T, for Text, M for Manual,
and so on, and an integer in brackets, for example S(11) means Song of
Prayer page 11, while U(4) means Use of terms, page 4.. You
can check against the original manuscript copy very easily using that
number. First load the relevant volume issuing the “View
Manuscript” buttons in the Navigator frame on the
top of your screen, and then use the PDF Viewer “GoTo”
function to “go to” that page number. You can then readily
compare the source with the copy, page by page. In Adobe Acrobat 7 the
easiest “GoTo” is in the middle of the
Acrobat window, at the very bottom. In Acrobat 5, its
still on the bottom but over to the left instead. In Acrobat 8, it’s moved to the
top. You will see a number, and on either side arrows. Clicking the
arrows goes ahead or back one page, clicking on the number highlights it.
You may then type another number and when you press Return, that page number
will be displayed.