Difference between revisions of "Talk:OSIS pre-verse titles"

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(Acknowledgement)
 
(The roles of subType="x-preverse" and canonical="true" in title elements?: new section)
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== Acknowledgement ==
 
== Acknowledgement ==
 
The information was kindly supplied by DM Smith. [[User:David Haslam|David Haslam]] 08:17, 21 October 2011 (MDT)
 
The information was kindly supplied by DM Smith. [[User:David Haslam|David Haslam]] 08:17, 21 October 2011 (MDT)
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== The roles of subType="x-preverse"  and canonical="true" in title elements? ==
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It would seem that the SWORD engine (though not JSword) not only uses the title attribute <tt>subType="x-preverse"</tt> to determine title ''position'', but also to determine whether or not the title is ''displayed'' when the headings are ''hidden'' by the front-end settings for modules with GlobalOptionFilter=OSISHeadings. This is made more complicated by its relationship with the attribute <tt>canonical="true"</tt>, which rightly ''overrides'' the hiding of headings in JSword, but not in SWORD. A further complication is when the same verse has more than one preverse title. Even JSword falls over at this point. I do not understand the reasoning behind this behaviour. [[User:David Haslam|David Haslam]] 09:44, 26 December 2011 (MST)

Revision as of 16:44, 26 December 2011

Acknowledgement

The information was kindly supplied by DM Smith. David Haslam 08:17, 21 October 2011 (MDT)

The roles of subType="x-preverse" and canonical="true" in title elements?

It would seem that the SWORD engine (though not JSword) not only uses the title attribute subType="x-preverse" to determine title position, but also to determine whether or not the title is displayed when the headings are hidden by the front-end settings for modules with GlobalOptionFilter=OSISHeadings. This is made more complicated by its relationship with the attribute canonical="true", which rightly overrides the hiding of headings in JSword, but not in SWORD. A further complication is when the same verse has more than one preverse title. Even JSword falls over at this point. I do not understand the reasoning behind this behaviour. David Haslam 09:44, 26 December 2011 (MST)