Is there any reason a text field can't be used in the sql? When I change the second statement to be the actual date format, the map updates as expected. Because of UTC/date conversions the date is a day off in AGOL hence the use of text. However, I would also like the second clause to be select multiple which is possible with text, but not date fields.

The Bible has to be encoded as an XML file that shows where the books, chapters, and verses begin and end. We support three different XML formats. Two are specific to OpenSong, so I recommend that new Bible files should be in the third format, Zefania 2005 (there's a Zefania 2014 as well, but I have not done any work on support for that and it is a significant change from Zefania 2005).


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At the moment we were given scriptures for the church services and we copy & paste it into one of the OpenSong facilities for presentation. And sometimes our media tech copy the incorrect chapter/verses. So we quickly revert to the OpenSong English versions. Yea, just a side note.

XML is a markup language. In other words, the text has instructions added around it that describe how the text is organized. Here is an example of the first few verses of Genesis 1 from the New American Standard Bible. The information in between the "" angle brackets are the markup.

This shows the very minimum information needed by OpenSong. Each book has an assigned number (for the Protestant Bibles, sequential numbering from 1-66) and a name (you provide, since it is in the Bible's language), each chapter has a number, and each verse has a number. The file is a standard text file (that is, something that Notepad can read, not .docx). The colors shown here are added by the discussion forum software for clarity; they are not part of an XML file.

So, what we need to determine is how we can get from what you have now to this. In your current file, how do you indicate the books/chapters/verses? Is there something that [i]every[/i] book has? Every chapter? Every verse? How do you know where one verse ends? If the file has a predictable pattern, we can find a way to transform it into Zefania format so you do not have to add markup tags to all 31,102 verses.

I think this can be automated, but only to a certain extent. The verse format looks like it is regular, with a paragraph starting with a number or [i]start-end[/i] followed by a space. I don't see enough contextual clues to identify the start of a chapter. It could be inferred by the verse number resetting to 1, though, and we can assume that chapters number sequentially from 1 to the last with no breaks.

Converting from SQLite to a format that OpenSong recognizes (I suggest Zefania 2005 XML) should be a fairly straightforward process. My guess is that your SQLite DB is set up with fields for book, chapter, verse, and verse text, or something similar to that.

This is basically a flat structure since every verse also has an element that indicates the book and chapter that it is from as well as the verse number and text. What you need to get it into is the hierarchical structure used by Zefania that shows the relationship between book, chapter, and verse in a slightly different way:

Speech Generation on Mac uses a different underlying speech synthesis engine than Windows. Both engines are provided by the respective operating system and are not cross-platform compatible. As such, the XML tags that Windows supports in its engine are not compatible on Mac, and vice versa for the tag format that Mac supports.

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Sib. 7.1: Best way to enter lyrics?

 Posted by Organerito - 24 Jan 03:35PM (edited 24 Jan 05:36PM) Hide picture Hi,


I do a lot of choir music. It would be great to know your tips to make things easier and faster. Is there something like Finale's "click assignment"? 


What's the best way to enter lyrics? 


-- 

Sibelius 7.1

Finale 2011

M-Audio keyStudio

Windows 7 64bit Back to top | Allthreads Re: Sib. 7.1: Best way to enter lyrics?

 Posted by John Murdoch - 24 Jan 06:46PM Hide picture Hi!


I do choir music too. 


For printed music:

Select the first note that will be sung. Type CTRL+L -- you'll see the cursor in position to enter text.


If you type a space, or a hyphen, you will advance the cursor to the next note. If you want to embed a space (e.g. "1. All") or a hyphen, just hold down the CTRL key as you type--Sibelius will not advance to the next note.


Note that the lyrics are considered to be attached to the notes in the stave (and the voice) you initially selected. If you copy those notes and paste them somewhere else, the lyrics will go along too (unless you have filtered your selection). Similarly, if you delete the notes (even if you don't delete the staff) the lyrics will be deleted as well.


When you're ready to type your second verse, select your starting note (again) and type CTRL+ALT+L. The cursor will display beneath Verse 1, and any text you enter will be styled as Lyrics 2. 


If you will be entering additional verses there are not default shortcuts for them--just select the starting note, choose the Text tab, and drop down the list of lyrics by clicking on the little down arrow beneath the Lyrics icon. 


Sibelius ships with predefined styles for Lyrics 1 through Lyrics 5. I have found that I use more styles than that, and have defined Lyrics 6 through Lyrics 8. 


Lyrics are a specially-defined type of text--so you can filter for lyrics, and even filter for specific verses. Sib 7 is markedly faster for working with hymn verses because of how much easier it is to use Advanced Search to select a particular verse.


One more tip: if you are doing anything to an entire verse, change your view to Panorama view. You can then double-click on the stave to which the lyrics are attached, and the entire stave--from the first bar to the last--will be selected. You can then filter for all lyrics, or for a specific verse (using Advanced Search). Much faster than trying to handle text in Page View.


-- 

Sibelius 2 - 7.0.3 | Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit 

HP dv7 notebook, Intel i5 quad CPU, 8 GB RAM

Kontakt Player 4 | GPO 4 | Hauptwerk 4 Back to top | Allthreads Re: Sib. 7.1: Best way to enter lyrics?

 Posted by James Gilbert - 25 Jan 12:52AM Hide picture I'll add another tip if you already have your lyrics entered in some other program (like a text editor or word processor). Copy the lyrics from the other program. Choose which lyrics you want (verse 1, above staff or whatever). Then paste note by note. If you need to skip a note, press the space bar before pasting. Doing it this way will automatically break syllables at the correct point.


There is also an option to import lyrics from a text file. I believe you can only have one verse per text file. Just be sure that if you have multiple notes for one syllable, that you've put a slur on them. Back to top | Allthreads Re: Sib. 7.1: Best way to enter lyrics?

 Posted by Organerito - 25 Jan 02:23AM Hide picture Thanks John!

Thanks James!


I will use your tips. I like the the pasting and hyphenating.


Your tips will help me a lot.

-- 

Sibelius 7

Finale 2011

M-Audio keyStudio

Windows 7 64bit Back to top | Allthreads 2351a5e196

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