singhals <
sing...@erols.com> wrote:
>Dennis wrote:
>> On Mon, 21 Nov 2011 12:17:16 -0500, singhals<
sing...@erols.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Dennis wrote:
>>>> On Mon, 21 Nov 2011 09:05:37 -0500, singhals<
sing...@erols.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> My working hypothesis is -- A person whose youngest child
>>>>> was born in 1822 is NOT LIVING. A person who married in
>>>>> 1793 is NOT LIVING.
>>>>>
>>>>> Automated hypothesis is -- A person with no death-date is
>>>>> LIVING.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> What is the "Living?" field set to for the person who was born in 1822?
>>>> It sounds like it is set to "Yes" in your database.
>>>>
>>>> I am pretty sure Legacy uses the "Living?" field to determine who is and
>>>> isn't living for the GEDCOM export. It doesn't use dates.
>>>>
>>>
>>> It's set to NO.
>>
>> I'm out of guesses.
>>
>
>I've found two things that /appear/ to work in the free version.
>
>1) insert UNK in the cemetery name field. This apparently
>deceases the person, regardless of his dates.
>
>2) insert UNK in the date field of the marriage record.
>
>By extrapolation (or is it interpolation?), it would make
>sense for UNK in a death-date field would also decease that
>person, but logic is little tweeting bird as someone famous
>once pointed out. I haven't cared to test-drive that one.
Rather than inserting "UNK", which is meaningless to the program, why
not insert "before Dec 2011" in the death date, which is obviously
true for anyone who is dead, and is a valid date. If you have
previous selected (using the search function) all those born or
married before certain dates, and then both mark them globally as not
LIVING and having a death date before the present, that should work
without being a huge kloodge.
The advanced set living function, if you had it, can be used in a
different way than was described by others. On the Tools menu, there
is an Advanced Set Living command, which basically automatically sets
everyone dead over a certain age. The Options/Customize menu, on the
Data Entry tab, also allows you to set a maximum age, as well as a
date where it will ask you if the person is dead. On the Data
Defaults Tab, you can specify whether the default is living, dead, or
whatever the last person was. Whether you have any of these features
on the basic version, I cannot say.
>What keeps nagging at me, though is -- since we can't
>definitively figure out what the issue is here, how do I
>know it hasn't happened before without my noticing? I
>frequently use LEGACY as a data-entry platform for stuff
>that I don't want in my real database(s), and export as a
>GED to forward to people who DO want it. I wonder what
>those people have actually gotten from those GEDs?
I tend to save a copy of any GEDCOM I give a copy of to someone or put
on line, so that I can resolve later questions of this sort. If you
have an old GEDCOM you sent, you can just load it back up and look at
it.
lojbab
---
Bob LeChevalier - artificial linguist; genealogist
loj...@lojban.org Lojban language
www.lojban.org