PATHAGORAS™ Users' Guide, Part 5

Glossaries
Comments would
be greatly appreciated to
improve the usefulness of the text below and of the program.
Section
C.
'Simple List' Glossaries
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The 2-minute tutorial
Creating the Simple List Glossary
- Type short snippets of text (a word, or a sentence)
no more than 70 characters in length. (Each term must be on a separate
line.)
- Save the document out to any location. You may give
the document any name, but the name must include the word "glossary"
(not case sensitive).
Shelving the Simple List Glossary to a
Library
- With the document still open, click the DocAssembly
icon.
- Click on <Settings> in the resulting Libraries
& Books screen.
- Click on a the line in the Libraries Setting Screen
where you want to shelve the book.
- Choose the <AutoSet> button. That button places
the underlying glossary on the selected shelf. Provide a nickname when
prompted.
Using your Simple List Glossary
- Click the DocAssembly icon to display the Books &
Libraries screen.
- Double click next the the name of the glossary.
- Select one, several or all of the terms. Press
<Next>. You're done.
alternative method
- Click the DocAssembly icon to display the Books &
Libraries screen.
- Click the name of the simple list glossary and then
click the 'Create DropDown List' option from the center box. Click
<Next>. This transfers each item in the glossary into a
selectable drop down list that will appear in the tool bar area of the
screen.
- Place the cursor at the insertion point. Click the
desired item from the dropdown list. Terms can be inserted into your
document quite rapidly using this technique.
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PATHAGORAS recognize two 'types' of
glossaries. Each type
serves
different needs. Both can exist simultaneously on a computer, but the
glossary types cannot be mixed within the same glossary.
'Bookmarked'
glossaries.
Bookmarked glossaries are the most common of the glossary types. Here,
the desired text is
surrounded
by Word bookmarks and the clause is given a shorthand name. Calling up
an entry
in
a bookmarked glossary is akin to calling a document from a folder --
just
select its name. The only real difference between a bookmarked glossary
and a folder is that, with the former, all of the clauses
exist
within a single document. Part 5b of this
guide discusses Bookmarked Glossaries in great detail.
'Simple list' glossaries.
These
are just collections of single lines of text. Each line is a
separate glossary term. If selected in the Pathagoras CheckSheet, the
text that displays
in the CheckSheet is the actual text that will be inserted into the
document.
Figures
10 and 11 in Part 4b of this Guide show how the names of
'bookmarked'
glossary terms display
in Pathagoras' Checkbox screen. Figure 15 immediately below shows a
CheckBox screen
of
a 'simple-list' glossary. Note that the look, feel and operation of the
CheckBox
screens are identical regardless of the source of clauses. Note that
the
tag-along box underneath the 'Now Viewing:' box (it's found at the
lower
right hand portion of the CheckBox screen) reflects the source-type:
"Directory,"
"Glossary" (if glossary clauses are bookmarked) and "Direct Text" (if a
'simple
list 'glossary is the source) are the 3 possible values.
The
following is an example of text assembly from a 'simple list'
glossary.
Picture Abraham Lincoln as he was composing his most famous speech on
the way to Gettysburg. Earlier, he had collected and saved a
simple list of nice sounding speechy
things. He saved them out into a glossary called “Presidential Sounding
Speeches Glossary.” Using <DocAssem>, he linked the
glossary as
a book in one of his document assembly libraries and fired up the
appropriate
screen. Now he can pick and choose the clauses he really
wants.
The choice of available clauses are all displayed in an easy to read
layout.
This is what Abe's screen looked like:
Figure 15.
Abraham
Lincoln's completed checkbox choices preceding his famous speech
Abe then
checked off the clauses he wanted, and clicked <Assemble>
and then <Next> in the upper right corner. Voila, his
complete speech appeared like
this.
Four score and seven
years
ago, our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation,
conceived
in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created
equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that
nation or any
nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure.
Not bad,
huh? "But, how," you ask, "did the clauses get into a computer
file in the first place?"' If Abe had been using a competitive
product, he might have had to input them in a very complex fashion
involving proprietary software and coding. With PATHAGORAS,
he simply typed lines of variable text onto a regular work screen with an extra return
separating every third line to form groupings (optional). He then saved
the document as a standard text in the way he always had, with the only
exception being that the name that
included the word "glossary." Using the <Setting> screen in the PATHAGORAS' Document Assembly module, he quickly made
this
glossary a part of the document assembly system. Its quick. Its
easy.
Here's are the simple step.
Getting Started
| Definition:
"Clause" Typically, a clause is the smallest component of a
document (other than a
single letter) that contributes significantly to the documents content.
Typically,
it is a sentence or a paragraph, but it can be (contrary to the
dictionary
definition) many paragraphs, many pages, pictures, charts, combinations
of
pictures and words, or a single letter . . . in other words,
anything. |
CREATING A SIMPLE LIST
GLOSSARY:
Every
document
is a potential glossary. Every clause within any document is a
potential
glossary clause. The only requirement for a document to be a glossary
is
that it must have the word 'glossary' somewhere in its name. (The case
is
not critical, it could be 'Glossary' or 'GLOSSARY' or my favorite,
"glossary.')
If
your clauses are short and you want to just 'click in' simple text into
your
document, create a 'simple-list' glossary of the desired phrases,
clauses
or short sentences. Make sure that each clause ends with a carriage
return
(<Enter>). To add more simple-list options, add more
lines.
- If you want to display the
simple list
in alphabetical order, you can (a) take care to keep the source list
alphabetized, or (b) don't worry about the order or the source list,
and let PATHAGORAS take care of sorting
the list. Here is how the
latter happens: When you first activate a glossary, PATHAGORAS will ask you for certain settings to
control
the sorting of its contents. Choose <Yes> if you
want
Pathagoras to sort the list, <No> if you want to display
the
contents in the precise order typed in the source document.
Major category breaks in
unsorted
lists can be noted by a second carriage return. (See figure 13.)
Save the
document in the
a proper folder (using SaveSmart, of course). Just make sure the name
of
the
document includes "glossary" (not case sensitive). Before
clearing
the document from the screen, you should also attach it to a Document
Assembly
library.
Just follow the steps outlined below in Part 4g of this Guide called "Shelving a Book in a Library."
ADDING
TERMS
TO THE SIMPLE LIST GLOSSARY:
Add
new terms to a 'simple list' glossary, could not be easier. Just type
more
lines of text. Pathagoras reads each block of text separated by a
paragraph
mark as a separate term. If you want to separate 'categories' of text,
just add a blank line.
A
PRACTICAL SIMPLE LIST GLOSSARY:
Imagine
this you are a school psychologist and want to make typing test names a
bit easier. You also want to be able to bring in a quantity of test
names into you document at one time. Your reasons for wanting these
tests in a glossary so are obvious--these things are hard to type.
Prepare a document such as the following:
Intelligence:
Stanford-Binet
Intelligence Scale
Wechsler
Intelligence Scale for Children - III
Slosson
Intelligence Test - R
Test
of Nonverbal Intelligence Test - 2
Leiter
International Performance Scale
Visual
Motor/Perception:
Beery
Developmental Test of Visual Motor Integration
Bender
Visual Motor Gestalt Test
Detroit Test of
Learning Ability - 2
Comprehensive Test
of Visual Functioning
Academic:
Wechsler
Individual Achievement Test
Woodcock-Johnson
Scales of Achievement - R
Wide
Range Achievement Test - R
Woodcock Reading
Mastery Test - R
Key
Math Test - R
Emotional/Behavioral:
Behavior
Assessment System for Children
Conner's Behavior
Rating Scales
Reynolds Child
Depression Scale
Adaptive
Behavior:
Adaptive
Behavior Inventory
Vineland
Adaptive Behavior Scales |
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The above document is easily be converted into a functional glossary.
Merely save it as a regular document. It is after all a regular
document. The 'where' is up to you. Pathagoras doesn't care, so put it
where it makes sense to you. Just make sure that the word "glossary"
appears at the end of the document's name. (E.g., "TestList Glossary").
Before closing the document (but after naming
it), shelve it to the current library. Follow the simple steps
described in Part 4g. (While you can
display that page, and work from pictorial examples provided on that
page, I summarize those steps here: (1) With the document still on the
screen, press the DocAssembly icon. (2) Click on an option button next
to an empty line.(3) Press the QuickSet button that will appear
at the right side of the screen. (4) Choose option #1 from the next
screen ("The book to be being shelved is a Glossary") and,(5)
from the screen after that, choose option #2 ("Shelve the current
document as the book"). Leave the 'prefix' question blank.
(6) Once the book has been shelved, close the document. That's it.)
Then, as you write your psychological reports and want to list the
tests given to a particular individual, just click the DocAssembly
icon, selecting the book and check off the desired items.
Note: Each line must be
noted by a true 'paragraph marker' (a hard return, indicated by the
symbol that looks like a backwards "P", not a soft one, which is
like a left pointing broken arrow).
Note:
The
carriage returns between major groups is not mandatory, but is helpful
in the visual display.
Note: The very first time
you attempt to use a newly created simple text glossary, Pathagoras
will confirm that it is intended to be a simple text glossary, and will
ask you if you want Pathagoras to display it in alphabetical order or
as shown. In the above example, an alphabetical order display
would ruin the effect, so be sure to choose, "Do Not Sort
Alphabetically"
Part 5a discusses Glossaries in general.
Part
5b of this
Users Guide discusses Bookmarked
glossaries in greater detail.
Part
5d provides
detailed guidance
regarding the Glossary Functions
screen.
Part
5e teaches how to "Bulk Add" clauses into a glossary.
Part 5f Creating and
maintaining a "General" glossary.
View Introduction (Part 1).
View
Part 2 of Users' Guide (PathSmart module)
View
Part 3 of Users' Guide (SaveSmart module).
Return
to Part 4 of Users' Guide (Document Assembly module)
View
Part 6 of Users' Guide (Database Linking module)
Continue
with Part 7 of Users' Guide (Other Features).
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