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- ENTERING DATA
-
- Unlike many other genealogical programs, Family Tree Journal
- data is structured around individuals rather than family
- group records.
-
- In its most refined form, genealogy is simply the study of
- human biology. Therefore, the only required information to
- produce a complete family tree is that each individual must
- have one mother and one father. With this information alone
- you may traverse through an entire family. Family groups are
- produced dynamically by locating and grouping children
- through parental linkages. The sex of the individual is im-
- plied when a person is recorded as a father or mother which
- is loosely translated as husband or wife in some of the
- printouts. (The marital status of parents is a cultural
- linkage that sometimes tends to confuse computers!)
-
- Family Tree Journal allows you to add, delete or modify the
- information for individual family members without regard to
- the impact that those changes may have on a particular
- family group.
-
- You will always start data entry from the individual infor-
- mation screen. Data fields may display default data. If the
- default is your desired response, then you can simply type
- an <ENTER> without over-typing the default. The <INSERT> key
- will toggle between normal and insert mode. (The cursor is
- full size in normal mode and half size in insert mode). The
- left and right <ARROW> keys move between fields in normal
- mode and move between characters within a field in insert
- mode. The <HOME> and <END> keys move between the beginning
- and the end of the line in insert mode and between the
- beginning and end of the screen in normal mode. The <ESC>
- key will return you to the previous menu or screen.
-
- Names, dates and places are critical when compiling
- genealogical information. Because computers require more
- stringent rules than people when interpreting information, I
- had to apply some restrictions to the way data must be
- entered. I did, however, try to make the rules conform more
- to normal human usage and force the computer to read our
- language rather than the other way around.
-
- NAMES - You should try to include full middle names and
- titles such as Jr., II, 3rd, etc. Married women should be
- listed using their maiden names. If you do not know their
- maiden name, enclose their married name in parenthesis i.e.
- Mary (Smith). Any other names that you are unsure of, such
- as nicknames, stage or professional names, that are not the
- names that appear on birth, death, etc. certificates, should
- also be enclosed in parenthesis. The parenthesis will flag
- the name as incorrect for the audit feature of the program.
-
- You should enter names in their natural order, that is:
- first name-middle name-last name. If a surname has more than
- one word, the name may not be sorted as you would expect
- when it appears in the book. As an example, the name
- "Wernher von Braun" would appear in the sorted lists as
- "Braun, Wernher von". Titles (Jr., II, 3rd, etc.,) should be
- preceded by a comma and a space, i.e. "John Smith, Jr." This
- will appear as "Smith, John, Jr." when sorted by the
- program. (If you don't include the comma, the name would
- appear as "Jr., John Smith"). (Only one title per name
- please - John Smith, Jr., M.D. won't work, and I doubt that
- his degrees would appear on his birth certificate anyway!)
-
- Names are limited to a total of 30 characters. This should
- be enough for most names. If anyone has a longer name, you
- should use abbreviations where possible, (Wm. instead of
- William for example) and enter the full name as a note in
- their references.
-
- If you type a number in the NAME prompt (instead of a name),
- the name that is assigned to the number will appear in the
- blank. This can help to prevent spelling errors and also
- makes data entry easier especially for long names.
-
- When you enter a new name, the bell will sound and a flash-
- ing name and number will appear for that person. This indi-
- cates the number that will be assigned to the person. A
- typing mistake can also cause this to occur. If you do not
- wish to add this name to the name list, the <ESC> key may be
- used to cancel the save.
-
- A quick name search may be made by typing a question mark
- <?> as the FIRST character in any name prompt followed by a
- name or partial name. Either upper or lower case letters may
- be used for the name, they will match either way. The first
- name that matches the name or partial name that you entered
- will appear in the prompt. If there is no match, the prompt
- will turn blank.
-
- PLACES - Try to list the city or county where birth, death,
- and/or marriage occurred or the name of the church, hospital
- etc. Many records are kept in these places that could
- provide additional information. Except for the size of the
- field, there are no other restrictions on places.
-
- DATES - Dates should be as complete as possible. If you only
- know the approximate date, use the abbreviation 'c.' for
- circa, followed by the year i.e. c. 1850. You may also use
- the abbreviations ABT, BEF and AFT for ABouT, BEFore and
- AFTer if you wish.
-
- Dates may be entered in any of the following ways:
-
- mm-dd-yyyy
- dd/mm/yyyy (If non-USA format in setup)
- yyyy
- c. yyyy
- ABT yyyy
- AFT yyyy
- BEF yyyy
- dd MMM yyyy
- MMM dd yyyy
-
- where 'mm' is the month number (1-12), MMM is the first
- three characters of the name of the month (JAN-DEC), 'dd'
- is the day number (1-31) and 'yyyy' is the full year number
- (note: don't assume 19--). The month and day may be one or
- two digits. The '-' and '/' in the example may be any single
- character except a digit. If you know only part of the date,
- you should put a '?' in the missing field, i.e. 5/?/1887.
- Dates must be in one of these formats in order to calculate
- life-spans correctly.
-
- FUNCTION KEYS
-
- F1 HELP - Displays help information.
-
- F2 NAMES - Display and edit your name list.
-
- F3 SEARCH - Search all data files for information.
-
- F4 BIBLIO - You may edit the Bibliography information from
- this screen using the F4 key.
-
- F5 and F6 MOTHER and FATHER - Changes the screen to display
- the genealogical information for this person's mother or
- father.
-
- F7 TREE - Shows a family tree for this individual that in-
- cludes mother, father, spouses, children and siblings. This
- function may also be used as a quick way to link individuals
- into family groups.
-
- F8 SAVE - Saves the genealogical information for this
- screen.
-
- F9 BIO - Quick way to add biographical information.
-
- F10 REF - Quick way to enter references to genealogical in-
- formation entries.
-
- NOTE: F9 and F10 will not work when the Genealogical infor-
- mation screen is blank.
- *******
-