![]() I had the NASB but I seem to have lost the install code. I am evaluating both Xiphos and Bible Analyzer, yet I will still use the e-Sword on the HP-Laptop’s Win7 e-Sword install as I have paid form the NKJV, the NRSV, and the NRSVA. Then I can do like the BDB does as to vowel pointing at a later time. I want to be able to just a Flamig’s Number of say H39677 so that all the un-voweled yet Masoretic word vocabulary is fully in place. Strong’s is getting threadbare these days with its very limited vocabulary for its Hebrew and Greek. The other thing I would like to do is to find a way to modifiy the software coding in such a fashion that it will not be totally dependent upon the Strong’s number system, but the Flamig’s numbering system. For instance how to make a module for my FNCB Hebrew to English Consonant only Transliterations as an actual searchable Bible. Making new Bible package for both of these systems is something I will want to learn how to do. For more information on Bible Analyzer, including tutorials and instructive videos, go to I am learning the system better and now that I have figured out here to change the default fonts from Verdane to Calbri the cut and pasting into MS Word and Open Office is working smoother without so much editing necessary to make it presentable. We also create Bible study software for all readers, students, scholars, and translators of the Bible, and have a growing collection of over 200 texts in over 50 languages.īible Analyzer (5.2.1.07) Is developed to aid believers in their study, analysis, and application of the word of God. Its purpose is to create cross-platform open-source tools – covered by the GNU General Public License – that allow programmers and Bible societies to write new Bible software more quickly and easily. Users can easily create custom modules with the built in 'Module Creator.' There are scores of free and premium modules available from the Bible Analyzer website. The SWORD Project is the CrossWIre Bible Society’s free Bible software project. Bible Analyzer utilizes Bible, Commentary, Dictionary, Book and Image modules in the open-sourceSQLitedatabase format. It is open-source software, and available free-of-charge to all. ![]() Xiphos is a Bible study tool written for Linux, UNIX, and Windows using GTK, offering a rich and featureful environment for reading, study, and research using modules from The SWORD Project and elsewhere. I will still use e-Sword when I can find a source implemented in any other of the ‘free’ Bible study software systems. E-Swords Bible text is hard to detail as to its source texts. ![]() E-Sword is not doing a very good job of implementing their other tools either. I have found far too many typos and other errors in the implementations of e-Sword and its content base implementions. After much use of e-Sword, Bible Time, and Bible Analyzer, and Xiphos, I have decide to start really using the Xiphos 4.0.4 (gth2 webkit1) and Bible Analyzer 5.2.1.07 Bible Study Software rather than continuing to use e-Sword.
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