![]() ![]() Thanks everyone for the excellent feedback! A few additional questions:ġ. Using the outliner features there provides some ability to organize and Find is very handy. I've always done it an older way and simply recorded my notes in Word processor documents. There is no way to organize or collect notes in the limited notes features in Bible software. Though they all provide for notes, you really need something dedicated to notes if you want digital research notes for a diss. I'd be very hesitant to commit my notes to any Bible software program. given the quantity of documentation expected in a diss.Īs for notes, you'll have to listen to others. Keeping footnotes on the right page is always a problem and I'd be surprised if any word processor is always perfect in that regard, esp. It's also the most robust in terms of features, even if you don't need all the fancier ones for a dissertation. Once you get up in the 400 (?) page range, it gets a bit slower and wants to repaginate more often than necessary (but you can cancel that with Esc), but I've had up to 1,200 pages of technical English/Unicode Greek in a single document w/o problems. If you need only English or English and Greek, then Word does just fine, even a full-length diss. Pages, as you note, is not ready for a dissertation-sized project. I've not used Nisus, but I've heard it does OK in that area. By all means don't use Word if it includes any R-to-L text (Hebrew or any other Semitic language). It's perhaps the best for anything with Hebrew. If it is OT or NT that includes Hebrew, R-to-L text, then I'd look at Mellel.
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