iamken 0 Report post Posted August 30, 2010 I am having trouble to make a birth tag sentence come out with some clarity, with my inability to grasp the English language properly. I have many births that I know only the state, no town. Here is my sentence: [PG] was born <[D]> in [L5] But when it prints out it does not sound right "Georg was born in 1923 in Kansas." Since I don't have his day he was born on it just does not sound right. To many "IN's" Any suggestions I would really appreciate. Thanks to this dumb question Kenny Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Terry Reigel 0 Report post Posted August 30, 2010 Kenny, I don't see a problem with that output. I think it is grammatically correct, and I can't think of another way to say it correctly. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Michael Hannah 0 Report post Posted August 30, 2010 Here is my sentence: [PG] was born in [L5]Hi Kenny, I agree with Terry that your sentence is simple and clear. However, if you want to have some flexibility, you could customize your sentence with the use of split memo fields. Maybe something like: [PG] was born <[M1]>< [D]>< [M2]>< [L]>.< [M3]> Notice the spaces between the left conditional ' Perhaps your split memo might be: sometime late in||probably somewhere in southern||He was reported to have nearly died at birth So your resulting sentence would be: "Georg was born sometime late in 1923 probably somewhere in southern Kansas. He was reported to have nearly died at birth." Of course a memo of "in||in" with this sentence structure will give you exactly what you have now. Hope this gives you ideas, Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
iamken 0 Report post Posted August 30, 2010 Thanks Terry and Michael I just did not think it looked OK but it sounded OK You guys are great, so is TMG Kenny Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GenerationGoneBy 0 Report post Posted September 3, 2010 Kenny, My only suggestion would be to change [L5] to [L]. TMG is smart enough to know that you only have data in L5 and it will print in Kansas. But if you find out he was born in say Springfield, Kansas and you add the city of Springfield (which I have no idea if it is a city in Kansas, having never been there.), the way you have it written now, you'd still get in Kansas. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
iamken 0 Report post Posted September 3, 2010 Kenny,My only suggestion would be to change [L5] to [L]. TMG is smart enough to know that you only have data in L5 and it will print in Kansas. But if you find out he was born in say Springfield, Kansas and you add the city of Springfield (which I have no idea if it is a city in Kansas, having never been there.), the way you have it written now, you'd still get in Kansas. True I have done just that. Thanks Teresa Share this post Link to post Share on other sites