Gary_G wrote: ↑20 Apr 2023 16:58
Gents; I'm hearing two apparently different views on the subject of witnesses from two very experienced users.
On the one hand, AS doesn't typically include the roles and Nick explained why. On the other, based on Mikes response, it sounds as if some people do use them. I only wish that I had a local user-group that I could have a conversation about the pro and cons of each approach. ...
Without parsing every word, my impression is that Nick was referring specifically to censuses, whereas Mike was answering a more general question about witnesses in general. Hence the slightly different flavour that you see.
I'd kind of agree with Lorna, by the way - to me, your questions come from having an initial understanding of FH, but a sophisticated understanding of (at least some) other genealogy software. So you might get frustrated with stuff designed for a typical newbie...
As for witnesses, if I can throw in my two pennorth (two cents?). I steered clear of witnesses for a long time after they were introduced into FH for reasons not unlike Helen's - they didn't help my compilation of reports. Eventually, I got to the point in my research where I needed to document the transfer of some land between an uncle and nephew. The exact details of the land might be important for identifying other, earlier members of the family. I was about to copy the details from the uncle to the nephew, when I realised that I was about to commit the cardinal sin (to me) of having the same data repeated in two different places. I therefore created a "Land Acquired" event (a new type) with the nephew as the Principal, and the uncle as a witness with role "Grantor". The details of the land were recorded in the Note for the nephew's "Land Acquired" event.
The Grantor's Witness Sentence was set up to read
Code: Select all
<para>{individual} transferred land <{place}> to {principal} <{date}>. {note}
That {note} then repeats the details of the land in the uncle's narrative report, while the details are held just once - against the principal's event.
The key to that story is not about that particular event type - it's unlikely anyone else will need that exact type - rather it's the point that witnesses provided
me with a very specific tool to deal with a very specific problem - and in all honesty I've no idea how to distill that into a general piece of advice other than - "Try it and see".
I have used witnesses now for lots of other event types - some the simple stuff like "witnesses" at wedding or "witnesses" to wills, but for also other situations like court cases where again I don't want to repeat text. But which is the principal, which the witness, what the sentences are - it changes for each fact type and the only advice I can give is try each fact type in turn. If that's feasible for you...