Post
by AdrianBruce » 11 Apr 2013 17:15
1. 'Where do I find the people linked to the citation?' What you can get is the people linked to the SOURCE Record. Select the Source Record, click menu item View / Record Links and you'll get a pop-up window listing the people (or families or note-records) linked to the Source-Record.
2. 'Where do I find the Citations?' Follow Jane's advice and download that plug-in. Select the SOURCE Record you want to interrogate; run the plug-in and you'll get a grid showing you what's been entered in that yellow source pane for each citation, with the title of the source record.
Unfortunately, you won't see the full text that would appear in a printed report because that grid doesn't show the publication details, author, etc from the Source Record. On the other hand, those items are visible by clicking the +-sign as you did for the selected Source Record.
Now - why is this clunky compared to what you can do in FTM? I'm not sure if this is going to help or not, Pedro, but I'll try. Let me warn you I'm not familiar with FTM but from your very useful screen-shot, I think this is what's going on.
In FTM one Source at the left (pointed to by your blue box) has many citations (listed in the middle) and each of those citations can point to many people (listed below). (Tell me if I'm wrong, please!)
This is NOT how FH works. It doesn't work like this because it's not how GEDCOM works. Instead, one source has many citations (like the 256 you highlighted below). Each citation points points to only one person. Indeed it points to only one fact.
So suppose you have a baptism that refers to (say) three people. Obviously the citation content will be the same for the different facts help against the three people. How do you enter it? Well, you type it in once but because of the way that GEDCOM is structured, FH must hold three (at least) copies of the same citation data. That's what Tools / Set Automatic Source Citation will do automatically, as will Ancestral Sources, as will just plain copying and pasting the citation from one fact to another. So it's not hard to set up but it does mean that it's different from FTM once it's entered because it's all held quite differently.
I'm not sure if this helps or not, but it might if you're trying to understand.
Adrian