I'm still getting a lot of non-duplicates on my report. Many of these are high on my report mixed in with the actual duplicates. Most of these would be eliminated or dropped way down if the mis-matched parents names didn' result in so many points.
If the new options you are adding work the same way, then will it really help all that much?Yes, that is correct. If both Names exist, and their matches result in zero points, then the deduction is applied. You can influence this with values of IntLastNameScore, IntForeNameRight and IntSoundexNames, which can be zero, and IntForeNameWrong that can even be negative.
Yes OK, I will add separate IntNamesDeductIndi=0, IntNamesDeductFath=-5, IntNamesDeductMoth=-5, IntNamesDeductSpou=0, IntNamesDeductChld=0 in the next Version.
Since IntLastNameScore, IntForeNameRight IntSoundexNames and IntForeNameWrong apply to all name matches, if I set them to zero won't that also impact matching of names for the individuals themselves and for their spouses and children?
I would really like to leave name matching alone for the individuals, their spouses, and children and only impact mothers and fathers names if possible.
Ideally, if the mothers and fathers surnames are not an exact match, I would deduct so many points that the individuals ended up with no points or negative points.
If the surnames were an exact match, then I would deduct some points if the forenames did not match.
What might work is options something like this:
IntNamesDeductFathSurname
IntNamesDeductFathForenames
IntNamesDeductMothSurname
IntNamesDeductMothForenames
Rather than these working only if the names are a total mismatch, they would work if the names were not a total match. So... we would be able to deduct points if one mother was named Julia Ann Snodgrass and one was named Ann Marie Henshaw for example. The common Ann should not prevent points from being deducted.
Would something like that be possible?
Thanks,
Bill