![]() If this box is checked, sort order is from A to Z, otherwise it's from Z to A. The result will be to sort those lines which contain "easy" (highly frequent) words at the top of the list.īy default you sort all the lines you may however type in for example 5-49 to sort those lines only. ANY(SELECT(ComponentsQty, AND(ItemTHISROW.Item,Model ANY(SELECT(TransactionsItem,id ANY(TOP(ORDERBY(Transactionsid, TimeStamp,TRUE. For this you will be asked to specify your reference corpus wordlist. The "contextual frequency" sort means sorting on the average ranking frequency of all the words in each concordance line which don't begin with a capital letter. See colour categories for a more sophisticated way of using the Set column.Īs the screenshot below shows, you can also sort by a number of other criteria, most of these accessible simply by clicking on their column header. See Nearest Tag for details of sorting by tags. The sort will put the classified lines first, in category order, followed by any unclassified lines. You can also sort by set, if you have chosen to classify the concordance lines according to your own scheme, using letters from A to Z or a to z or longer strings. Sorting by set ( user-defined categories) This is set in the main controller settings. For very large concordances you may find the third sort (Sort 3) useful: this is an extra tie-breaker in cases where the second sort matches.įor many purposes tie-breaking is unnecessary, and will be ignored if the "activated" box is not checked. A second sort (Sort 2) on R2 would re-order the listing by tie-breaking, that is: only where the L1 words (immediately to the left of the search word) matched exactly, and would place these in alphabetical order of the words 2 to the right of the search word. A Main Sort on Left 1 (L1) will sort the entries according to the alphabetical order of the word immediately to the left of the search word. ![]() The listing can be sorted by three criteria at once. Sorting is by a given number of words to the left or right (L1, L2, 元, L4, L5, R1, R2, R3, R4, R5), on the search word itself, the context word (if one was specified), the nearest tag, the distance to the nearest tag, a set category of your own choice, or original file order (file). For example you may find that most of the entries have "in the" or "in a" or "in my" just before the search word - sorting by the second word to the left of the search word will make this much clearer. By sorting them you can separate out multiple search words and examine the immediate context to left and right. It can be hard to see overall trends in your concordance lines, especially if there are lots of them. The point of re-sorting is to find characteristic lexical patterns. There’s even an option to set up location-based reminders, which trigger when you’re near a favorite store, but it would nice if this worked only for lists with unpurchased items.Sorting can be done simply by pressing the top row of any list. Paid members can also add photos to items, scale recipe ingredient quantities, assign stores to lists, personalize with premium themes, and organize lists into folders. On rare occasions where websites weren’t formatted to microdata or hrecipe standards, it was a trivial matter to copy and paste data into the Mac app, which parses an entire block of text into individual steps.Īn annual paid subscription also adds native Mac and PC applications to the mix for planning shopping trips from the desktop. This feature worked like a charm on SkinnyTaste, The Cozy Apron, Allrecipes, and countless others, breaking down a list of ingredients and preparation steps with a photo of the completed dish. ![]() Subscribing also adds browser extension support for automatically importing recipes from popular websites with a click. For starters, paid users are able to access accounts from any web browser, or use companion native applications for Mac and Windows. While the free version offers an impressive array of features, a paid subscription ($8 for a single user or $12 for a family per year) really makes AnyList boil. ![]() Everything is securely backed up in the cloud, with freaky fast sync between devices. All that’s required is an email address, used to sign up for a free account. Recipes and individual lists can be shared with others, such as your spouse, roommates, or the entire family. AnyList is also a depository for all your favorite recipes, and ingredients can be added to a shopping list in one tap. ![]()
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