27 messages over 4 pages: 1 2 3 4
andras_farkas Tetraglot Groupie Hungary Joined 4903 days ago 56 posts - 165 votes Speaks: Hungarian*, Spanish, English, Italian
| Message 25 of 27 25 February 2014 at 7:03pm | IP Logged |
Lizzern wrote:
kujichagulia wrote:
It's easier to have a collection of files such as
Word or LibreOffice documents, PDFs, or .txt files in a folder. But how do you search
all of those files? I'm not aware of any software that could do that. |
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The normal Windows search lets you get a list of files at least (it doesn't always
search inside pdfs though). Or if you keep them in the same folder, you can search the
folder itself and narrow down the list of files to those containing a certain word,
without having to open them. I'm probably going to use Word if I decide I want to build
my own corpus, and just use the search in the program, along with the Windows search.
Liz |
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Both of those options work, but they are really clumsy for regular use. The Windows
search feature gives you a list of file names without the actual content, so you have
to open the files one by one and find where the search term occurs. The search in Word
allows you to search in a single file only and even then you can only see one hit at a
time.
Dedicated software tools work much better, so that's what I recommend unless you are
unable or unwilling to install a dedicated tool.
Copernic, dtsearch et al. can search in pdf/word/html/txt and a bunch of other formats,
while xbench and tmlookup can handle bilingual or multilingual texts and have better
search features. The downside is that you can't just dump files in a folder and be done
with it; you need to import your files, possibly after converting them to the right
format.
3 persons have voted this message useful
| Lizzern Diglot Senior Member Norway Joined 5912 days ago 791 posts - 1053 votes Speaks: Norwegian*, English Studies: Japanese
| Message 26 of 27 25 February 2014 at 7:11pm | IP Logged |
andras_farkas wrote:
Both of those options work, but they are really clumsy for regular use. The Windows
search feature gives you a list of file names without the actual content, so you have
to open the files one by one and find where the search term occurs. The search in Word
allows you to search in a single file only and even then you can only see one hit at a
time.
Dedicated software tools work much better, so that's what I recommend unless you are
unable or unwilling to install a dedicated tool.
Copernic, dtsearch et al. can search in pdf/word/html/txt and a bunch of other formats,
while xbench and tmlookup can handle bilingual or multilingual texts and have better
search features. The downside is that you can't just dump files in a folder and be done
with it; you need to import your files, possibly after converting them to the right
format.
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Yep, it's not ideal. I just have an aversion to having to learn new software and how to convert files and so on, so I tend to just stick to the stone age method :-) I'm just not the technologically savvy type. That said, I probably wouldn't feel that way if I intended to have lots of separate files. I'm most likely going to compile texts into large files grouped in some way that makes sense (by subject, source, complexity...). So I might only have a few texts to search through. But if it feels too clunky I'll look into some of the other options :-)
Liz
1 person has voted this message useful
| kujichagulia Senior Member Japan Joined 4850 days ago 1031 posts - 1571 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Japanese, Portuguese
| Message 27 of 27 26 February 2014 at 1:42am | IP Logged |
Excellent advice here. Thank you very much!
It is probably too time-consuming for me to attempt right now, but now I know what to do if I am ever in the right situation.
1 person has voted this message useful
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