Clarity,
Office 17622,
PO Box 6945,
London.
W1A 6US
United Kingdom
Phone/ Voicemail:
+44 (0)20 3287 3053 (UK)
+1 (561) 459-4758 (US).
That's part of it, but I'm not sure what My_key's asking.There is already the facility to find the change patterns which includes number of moving lines of course.
Is there a way in the search facility to identify all my readings that have the same number of changing lines?
Alternatively is there a way to list the all readings and against each reading will show the changing lines?.
Yes that's it. Ideally I'd like a summary table of the search too. So if I ask for all the readings ( irrespective of primary or relating hexagrams ) where I have had 3 moving lines a table is produced - a table like this or similar. Next search I could ask for results for 2 changing lines.Do you mean "list all readings that have 3 moving lines, no matter what those lines are"? (i.e. .1.2.3, .3.5.6, .1.4.5 in one list)
Yes that's what I mean. It'd take a bit more manual intervention but I could find things easier than going into each reading to see and record the number of moving lines. Again what would be helpful in this a column headed 'No of changing lines' where here it would return anything from 0 to 6.Your 2nd question: do you mean add a column to tables that displays the cast? Like in cast history results for hexagram 50:
...or something else? Could you give examples, if none of my guesses are right?style="width: 100%"
|-
| style="width: 25.0000%" | Date
| style="width: 25.0000%" | Entry Title
| style="width: 25.0000%" | Hexagram Type
| style="width: 25.0000%" | Reading
|-
| style="width: 25.0000%" | 2019-10-20
| style="width: 25.0000%" | What is this?
| style="width: 25.0000%" | Primary
| style="width: 25.0000%" | 50.1.2.5 to 13
|-
| style="width: 25.0000%" | 2018-07-06
| style="width: 25.0000%" | What is that?
| style="width: 25.0000%" | Relating
| style="width: 25.0000%" | 19.1.3.4.6 to 50
|-
| style="width: 25.0000%" | 2018-02-12
| style="width: 25.0000%" | Why and wherefore?
| style="width: 25.0000%" | Steps of change
| style="width: 25.0000%" | 14.1.3 to 64
Hi TrojinaThere is already the facility to find the change patterns which includes number of moving lines of course.
If you have bought the Resonance Journal why do you not have a yellow 'clarity supporter' badge ?
unchanging: 2
In the "Hexagrams:" box in the middle of the form, type in all the change patterns for the number of moving lines you want. (Can copy and paste from lists below.) Tick the Yang Pattern checkbox. Un-tick the Primary checkbox. Click Search.
1-line changes: 7,8,15,16,23,24
2-line changes: 3,4,19,20,27,29,35,36,39,40,45,46,51,52,62
3-line changes: 11,12,17,18,21,22,31,32,41,42,47,48,53,54,55,56,59,60,63,64
4-line changes: 5,6,25,26,28,30,33,34,37,38,49,50,57,58,61
5-line changes: 9,10,13,14,43,44
6-line changes: 1
Hi Trojina
I'd appreciate it if you could give some pointers as to how I could do this.
As for your second query - I do not know. I certainly have bought a RJ licence.
I noticed that my status changed from Senior Member to Visitor some weeks back so I guess that must have been some kind of cut off point.Re-badge: buying the Journal gives you 'Supporter' status for some months, but not forever. Change Circle and WikiWing are ongoing memberships, and Supporter status lasts as long as the membership.
Re-yang patterns: if you're not familiar with those, then Liselle's brilliant solution will be utterly confusing. In brief...
A change pattern is a hexagram that represents only which lines are changing in a reading. The yang pattern represents changing lines as yang/solid lines, and unchanging lines as yin/broken. So if just line 1 is moving you have as yang pattern. If lines 1 and 5 are changing, you have as yang pattern.
What Liselle has done is to list all the hexagrams with 3 yang lines, in any configuration - which corresponds to yang change patterns for all possible readings with 3 changing lines. So if you run the search in her screenshot, you'll get the list of readings you wanted.
Clarity,
Office 17622,
PO Box 6945,
London.
W1A 6US
United Kingdom
Phone/ Voicemail:
+44 (0)20 3287 3053 (UK)
+1 (561) 459-4758 (US).