Show terms in Term Recognition window in alphabetical order?

Hello everyone,

It seems that there is no way to show terms in the Term Recognition window in alphabetical order. This is not such a big deal if you only have five or six entries in it, but with large TBs connected, alphabetical is the only way to find anything. Is there a way to do this that I have missed, and if not, are there any plans to implement it? This is extremely important for me.

Michael

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  • Hi Michael

    I wonder why you consider this as "extremely important". The Term Recognition window displays only the terms that it found in your current segment, so the probability that you have dozens of term hits within one single sentence is very low.
    Personally, if there are many terms, I would then prefer them to be ordered by their appearance within the sentence rather than alphabetically (I mean they don't appear in alphabetical order within your sentence, do they?).
    My two cents!
    Walter
  • The reason it is "very important" to me is that I do a lot of highly technical texts with very long segments. I get "dozens of term hits within one single sentence" all the time. The patent applications I do, for example, sometimes have extremely long sentences. Or sth like this, from a set of Excel files from a logistics project:

    "dozenlift, goederenlift, beschrijving, verticaal transporteur, krattenlift, verticaal sorteren, sorter, rollenbaan, aangedreven rollen, rollerbaan, rollen, interroll, sew motor, patent, gepatenteerd, dozenheffer, krattenheffer, dozentransporteur, flexibel, integratie, eenvoudig, discontinue goederenlift, goederenlift, dozenlift, krattenlift, rollenbaan, aangedreven rollenbaan, interroll, roller drive, 24V trommelmotor, palletisers, palletiseermachines, flexibel, palletiseerrobot, palletizer, palletizers, palletiseermachine, palletiseersysteem, paletiser, palletiseren, automatisch stapelen" 

    The above is a single segment. The results in the Term Recognition are completely impenetrable, visually. If I could make them alphabetical, and I was looking for, e.g., "dozentransporteur" (in bold above), I could then just visually scan to the "d" section and find it.

    Of course they don't appear in alphabetical order within my sentence, but that's kind of irrelevant. When looking things up or searching for them in a large collection of words, humans are accustomed to searching in long lists alphabetically. It's deeply ingrained in our mind, and for very good reason: it's the fastest way to get from A to B  ;-)

    Michael

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  • The reason it is "very important" to me is that I do a lot of highly technical texts with very long segments. I get "dozens of term hits within one single sentence" all the time. The patent applications I do, for example, sometimes have extremely long sentences. Or sth like this, from a set of Excel files from a logistics project:

    "dozenlift, goederenlift, beschrijving, verticaal transporteur, krattenlift, verticaal sorteren, sorter, rollenbaan, aangedreven rollen, rollerbaan, rollen, interroll, sew motor, patent, gepatenteerd, dozenheffer, krattenheffer, dozentransporteur, flexibel, integratie, eenvoudig, discontinue goederenlift, goederenlift, dozenlift, krattenlift, rollenbaan, aangedreven rollenbaan, interroll, roller drive, 24V trommelmotor, palletisers, palletiseermachines, flexibel, palletiseerrobot, palletizer, palletizers, palletiseermachine, palletiseersysteem, paletiser, palletiseren, automatisch stapelen" 

    The above is a single segment. The results in the Term Recognition are completely impenetrable, visually. If I could make them alphabetical, and I was looking for, e.g., "dozentransporteur" (in bold above), I could then just visually scan to the "d" section and find it.

    Of course they don't appear in alphabetical order within my sentence, but that's kind of irrelevant. When looking things up or searching for them in a large collection of words, humans are accustomed to searching in long lists alphabetically. It's deeply ingrained in our mind, and for very good reason: it's the fastest way to get from A to B  ;-)

    Michael

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