In message <3F66BB5AC5E4D511B23C00902746C443FAA557@WWMESSD207>, Archer Barrie <Barrie.Archer@services.fujitsu.com> writes >The algorithm that works out the page range has various limits that are >designed to ensure that there is a reasonable degree of confidence in the >page range produced. One of these is that there is not a gap of greater than >1 page number in the sequence. In Dec 1884 Deaths for Marylebone,1a there is >a gap between page numbers 374 and 377, i.e. two page numbers missing. > >This limit was particularly aimed at situations at either end of the range >and where there were relatively few page numbers to work with. We will ease >the limit so that it does not exclude the cases with good populations of >pages. Another related problem that I raised elsewhere [I think it was just with Dave] is with regard to possible page number typos. West Derby, in the period I'm most used to transcribing, has a normal page range c800-900. A West Derby entry mistype as 85 would presumable cause the page range algorithm to reject/ignore West Derby even though it is one of the largest districts? I mention this simply as something that people might need to be aware of and not as a criticism. -- Philip Powell Looking north across the Derwent Valley and Northumberland to The Cheviot