On 22 May 2006 june harvey wrote: > Dave Naylor wrote: > > you need to break a few links in your tree (make notes where you do > this) so you have multiple trees. Then check each of these trees to > see which one has the problem. To view the different trees click on > View > Tree Finder > Refresh. From this window you can tag all > individuals in a tree to see just who's included in it. > > When you know which tree has the problem you can re-join the others and > then split the problem one further until you narrow down to the link(s) > causing the problem. > Dave: I tried this, but cannot find any problem with the small trees > which I had unlinked. Your response makes it sound like you still have a "large" tree that contains the problem. If that is so then break it up further. If that is not the case and *all* trees are problem free then what happens when you re-link them one-by-one and recheck them after each re-link? At some point the problem should reappear (or you'll be problem-free)! If the problem still exists and you cannot find the problem (after you get all the trees back together and only have one tree) then send me a *backup* of your family file and I'll see if I can find the problem for you. Obviously I will treat your data with the strictest confidence and will erase the file after checking it. Cheers, -- Dave N. -- David Naylor, Halton Hills, Ontario, Canada. ---