- From: E.A. Draffan <ead@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
- Date: Wed, 25 Oct 2023 17:16:38 +0000
- To: Lisa Seeman <lisa1seeman@gmail.com>, public-cognitive-a11y-tf <public-cognitive-a11y-tf@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <LO2P265MB472547A3F037C4F4CD9204DFB4DEA@LO2P265MB4725.GBRP265.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM>
Dear Lisa That looks really easy to use, but I am wondering under columns C/D/E what happens if there are multiple issue papers, sections and even patterns covered in a research paper? One to many seems impossible unless we have multiple entries for one academic paper that might for instance cover dyslexia, mental health as well as speech and language? I appreciate Google sheets is not a relational database so we may have to live with some copying and pasting to cover multiple entries where content applies to several listed entries in those columns. Best wishes E.A. From: Lisa Seeman <lisa1seeman@gmail.com> Sent: 24 October 2023 10:14 To: public-cognitive-a11y-tf <public-cognitive-a11y-tf@w3.org> Subject: [public-cognitive-a11y-tf] <none> CAUTION: This e-mail originated outside the University of Southampton. Hi Folks I made a spread sheet for collecting our research <https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Cu_qVP1WBz2TbsrAjLbbeb55RAlJmu9kfHamriL1Ocs/edit?usp=sharing> for our updates, literary reviews etc Please add your comments and suggestions. Unfortunately I made the spreadsheet before I made the form. So I will need to make a form based on it. Do we see advantages in a form or should we just use the spreadsheet? -- All the best Lisa Seeman-Horwitz LinkedIn<http://il.linkedin.com/in/lisaseeman/>, Twitter<https://twitter.com/SeemanLisa>
Received on Wednesday, 25 October 2023 17:16:49 UTC