Downloading The Database Structure
Serious Bible students, having many topical studies in DOC, HTML, PPT, TXT, PDF, and image (GIF, JPG, etc.) files, have found it useful to link their files into a structure similar to that of a systematic theology. This help page is provided to help you download this structure in a zipped file, and to extract its directories and files, leaving them on your disk drive ( C: D: ...).
Pastors and other teachers, who use laptop computers for overhead projecting of visual aids and notes, can use this structure for quickly finding their own documents, in answer to ad hoc questions from students.
Having downloaded this structure, you can link your own topical Bible notes into it. The web page at the use of the SAMs explains how the SAMs (Summary And Master User E-Links) work.
But, first, this page explains how to download the database structure:
The database structure for this website includes the Tables of Contents and the directories in which they are saved. The entire structure may be downloaded from this web page (about 4 MB zip file). When completed, you will have a directory structure that looks like the following (displayed assuming that you want it to be on your C: disk drive):

If you wish to download the complete structure, click here, then click Open (as shown above), causing the following dialog box to begin displaying the progress of the download:

When the file download has completed, the WinZip Welcome display will appear.
Click the I Agree button.
Once the WinZip dialog box is visible, click the Extract button ...

Once the Extract dialog box is displayed,
browse enough to locate and select the C: disk drive,
and then click the New Folder button ...

When the Create Folder dialog box is displayed, as shown below,
type the directory name, "NOTEBOOK_PST" into the Name field,
and then click OK.

When the Extract dialog box displays, click the Extract button.

After all the files in the archive have been extracted, close the WinZip window.
Congratulations. You should now have the entire structure on your C: drive.