-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of
Jonathan Rochkind
Sent: Tuesday, April 28, 2009 08:43
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] exact title searches with z39.50
It can be a chicken-egg thing too. Maybe more users
Bill Dueber writes:
What are the ways to accomplish exact title searches with z39.50?
I'm looping through a list of MARC records trying to determine
whether or not we own multiple copies of an item. After reading
MARC field 245, subfield a I am creating the following z39.50
On Apr 27, 2009, at 5:13 PM, Eric Lease Morgan wrote:
What are the ways to accomplish exact title searches with z39.50?
Thank you for all the prompt and helpful replies. The most precise and
complete magic incantation came from Larry Dixon of the Library of
Congress:
Exact match in
From: Mike Taylor m...@indexdata.com
The irony is that Z39.50 actually make _much_ more effort to specify
semantics than most other standards -- and yet still finds itself in
the situation where many implementations do not respond correctly to
the BIB-1 attribute 6=3 (completeness=complete
On Tue, Apr 28, 2009 at 8:27 AM, Eric Lease Morgan emor...@nd.edu wrote:
Wow, isn't the Internet cool, and /me wonders, Did the Bath Profile come
from... Bath? [2]
Yes.
http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/bath/tp-bath2.1-e.htm#c
Ray Denenberg, Library of Congress writes:
The irony is that Z39.50 actually make _much_ more effort to
specify semantics than most other standards -- and yet still
finds itself in the situation where many implementations do not
respond correctly to the BIB-1 attribute 6=3
10:43 AM
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] exact title searches with z39.50
Ray Denenberg, Library of Congress writes:
The irony is that Z39.50 actually make _much_ more effort to
specify semantics than most other standards -- and yet still
finds itself in the situation where many implementations do
Of Ray Denenberg,
Library of Congress [r...@loc.gov]
Sent: Tuesday, April 28, 2009 8:32 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] exact title searches with z39.50
Right, Mike. There is a long and rich history of the debate between loose
and strict interpretation, in the world at large
From: Walker, David dwal...@calstate.edu
I'm not sure it's a _big_ mess, though, at least for metasearching.
I wasn't thinking specifically about metasearch, but rather, bad decisions
getting replicated and you end up with an installed base of bad
implementations. The best illustration
HTML works out pretty well. If our biggest failures were 'failures' like
HTML, we'd be doing pretty well.
Ray Denenberg, Library of Congress wrote:
From: Walker, David dwal...@calstate.edu
I'm not sure it's a _big_ mess, though, at least for metasearching.
I wasn't thinking
Jonathan Rochkind writes:
I'm not sure it's a _big_ mess, though, at least for metasearching.
I wasn't thinking specifically about metasearch, but rather, bad
decisions getting replicated and you end up with an installed
base of bad implementations. The best illustration would be
From: Jonathan Rochkind rochk...@jhu.edu
HTML works out pretty well. If our biggest failures were 'failures' like
HTML, we'd be doing pretty well.
HTML is a wonderful standard.
And I don't mean to take the discussion off-course. My point was simply
that because early browsers did not
What are the ways to accomplish exact title searches with z39.50?
I'm looping through a list of MARC records trying to determine whether
or not we own multiple copies of an item. After reading MARC field
245, subfield a I am creating the following z39.50 query:
@attr 1=4 foo bar
-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On
Behalf Of Eric Lease Morgan
Sent: Monday, April 27, 2009 3:14 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] exact title searches with z39.50
What are the ways to accomplish exact title searches
Like so many library standards, z30.50 is a syntax and a set of rough
guidelines. You have no idea what's actually happening on the other end,
because it's not specified, and you just have to either find someone you can
ask at the target machine or reverse engineer it.
On Mon, Apr 27, 2009 at
I think in order to accomplish this you'd have to send a completeness
or truncation attribute:
@attr 1=4 6=3 foo bar # search for 'foo bar' as the complete field
@attr 1=4 6=2 foo bar # search for 'foo bar' as the complete subfield
@attr 1=4 5=100 foo bar # do not truncate - although this is
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