Dear Colleagues,
You are invited to participate in a survey designed to collect information
on the practice of embedding metadata into digital objects.
The purpose of the survey is to explore the cost and benefit of embedding
additional (i.e. LAM-generated) metadata into digital objects, to the
On the surface, your difficulties suggest you may need look at a few
optimization tactics. Apologies if these are things you've already
considered and addressed - just offering a suggestion.
This page [1] is for Access 2003 but the items under "Improve query
performance" should apply - I think
Well, I guess it could be bad data, but I don't know how to tell. I think I've
done more than this before.
I have a "Find duplicates" query that groups by bib record number. That query
seemed to take about 40 minutes to process. Then I added a criterion to limit
to only records that had >0 cir
Hi Cindy,
This doesn't quite address your issue, but, unless you've hit the 2 GB
Access size limit [1], Access can handle a good deal more than 250,000
item records ("rows," yes?) you cited.
What makes you think you've hit the limit? Slowness, something else?
All the best,
Kevin
[1]
https
Another option might be to use OpenRefine http://openrefine.org - this should
easily handle 250,000 rows. I find it good for basic data analysis, and there
are extensions which offer some visualisations (e.g. the VIB BITs extension
which will plot simple data using d3
https://www.bits.vib.be/in
Hi all. What are you using to process circ data for ad-hoc queries. I usually
extract csv or tab-delimited files - one row per item record, with identifying
bib record data, then total checkouts over the given time period(s). I have
been importing these into Access then grouping them by bib re
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