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摘要
摘要
If you are in the process-beginning, middle, or end-of automating your catalog, you will welcome the wealth of information in this concise, easy-to-use handbook. Created for librarians new to MARC and for those accustomed to using MARC data, it explains all three types of MARC records, and it gives considerations and specifications for MARC database processing, MARC products, and online systems. Byrne addresses MARC format integration in a separate chapter new to this edition and thoroughly explains the new and changed MARC codes that resulted from MARC format integration. In another new chapter she covers the MARC Format for Community Information. All information has been updated- including that on MARC authority records and holdings records.
评论 (2)
《书目》(Booklist)书评
This volume is extremely well organized and fortunately does not suffer from all the ills so often associated with its ilk (particularly the unusable manuals that come with computer programs). A virtual "Everything you always (or never) wanted to know about MARC [such as that it stands for Machine Readable Cataloging] but didn't know enough to ask," Byrne's effort discusses tags, subfields, and all their gloriously gritty applications in everyday cataloging. Although all this is also in Crawford's MARC for Library Use, 2d ed. (G. K. Hall, 1989), Byrne's discussions of MARC database processing, MARC records on tape and disk, and MARC database products are slightly more up-to-date and inclusive. Her consideration of MARC applications in different types of libraries and collections (government documents, multimedia, archival, etc.) is especially admirable and useful. ~--Charles Harmon
《图书馆杂志》(Library Journal )书评
A well-written, carefully edited, and nicely printed explanation of the MARC format, that bugaboo of library/information science students, practitioners who trained before computer-based cataloging became ubiquitous, and computer specialists trying to understand the arcane tools of librarians. Filled with examples, the book begins with a thoughtful chapter on MARC theory and development. Later chapters cover MARC structure and content designation, format integration, patterns, major bibliographic codes, electronic records, database processing, products, online systems, authority format, holdings format, community information format, and use in different types of libraries. A glossary and index complete the book. Byrne answers virtually every question you had about MARC and does it without using strange language, e.g., she quickly defines "content designation." (This is not a workbook like Larry Millsap and Terry Ellen Ferl's Descriptive Cataloging for the AACR2R and the Integrated MARC Format, 2d ed., Professional Media, LJ 1/98.) Recommended for professional collections, students, new practitioners, vendor/computer staff, and others who must work with MARC-based systems.Sheila S. Intner, GSLIS, Simmons Coll., Boston (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.