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The Classification of African History by the Library of Congress
Cataloging & Classification Quarterly, 1983Subclass DT of the Library of Congress classification assigns comparatively brief spans of class numbers to many of the countries of East Africa and West Africa. Many of these spans leave very little space for classes which will be assigned in the future to cover the future historical developments of these countries.
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A practical guide to Library of Congress Classification
Technical Services Quarterly, 2018A Practical Guide Library of Congress Classification is a relatively compact book of 13 brief chapters chock-a-block with illustrations, with, at the end, a brief glossary, an index, and tables.
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Library of Congress Classification (LCC)
2017The Library of Congress Classification (LCC), originally designed for classifying the Library’s own collection, is now used in a wide range of libraries, both in the United States and abroad. This entry recounts its history and development from its genesis to the present time, leading up to an explanation of LCC structure, tables, and notation. It then
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Journal of Internet Cataloging, 2002
This paper describes the first phase of a project at Columbia University Libraries to create a hierarchical interface to LC classification (HILCC). The project's objective was to assess the potential of using the Library of Congress classification numbers as provided in standard catalog records to generate a structured, hierarchical menuing system for ...
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This paper describes the first phase of a project at Columbia University Libraries to create a hierarchical interface to LC classification (HILCC). The project's objective was to assess the potential of using the Library of Congress classification numbers as provided in standard catalog records to generate a structured, hierarchical menuing system for ...
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A Practical Guide to Library of Congress Classification
Cataloging & Classification Quarterly, 2018Classifying resources with the Library of Congress Classification (LCC) system is typically daunting to the uninitiated.
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Library of Congress Islamic and Jewish Law Classification Schedule
International Journal of Legal Information, 2001Abstract Islamic and Jewish law has, for years, been the orphan of the Library of Congress classification scheme. Left without a place of its own it has been either shoehorned into the religion schedules, or set aside in homegrown organizational schemes.
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Library of Congress Classification 2: use of tables
2018As we saw in the previous chapter, it's very straightforward to construct LCC call-marks. In most cases, the subject part of the call-mark is lifted from the schedule without any alteration. The only real intellectual work for the classifier is the creation of the Cutter number, deciding whether it should be for the author or for another aspect of the ...
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Cataloging & Classification Quarterly, 1983
The Library of Congress classification system distributes biographical works throughout the collection, a result of questionable desirability for reference collections. A practical method for bringing biographical dictionaries together in one section of the reference shelves is the use of alternative class numbers printed in the CT schedule.
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The Library of Congress classification system distributes biographical works throughout the collection, a result of questionable desirability for reference collections. A practical method for bringing biographical dictionaries together in one section of the reference shelves is the use of alternative class numbers printed in the CT schedule.
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A New Subclass for Library of Congress Classification, QF: Computer Science
Cataloging & Classification Quarterly, 1998ABSTRACT The field of computer science has been growing rapidly in the last 20 years. However, the Library of Congress (LC) classification only gives computer science a very limited space QA75-QA76, which is buried in the QA subclass for mathematics.
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Development of Game for Learning in a Title of library of congress classification system
2019Journal of Information Science, 37, 2, 44 ...
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