Cataloging Single Issue Of Serial Numbers
If the serial issues are in PDF format and basically function as camera images of the original print version (i.e. Original pagination is reproduced), the resource may be cataloged as a serial, since cataloging will be based on the earliest issue and therefore the PDF rather than the website. Example: Cataloging and Classification Quarterly.
Specification 1.0GHz dual core CPU 512M RAM Expansion for 32G Micro SD card 3000mAh Polymer lithium battery 7’’ color LCD screen Dual camera,front camera with 300000 pixels,back camera with 2 million pixels(1024 x600 definition) Support Bluetooth Support WIFI Other Hot sale Product: Packaging & Shipping Within 15 working days after deposit Standard package Warranty: 1-year will be offered Our Factory. Cracked diagun x431 software. About product and suppliers: During the research period (Dec 2016 to Nov 2018), major trends on sales, online shipping, product and requirements data were anlysised for Tyre Changer, Wheel Balancer, Launch X431 V, Launch X431 Pro, Scanner/diagnostic Too, Car Lift, Autel Maxisys Elite, Autel Maxisys Pro, Injector Cleaner And Tester and Ikeycutter Condor Xc-007 Master Series Key Cutting Machine etc.
| Librarians who LibraryThingJoin LibraryThing to post. This topic is currently marked as 'dormant'—the last message is more than 90 days old. 7 loader release 4. You can revive it by posting a reply. If I were to catalog just one issue of a serial publication (in real life, not on LT), would I catalog it as a monograph or as a serial component part? I get that items that are part of a monographic series can be cataloged as monographs (hence the name) but what about just one issue of something like GQ? Can I catalog it as a monograph and just add a $n in the 245 field for the volume and issue number? It would depend on what you are cataloging this issue for. Typically, if it were just a single issue of something like GQ, I would use the serial record, and then indicate in your holdings statement that you just have one issue. (The system I work in allows free-form input in the holdings statement, so I can not only include the vol./issue number for the one in hand, but I can also include a note such as 'Library has one issue' or something like that, just to be clear that we don't have more. My system also allows notes to be attached to the item record, so I could assign the item the volume/issue number of the serial, and put a note in the item record as to why it's important, e.g. 'The local wine and cheese issue' or whatever.) If the item is being cataloged for some sort of special collection, and you really want to get into the nitty-gritty details of what is in the issue, then you might want to catalog it as as monograph. Then you can include various 5xx notes about the issue. I would probably only bother doing this if I wanted to analyze the contents of the issue in a 505. I would be reluctant to do this if the only identifying information about the issue is in the 245 n and p, unless there is a special title for this one issue. (And not a cataloger-supplied title, either, but an honest-to-goodness title for the issue that is available from the chief source.) Another thing to consider is what else is held by the library. I work in a shared consortium catalog, so I would be very reluctant to make a monograph record for our example (an issue of GQ) just because anyone searching our catalog for 'GQ' is likely to want the serial, not this lone issue. Most users wouldn't think to look at individual records for GQ that appear in our catalog. They want one record - the one for the serial. Anything else is just a distraction. If this is for your own LT catalog or something, then do whatever you want, I promise not to call the cataloging police on you! >If the item is being cataloged for some sort of special collection, and you really want to get into the nitty-gritty details of what is in the issue, then you might want to catalog it as as monograph. . . . I would probably only bother doing this if I wanted to analyze the contents of the issue in a 505. That's my situation, exactly. There was an issue of Esquire last year which included a short story by Stephen King, and our library collects King-iana (?), so they acquired an extra copy of that issue of the magazine for the special collections department. In the end, I think I decided to catalog the story itself as a serial component part, and not worry about the single volume of that magazine, since it's available both in our periodicals dept. and through our online serials. Thanks for the help! Sometimes I feel like I'm reinventing the cataloging wheel and I don't always know where to turn for help when I run into a tricky situation. | Group: Librarians who LibraryThingAboutThis topic is not marked as primarily about any work, author or other topic. Touchstones |
Cataloging Single Issue Of Serial Killer
- It would depend on what you are cataloging this issue for. Typically, if it were just a single issue of something like GQ, I would use the serial record, and then indicate in your holdings statement that you just have one issue.
- First decisions when cataloging Affects type of MARC record, rules for descriptive cataloging, when to create a new record, etc. What level of granularity? What is the primary content at that level? (language, image, sound, video, cartographic, other? Is the content static or continuing? Is it a monograph, a serial, or an integrating resource?