Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Anglo-American Cataloguing Rules ( AACR) were an international library cataloging standard. First published in 1967 and edited by C. Sumner Spalding, [ 1] a second edition ( AACR2) edited by Michael Gorman and Paul W. Winkler was issued in 1978, with subsequent revisions ( AACR2R) appearing in 1988 and 1998; all updates ceased in 2005.
Site-to-site backup. backup, over the internet, to an offsite location under the user's control. Similar to remote backup except that the owner of the data maintains control of the storage location. Synthetic backup. a restorable backup image that is synthesized on the backup server from a previous full backup and all the incremental backups ...
Extended Backus–Naur form. In computer science, extended Backus–Naur form ( EBNF) is a family of metasyntax notations, any of which can be used to express a context-free grammar. EBNF is used to make a formal description of a formal language such as a computer programming language. They are extensions of the basic Backus–Naur form (BNF ...
"No liberties whatever have been taken with the manuscript left by the author ... The Appendix has been shortened by the omission of all rules [except those for imprint] and of the list of reference books. The articles on the cataloging of special material have been added [1 Manuscripts, by W.C. Ford. 2. Music, by O.G. Sonneck. 3.
The main academic full-text databases are open archives or link-resolution services, although others operate under different models such as mirroring or hybrid publishers. Such services typically provide access to full text and full-text search, but also metadata about items for which no full text is available.
Backup. In information technology, a backup, or data backup is a copy of computer data taken and stored elsewhere so that it may be used to restore the original after a data loss event. The verb form, referring to the process of doing so, is "back up", whereas the noun and adjective form is "backup". [ 1] Backups can be used to recover data ...
Structure of the Expansive Classification. The Expansive Classification uses seven separate schedules, each designed to be used by libraries of different sizes. After the first, each schedule was an expansion of the previous one, [ 12] and Cutter provided instructions for how a library might change from one expansion to another as it grows.
Original file (858 × 1,266 pixels, file size: 4.21 MB, MIME type: application/pdf, 22 pages) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.