Ha! I will use it (again) in my tenth attempt to move the list to @ koha-community.org Thanks! Regarding Koha on big libraries, as a support vendor I can tell Koha suits both tiny libraires and big consortia. I've helped myself several small libraries get up and running. After that, some care for the tool maintenance is all that's needed. And we love to help here with issues that arise, and for more synchronous conversations on IRC. Have nice weekend! El vie., 16 mar. 2018 a las 15:52, Narcis Garcia (<informatica@actiu.net>) escribió:
I'm sorry and thanks; I don't subscribe third-party services (including Yahoo/google/etc contract). I really prefer FOSS and neutral tools.
As small libraries I meant less than a thousand books each one (and volunteers dedicating few hours per month), and I'm facing a tool (Koha) designed for really big libraries and with dedicated professionals.
Narcis, you could consider joining us at koha-es (Yahoo groups). And of course make your librarians join too!
El vie., 16 mar. 2018 a las 15:40, Narcis Garcia (<informatica@actiu.net <mailto:informatica@actiu.net>>) escribió:
El 16/03/18 a les 18:35, Paul A ha escrit: > On 2018-03-16 10:59 AM, Narcis Garcia wrote: >> Thanks; I didn't see tag 300.a > > It's a standard bibliographic entry for cataloguing, used by all major > libraries. > >> Applying replacement. >> About JavaScript, let's see how can it be implemented consistently in >> Koha. >> >> I'm really surprised Koha seems not having implemented data types >> (numeric, boolean, string, binary, date/time...). > > Koha *does* implement data types, where required by cataloguing rules > and conventions (and by internal db constraints.) Tag 300$a is *not* an > integer by any stretch of anybody's imagination. > > This list is here to help you. You might like to explain which version > of Koha you are implementing, and which library you are working for. > That would assist the Koha community in giving you the best
El 16/03/18 a les 19:45, Tomas Cohen Arazi ha escrit: possible
> advice. > > You give the impression (y disculpame si estoy en error) that you
have
> done very little MARC cataloguing. I might suggest that you look at > records from Library of Congress, the British Library, Library Archives > Canada, etc. particularly via Z39.50, or through the web interface
to
> WorldCat (OCLC). Koha is very good at "compliance" -- but does
allow
> flexibility for you to go off on a tangent and "reinvent the
wheel" if
> you have "non-industry / non-professional / specialized / amateur" > requirements. > > Amicalmente -- Paul > >
I've installed Koha 17.11 and I'm not implied in calaloguing but in computing. I'm trying to setup bibliographic software in a small library, with
the
double hope: catalogue is viewable publicly from internet and other libraries in the same association can join with their catalogs.
I've not found any other easier CMS (translated to spanish) with
those 2
features I hope to deploy. I feel koha seems so open and flexible that it needs x10
documentation
and examples than now (and current resources are really big and
great!)
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