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Zoltan,

If you look at http://www.loc.gov/marc/bibliographic/ecbdcntr.html for
example (in the section on 006 codes) you will see that for each
"different" uses of 006 some of the positional characteristics are
similarly named. So there is a "form of material" under 006 Books and
another under 006 Computer Files/Electronic Resources.

The Create Lists functionality lets you find individual settings down to
that minute level. BTW, this is very helpful when creating additional
limits for your WebPAC. That's how I became familiar with this.


Candace
------------------------------------------------
Candace Lebel
Innopac Coordinator
The Libraries of The Claremont Colleges
800 N Dartmouth Ave
Claremont CA 91711
909-621-8682
candace dot lebel at libraries dot claremont dot edu
http://blais.claremont.edu


-----Original Message-----
From: innopac-bounces at innopacusers dot org
[mailto:innopac-bounces at innopacusers dot org] On Behalf Of Zoltan Tomory
Sent: Monday, December 18, 2006 11:56 AM
To: innopac at innopacusers dot org
Subject: [IUG] Create lists @ "twins"

In Create lists, I have noticed that some of the @ codes seem to repeat.
For example: "@261 Pub Stat" resembles "@263 Pub Stat", and "@264 Dat
Type" resembles "@265 Dat Type" and "@262 Dat Type". Is the information
stored in the like variables in fact the same? If not, what is the
difference between them.

Apologies, I just noticed and thought it curious.


Zoltan Tomory
Technical Services Librarian
Missouri Botanical Garden
Zoltan dot tomory at mobot dot org

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