Scroll to navigation

LCCNORM(1p) User Contributed Perl Documentation LCCNORM(1p)

NAME

lccnorm - normalize Library of Congress Classification call numbers

SYNOPSIS

lccnorm [option...] [file...]

lccnorm -h|--help

lccnorm -V|--version

DESCRIPTION

lccnorm transforms LC-style call numbers into a form that may be used in a straight ASCII sort.

By default, each line of input is assumed to consist of a number of tab-delimited fields, of which the first contains an LC-style call number or class.

If no file is specified, or if the file name "-" is specified, standard input will be processed.

Normalization of call number ranges is a special challenge, because ranges are not normally specified using the exact endpoint. Consider the range "B708-B713"; while "B708" does indicate the beginning point -- a no call number that comes before B 708 can fall within the range -- the end point is only a guide, not a strict limit, since the intent is that call numbers such as "B 713 .H94" and "B 713 .W55 L86" do fall within the range. Unfortunately, ranges are often specified ambiguously; for example, the call number "B 713.14 G92" might or might not be considered to fall within this range.

OPTIONS

Specify a string other than a single tab (ASCII character 9) to delimit the fields in a line of input. This also provides the default for joining fields in the output; see option -j below.
The call number (or range) is found in the given range of fields. Fields are 1-based (the first field is field 1, not field 0) and are separated by a single tab character (unless option -d is used to specify an alternate delimiter).

When parsing call numbers (not ranges), all fields are concatenated using a single space to form the call number that will be normalized.

When parsing ranges, there are four possibilities:

1 field
The field contains a range in the form prefix (e.g., "J80"), closed range (e.g., "ML566-566.6" or "ML566-ML566.6") or half-open range (e.g., "KME451<KME500").
2 fields
The first field is the beginning of the (closed) range, and the second is the end.
3 fields
The first field is a prefix common to both the beginning and end of the range, and the second and third fields are the remainders.
4 fields
The first and third fields together are the beginning of the range, and the second and fourth are the end.

For example, the following all produce identical output:

    $ echo 'PL4501-4509'     | lccnorm -d: -f1
    $ echo 'PL4501:PL4509'   | lccnorm -d: -f1-2
    $ echo 'PL:4501:4509'    | lccnorm -d: -f1-3
    $ echo 'PL:4501:PL:4509' | lccnorm -d: -f1-4
Specify a character to use when joining fields for output. The default is to use the same string specified in option -d, or a single tab if -d was not given.
Don't delete the input fields from which call numbers (or ranges) were obtained. Either the -b and -e option must be provided to specify where the normalized string is to be placed.
Place normalized strings at the beginning of output lines.
Place normalized strings at the end of output lines.
Exit with a non-zero status as soon as an unnormalizable input is encountered. The default is to issue a warning and normalize to the empty string.
Be verbose. This currently has no effect unless used with the -V or --version option.
Print help information and exit.
Print the version number and exit. If the -v or --verbose option is specified, print out additional information.
View the manual page for lccnorm.
View the license under which lccnorm is distributed.

AUTHOR

Paul Hoffman (nkuitse AT nkuitse DOT com)

COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2007 Paul M. Hoffman.

This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl:

the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later version;

or

the "Artistic License".

For the full text of these licenses, see the script file itself or enter the command lccnorm -L.

SEE ALSO

Biblio::LCC

2023-02-05 perl v5.36.0