Machine Readable Cataloging Record which uses tags, indicators, and delimiters to identify and separate information on the bibliographic or authority record The MARC record can be displayed in STAR GATEWAY or DRA WEB2
An international standard format for the arrangement of cataloging information so that it can be stored and retrieved using computer tapes
MAchine Readable Cataloging record For purposes of this document, MARC is the USMARC format maintained by LC Refer also to USMARC
Is considered a grape spirit After wine has been made, water is added to the leftover husks, skins, pits and stalks The mix is fermented then distilled to become marc Marc is clear, colorless and produced in France Best enjoyed straight up in a cognac snifter, in mixed drinks and cocktails Blends well with fruit juices, coffee, fruit liqueurs, nut liqueurs, cacao liqueurs, coffee liqueurs and cream liqueurs Back to index
MAchine-Readable Cataloging Machine-readable records of cataloging done by the Library of Congress and sold on subscription, as well as records done by others MARC records are distributed on tape and by FTP and are constantly being added to RLIN, OCLC, and other databases Each MARC implementation (e g OCLC MARC, RLIN MARC, MARC in Advance) varies slightly from USMARC
MAchine-Readable Cataloging, a standard for storing bibliographic data in electronic databases The standard, which first emerged from a Library of Congress initiative in the 1970s, is used by most library catalogs today The current version is MARC 21
(Minority Access to Research Careers)A program to provide special research training opportunities in the biomedical sciences for students and faculty at 4-year colleges and health professional schools in which substantial student enrollments are drawn from minority groups
MAchine Readable Cataloging; the standard format for machine readable bibliographic, authority, and holdings data; records consist of fields containing the content designators tags, indicators, and subfields (see also USMARC)
Machine-Readable Cataloging Record The MARC formats are standards for the representation and communication of bibliographic and related information (authority, holdings, classification, community information) in machine-readable form MARC 21 grew out of the harmonization of USMARC and CAN/MARC, formerally national standards, and has emerged as an international standard MARC21 is an implementation of the American National Standard, Information Interchange Format (ANSI Z39 2) and its international counterpart, Format for Information Exchange (ISO 2709) UniMARC was originally designed for conversion between national formats but now has been adopted by some countries as their national standard
It is a record that a computer can read and interpret Each record conforms to a national standard for communication of bibliographic information, established and used by the National Library and the Library of Congress
Machine Readable Cataloguing A family of formats based on ISO 2709 for the exchange of bibliographic and other elated information in machine readable form For example: USMARC, UKMARC and UNIMARC http: //lcweb loc gov/marc/
Machine Readable Cataloging; the international standard format for the storage and exchange of bibliographic data (catalog cards) in machine readable form
Machine-Readable Cataloging (MARC) A standard format for storing bibliographic information in electronic format
Machine Readable Cataloguing - a standard bibliographic format used in libraries
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