Subject: Preparing microfilm targets
At St. Bonaventure University we have been involved in several large brittle book microfilming projects. We created a customized database for microfilm processing which allowed us to track titles through the many steps involved in microfilm preparation and to identify where any given book was at any given time. Every title had a worksheet and every worksheet had a computer assigned serial number. The record for any book could be searched by the serial number or the books call number. Once a book was selected for microfilming a brief bibliographic record (author, short title, place of publication and date of publication) was entered into the computer. From this information we not only pulled information for targets, but labels to put on quality control forms, microfilm box labels, and a reel by reel catalog of microfilm produced. Though the program was on the campus mini-computer, targets were printed using a basic sign program, an ibm compatible PC and a dot matrix printer. Serial numbers of items to be targeted were queued onto the computer. The master program on the mini-computer read the que, retrieved the relevant bibliographic information and and created an ASCII batch file readable by the sign program. The batch file was downloaded and processed by the PC, producing the necessary targets. Though this was a custom programmed application the ability to produce a batch file for targeting is easily handled by most any database program with a mail merge capability. As the commands in such a batch file are simply repeated for each target, these commands need only be defined once and written out in an file with variables where the bibliographic information goes. As with form letters, where the computer merges names and addresses with the same letter body, so it will merge bibliographic fields into your prepared batch file. At an institution where I recently interned, I was able to help add this type of targeting capability to a database they had created on the IBM PC using PC File, a shareware database program. A flag field (a one character field denoting yes or no) for targeting was added to all records on the database. Records that needed targets were simply marked "y" in the flag field. When the time came to produce targets all flagged records were merged into a target batch file. This batch file was then processed by their sign program. Once the targets were successfully printed, a global change command cleared all of the flags in the original database. Pete Jermann St. Bonaventure University *** Conservation DistList Instance 4:48 Distributed: Thursday, March 14, 1991 Message Id: cdl-4-48-005 ***Received on Thursday, 14 March, 1991