[Metadatalibrarians] Metadatalibrarians Digest, Vol 50, Issue 9
Timothy Lepczyk
tlepczyk at wustl.edu
Fri Aug 15 09:19:41 PDT 2008
Is there any interest to create a project using Google Code to share
xslt's, useful information, and troubleshooting?
Tim
Timothy A. Lepczyk
Metadata Librarian
Digital Library Services
Washington University Libraries
Campus Box 1061
One Brookings Drive
St. Louis, MO 63130
Tel: 314.935.8934
Email: tlepczyk at wustl.edu
-----Original Message-----
From: metadatalibrarians-bounces at lists.monarchos.com
[mailto:metadatalibrarians-bounces at lists.monarchos.com] On Behalf Of
Greta de Groat
Sent: Friday, August 15, 2008 10:46 AM
To: metadatalibrarians at lists.monarchos.com
Subject: Re: [Metadatalibrarians] Metadatalibrarians Digest, Vol 50,
Issue 9
metadatalibrarians-request at lists.monarchos.com wrote:
> ...
>
> I took this course http://www.amigos.org/?q=node/698 through Amigos
and
> it was great. I learned a lot that I've been able to apply directly.
> Also, lately I've been using the XSLT Cookbook 2.0 as a reference.
>
>
Does anyone offer something similar online? I'm also finding that the
XSLT instructional materials and training seem to be geared towards
other purposes and it's hard to tease out the bits that are useful for
our purposes. Which brings up the larger training issue. In chatting
with colleagues, i'm finding that that there are lots of times when
skills like this come in handy, but it's difficult to find training
geared towards our specific needs. It's not like we're going to go back
to school to learn how to be programmers at this point in our careers,
but we do need some degree of programming skills. Look at the job
advertisements for metadata librarians or digital librarians. A lot of
us who have been working as traditional librarians feel completely shut
out of these jobs because we don't have the specific skills asked for.
Speaking from a cataloger's viewpoint, we're hearing folks like Karen
Calhoun (as well as the training coming out from the Catalogers'
Learning Workshop) that our skills will be needed to manage digital
projects and do mapping and that sort of thing, and that we'll be
working with programmers. But realistically, programmers aren't always
available. It may be easy for a cataloger to transition to creating
metadata records or managing others who are creating them, but we may
also need to know how to create valid files of records, troubleshooting
XSLT tranformations, Perl scripting, OAI protocols, mashups, MySQL,
XQuery, SRU, and it looks like RDF is coming on fast. And when it
comes up, we need to know it right now. Where can we get this kind of
"just in time" training geared toward the specific needs we have? The
W3 tutorials only go so far. And asking questions on the blogs that
programmers frequent often gets you answers that you don't have the
technical expertise to even understand, much less implement.
>
> I'd really like to have a "library" of XSLT scripts used by metadata
> librarians, so we can share/pool our scripts, re-use bits and pieces
as
> needed, and share tips.
>
>
I think this is a great idea. Where could such a thing be housed? It
would also be nice to have a place to ask questions. For example, the
question i asked the other day about splitting LCSH headings. Can i
split a field at the dashes and separately tag each piece using XSLT?
(ok, it's probably too much to ask to have the pieces tagged
*correctly*, but even getting them split would be a step forward).
>
> I'd like to second/third/fourth MarcEdit. It's a great tool. It was
very
> helpful for me to be able to see the before & after of the
> transformations.
>
>
This is a great tool, but again, if you don't have troubleshooting
skills, you have no way of knowing why your transform failed.and what to
do about it. Was there a problem of some sort with the style sheet? Do
you have a namespace problem? Was the source file invalid? Was it
invalid because it was invalid Dublin Core or MODS or whatever or
because it was invalid XML? I'm sure there are other problems that i
can't even imagine.
Greta de Groat
Stanford University Libraries
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