Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
MARC standards for authority records in machine-readable format.
It also develops an independent computer housekeeping system and implements the MARC standards.
Information retrieval and cataloguing system (use of MARC standards)
Librarians had to develop software and the MARC standards for cataloguing records electronically.
The modern formats, while reflecting this heritage in their structure, are machine-readable and most commonly conform to the MARC standards.
Z39.2 (MARC standards for bibliographic records)
The project's goal was to create a data standard for describing archives, similar to the MARC standards for describing bibliographic materials.
"MARC Standards."
Morocco country code (Library of Congress MARC standards)
The first edition of the PNB was published in 1977 using simplified MARC standards, and subsequently updated ever since.
Library of Congress-Network Development and MARC Standards Office.
These standards are maintained in the Network Development and MARC Standards Office of the Library of Congress.
Following this, the next big innovation came with the advent of MARC standards in the 1960s which coincided with the growth of computer technologies - library automation was born.
Many applications can reduce a major portion of manual data entry by populating data fields based upon the entered ISBN using MARC standards technology via the Internet.
The MARC standards define three aspects of a MARC record: the record structure, the field designations within each record, and the actual content of the record itself.
In November 2010, the Network Development and MARC Standards Office of the Library of Congress began hosting VRA Core 4 in partnership with the VRA.
The standard is maintained in the Network Development and MARC Standards Office of the Library of Congress, and is being developed as an initiative of the Digital Library Federation.
Technical functionality and programming of the site was performed by a team from Network Development and MARC Standards Office which included Morgan Cundiff, Glenn Gardner, Betsy Miller, and Nathan Trail.
Other than a handful of fixed fields defined by the MARC standards themselves, the actual content a cataloger will place in each MARC field is usually governed and defined by standards outside of MARC.
Online cataloging, through such systems as the Dynix software developed in 1983 and used widely through the late 1990s, has greatly enhanced the usability of catalogs, thanks to the rise of MARC standards (an acronym for MAchine Readable Cataloging) in the 1960s.
Compared to MARC (MARC standards are the bibliographic standards used by most American libraries), DS is better designed to describe not only the content but also the historical and artifactual characteristics of this material, while using sample images to support the descriptions.