Searching

Searching for books and other materials can be as simple or as advanced as you wish. You can simply type a word or phrase and click Go, or you can search by author, title, location, format, or other characteristics and combine search terms. You can also a search by typing a search command. You can search any resource your library provides, from the local library, library system, and network catalogs to remote libraries and subscription indexes and databases.

“Quick Searches”

“Keyword Searches”

“Phrase and Exact Phrase Searches”

“Advanced Searches”

“Boolean Searches”

“Browsing the Catalog”

“Finding Course Reserves”

“No Results?”

Quick Searches

Your library may offer either of two types of quick searching. With one type of search, you type a word or words, select a limiter if you wish, and click Go. See “Do a quick search with Limit by”. With the other type of search, you type a word or words and click a search button. See “Do a quick search with search buttons”. You may also be able to click a picture of a best-seller to launch a search for the title. See “Search from a book jacket image”.

Do a quick search with Limit by

Follow these steps to do a quick search of the library catalog from the portal page if your library offers an option to limit your search.

1. Type a word or words in the Quick Library Search box.

• If you type more than one word, your results may include materials with the words in any order. If you want to find the words in the exact order, begin the phrase with double quotation marks.

• You can type a part of a word and use a wildcard character. The wildcard character asterisk (*) represents the rest of the word. For example, if you type King*, the results include words such as King, Kingsley, and Kingford. The question mark (?) represents exactly one character. For example, wom?n finds woman and women.

• Punctuation is usually ignored. However, you can include the following characters if they immediately precede or follow a letter or number (no space between): + # % $

• If you leave this box blank and just select an option in the Limit by box (see step 2), the search is launched and your results include all the materials that fit your Limit by selection.

2. If you want to find only a certain kind of material, click the arrow symbol in the Limit by box, and select an option from the list. Your library may provide additional limiters, such as availability.

Example:
If you want to find only DVDs, select DVD in the Limit by list.

Note:
Your library may provide a digital collection that you can search and access online in the same way that you search for other materials. Materials in the collection may include images, video clips, sound files, and text files. If you want to restrict your search results to digital collection materials, select Digital Collection in the Limit by box. For information about using digital collection search results, click User’s Guide.

3. Click Go.

• If the search is successful, information about titles is displayed in the search results list.

• If no matches are found, you see a message. You may also see a Did you mean suggestion. You can click the suggestion to search for the suggested term.

Note:
You may see a more link next to the suggestion. Click the link to see more suggestions.

4. To work with the results, do any of the following actions:

• Navigate the results list and view more information about the titles.

• Narrow your search results or do related searches. .

• Add a title to a title list.

• Place a request for a title, or purchase a title.

For more information, click User’s Guide.

Do a quick search with search buttons

Follow these steps to do a quick search of the library catalog from the portal page if your library offers quick search buttons.

1. Type a word or words in the Quick library search box.

• If you type more than one word, your results may include materials with the words in any order. If you want to find the words in the exact order, begin the phrase with double quotation marks.

• You can type a part of a word and use a wildcard character. The wildcard character asterisk (*) represents the rest of the word. For example, if you type King*, the results include words such as King, Kingsley, and Kingford. The question mark (?) represents exactly one character. For example, wom?n finds woman and women.

• Punctuation is usually ignored. However, you can include the following characters if they immediately precede or follow a letter or number (no space between): + # % $

2. Click a search button to start the search.

You may see any of these buttons:

Anywhere - Looks for your text anywhere in the library catalog records.

Note:
If you type search text and press ENTER, without clicking a search button, a keyword search starts.

Subject - Looks for your text in the catalog’s subject descriptions. The results will include works about the subject.

Title - Looks for your text in the titles of works in the library catalog. The results will include works with your text in the title.

Author - Looks for your text in authors’ names in the library catalog. The results will include works by authors with your text in the author’s name.

Series - Looks for your text in series names in the library catalog. The results will include works in series, where the series name includes your text.

Fiction - Looks for your text anywhere in the library’s records for fiction titles.

Nonfiction - Looks for your text anywhere in the library’s records for nonfiction titles.

If the search is successful, information about individual titles is displayed in the search results list, or you may see a list of titles, authors, subjects, or series.

Note:
If no matches are found, you see a message. You may also see a Did you mean suggestion. You can click the suggestion to search for the suggested term. You may also see a more link next to the suggestion. Click the link to see more suggestions.

3. To work with the results, do any of the following actions:

• If you see a group of individual titles, navigate the results list and view more information about the titles. For more information, click User’s Guide.

• If you see a list of titles, authors, subjects, or series, you can browse through the list and select a list item to see the associated titles. For more information, see “Browsing the Catalog”. Once you see the associated titles, you can view more information about each one. For more information, click User’s Guide.

Search from a book jacket image

You may see a picture of a book in the center pane of the portal page. (You may have to scroll the page down to see the picture.) The pictured book is taken from current best-seller lists, and changes every time you return to or refresh the portal page. You can search for the pictured book in the library catalog, and if the title is not found, you can ask the library to purchase it. Follow these steps to search for a title from an image on the portal page.

1. Click the book jacket image to launch the search.

If the search is successful, information about the title is displayed. If the title is in the catalog but currently unavailable, you may be able to request or purchase it. Click User’s Guide for more information.

If no matches in the catalog are found, the purchase request form appears.

2. To ask the library to purchase the title, type a note in the box, if you wish, and click Send.

The request is sent to the library by e-mail, and a confirmation message is displayed.

3. Click Library Info to return to the portal page.

Keyword Searches

The online library catalog contains thousands of records that represent titles in the catalog. Within each title record, separate fields contain specific information such as the title, author, and subject. You can search these fields for keywords (text you specify).

A keyword search in any field looks in all the search fields of the library catalog to find the keyword text. Other keyword searches narrow the search for the keyword only in the author, subject, title, or other specific fields.

Search for a keyword

Follow these steps to find titles containing your text in any field, or in a selected field, of the library catalog.

1. Click Search on the menu bar, and click Keyword in the Search submenu.

2. If you want to find only a certain kind of material, click the arrow symbol in the Limit by box, and select an option from the list. Your library may provide additional limiters, such as availability.

Example:
If you want to find only DVDs, select DVD in the Limit by list.

Note:
Your library may provide a digital collection that you can search and access online in the same way that you search for other materials. Materials in the collection may include images, video clips, sound files, and text files. If you want to restrict your search results to digital collection materials, select Digital Collection in the Limit by box. For information about using digital collection search results, click User’s Guide.

Note:
If your library handles course reserves, you can limit your search to materials reserved for courses. Click the Course reserve items only check box. For more information, see “Find an item on reserve”.

3. If you want to search a database other than the library’s catalog, or select multiple databases to search, click Select Databases and choose the databases. For more information, click User’s Guide.

If you want to have the search results sorted by a category other than the one displayed, click the Sort by arrow symbol and select a sorting option.

Relevance sorts titles in the search results so that those that seem most likely to meet your needs appear first in the list. Most Popular sorts titles in the search results so that the titles most frequently checked out or requested over the past 120 days appear first in the list.

When you select a sorting option that combines two categories, the results are sorted by the first category, then by the second.

Example:
You do a keyword search by subject. If you choose to sort by Author, then Publication Date, the titles about that subject are sorted first by author, then by publication date within the group of each author’s titles.

Note:
When you choose to sort by publication date, the sorting of serial titles in the results may not be obvious since the publication date is not displayed in the brief results for these titles.

4. If you want to limit the search by library location, publication date, physical item material type, language, target audience, or collections, or set the number of titles that appear on each search results page, follow these steps:

a) Click Open Search Options.

b) Select the settings you want.

c) Click Set Search Options.

5. Type the text to search for in the Keyword search for box, keeping these tips in mind:

• Letter case, multiple spaces, and punctuation are ignored. Omit hyphens in numbers. However, you can include the following characters if they immediately precede or follow a letter or number (no space between): + # % $

• If you type more than one word, your results may include materials with the words in any order. If you want to find the words in the exact order, begin the phrase with double quotation marks.

• You can type a part of a word and use a wildcard character. The wildcard character asterisk (*) represents the rest of the word. For example, if you type King*, the results include words such as King, Kingsley, and Kingford. The question mark (?) represents exactly one character. For example, wom?n finds woman and women.

• If you leave this box blank and just select an option in the Limit by box (see step 2), the search is launched and your results include all the materials that fit your Limit by selection.

6. Click the Search by arrow symbol, and select a search field from the list:

Any Field - All the indexed information fields

Title - Title fields

Author - Author fields

Subject - Subject fields

General notes - Notes fields

Publisher - Publisher field

Genre - Forms or types of materials, such as science fiction, romance, biography, bibliography, or large type books

Series - Series fields

ISBN - International Standard Book Number, a 13-digit number that is assigned to a specific book or edition of a book when it is published. Type the wildcard character * at the beginning and end of the number you enter for best results.

ISSN - International Standard Serial Number, an 8-digit number with an optional letter code that identifies a serial title. Type the wildcard character * at the beginning and end of the number you enter for best results.

LCCN - Library of Congress Control Number. Type the wildcard character * at the beginning and end of the number you enter for best results.

Publisher No. - Publisher’s number, the unique identifier assigned to the publishers of sound recordings, video recordings, printed sheet music, and other musical works

SuDoc - Superintendent of Documents classification number (identifier) assigned to government documents. The identifier can consist of letters and numbers.

CODEN - Identifier for scientific and technical periodical titles. The six-character identifier can consist of letters and numbers.

STRN - Standard technical report number (identifier) assigned according to ISO 10444 or NISO Z39.23 standards. The identifier can consist of letters and numbers.

7. Click Go.

• If the search is successful, information about titles is displayed in the search results list.

Note:
You may find thousands of titles. You can focus searches before you launch them to yield fewer but more useful titles. Click User’s Guide for more information.

• If no matches are found, you see a message. You may also see a Did you mean suggestion. You can click the suggestion to search for the suggested term.

Note:
You may also see a more link next to the suggestion. Click the link to see more suggestions.

8. To work with the results, do any of the following actions:

• Navigate the results list and view more information about the titles.

• Narrow your search results or do related searches. .

• Add a title to a title list.

• Place a request for a title, or purchase a title.

For more information, click User’s Guide.

Phrase and Exact Phrase Searches

A phrase search looks for matches to multiple words, in the same order you typed them. You might choose a phrase search when you know the phrase is part of a specific title.

Your library may offer another type of phrase searching called an exact search. An exact search looks for the exact phrase, from beginning to end.

Examples:
For a phrase search, you select Phrase from the Search submenu. You type nancy drew in the Search for box, and select Title in the Search by box. The results include all the titles in the Nancy Drew mystery series, such as Nancy Drew, Girl Detective. No 10, The Disoriented Express. (If you had typed drew nancy you would likely get no results, because word order matters.)

For an exact search, you select Exact from the Search submenu. You type nancy drew in the Search For box, and select Title in the Search By box. You get no results, because the exact phrase search looks for all the words in the title from beginning to end, and no title is named simply Nancy Drew. An exact search is useful when you know the entire phrase precisely. You can also use the beginning part of the phrase and a wildcard character: Nancy Drew*.

Search for a phrase or an exact phrase

Follow these steps to find titles containing a specified phrase in any field or a selected field of the library catalog.

1. Click Search on the menu bar, and click Phrase or Exact in the Search submenu.

Note:
For examples showing the difference between phrase and exact phrase searching, see “Phrase and Exact Phrase Searches”.

2. If you want to find only a certain kind of material, click the arrow symbol in the Limit by box, and select an option from the list. Your library may provide additional limiters, such as availability.

Example:
If you want to find only DVDs, select DVD in the Limit by list.

Note:
Your library may provide a digital collection that you can search and access online in the same way that you search for other materials. Materials in the collection may include images, video clips, sound files, and text files. If you want to restrict your search results to digital collection materials, select Digital Collection in the Limit by box. For information about using digital collection search results, click User’s Guide.

Note:
If your library handles course reserves, you can limit your search to materials reserved for courses. Click the Course reserve items only check box. For more information, see “Find an item on reserve”.

3. If you want to search a database other than the library, or select multiple databases to search, click Select Databases and choose the databases. For more infomration, click User’s Guide.

4. If you want to have the search results sorted by a category other than the one displayed, click the Sort by arrow symbol and select a sorting option.

Relevance sorts titles in the search results so those that seem most likely to meet your needs appear first in the list. Most Popular sorts titles in the search results so that the titles most frequently checked out or requested over the past 120 days appear first in the list.

When you select a sorting option that combines two categories, the results are sorted by the first category, then by the second.

Note:
When you choose to sort by publication date, the sorting of serial titles in the results may not be obvious since the publication date is not displayed in the brief results for these titles.

5. If you want to limit the search by library location, publication date, physical item material type, language, target audience, or collections, or set the number of titles that appear on each search results page, follow these steps:

a) Click Open Search Options.

b) Select the settings you want.

c) Click Set Search Options.

6. Type the words to search for in the Phrase search for box, keeping these tips in mind:

• Letter case, multiple spaces, and punctuation are ignored. However, you can include the following characters if they immediately precede or follow a letter or number (no space between): + # % $

• Word order matters. For example, a phrase series search for drew nancy may yield no results. The same search for nancy drew lists the titles in the Nancy Drew mystery series.

Tip:
If you are searching for an author, enter the author’s name in this format: last name, first name, because that is the way the name appears in the catalog. For exact searches, use the format last name, first name* (in case there are more characters, such as a middle initial).

• You can type a part of a word and use a wildcard character. The wildcard character asterisk (*) represents the rest of the word. For example, if you type King*, the results include words such as King, Kingsley, and Kingford. The question mark (?) represents exactly one character. For example, wom?n finds woman and women.

• If you leave this box blank and just select an option in the Limit by box (see step 2), the search is launched and your results include all the materials that fit your Limit by selection.

7. Select a field to search in the Search by box:

Any Field - All the indexed information fields (phrase only)

Author - Author fields (phrase and exact phrase)

Subject - Subject fields (phrase and exact phrase)

Title - Title fields (phrase and exact phrase)

General notes - Notes fields (phrase only)

Publisher - Publisher field (phrase only)

Series - Series fields (phrase and exact phrase)

Genre - Forms or types of materials, such as science fiction, romance, biography, or large type books (phrase only)

8. Click Go.

• If the search is successful, information about titles is displayed in the search results list.

Note:
Some searches may find thousands of titles. You can focus searches before you launch them to yield fewer but more useful titles. Click User’s Guide for more information.

• If no matches are found, you see a message. You may also see a Did you mean suggestion. You can click the suggestion to search for the suggested term.

Note:
You may also see a more link next to the suggestion. Click the link to see more suggestions.

9. To work with the results, do any of the following actions:

• Navigate the results list and view more information about the titles.

• Narrow your search results or do related searches. .

• Add a title to a title list.

• Place a request for a title, or purchase a title.

For more information, click User’s Guide.

Advanced Searches

With advanced searching, you can do a complex, focused keyword search, combining up to four search terms and selecting a search field for each one. You can set search options to limit an advanced search, and you can search multiple databases. You do not need to know any special commands to do advanced searching.

You can combine search terms with the following connector words (also called logical operators, or Boolean operators):

And - Search results must match the search text before And, and the search text after And.

Example:
A search for Subject: planets And Author: Asimov finds only the works written by Asimov about planets. Any works about planets by other writers and any works by Asimov about other subjects are ignored.

Or - Search results can match the search text before Or, the search text after Or, or both search terms.

Example:
The search Any field: planets Or Author: Asimov finds all works written by Asimov, as well as all works containing the word planets in any search field.These last works include titles by Isaac Asimov and titles by other authors.

Not - Search results must match the search text before Not, but must not include the search text after Not.

Example:
A search that specifies Any field: planets Not Author: Asimov finds works containing the word planets in any search field, except works by Asimov.

Do an advanced search

With advanced searching, you can build a complex search and focus it by setting search options. Follow these steps to do an advanced search.

1. Select Search on the menu bar, and select Advanced in the Search submenu.

The Advanced search bar appears.

2. If you want to find only a certain kind of material, click the arrow symbol in the Limit by box, and select an option from the list. Your library may provide additional limiters, such as availability.

Example:
If you want to find only DVDs, select DVD in the Limit by list.

Note:
Your library may provide a digital collection that you can search and access online in the same way that you search for other materials. Materials in the collection may include images, video clips, sound files, and text files. If you want to restrict your search results to digital collection materials, select Digital Collection in the Limit by box. For information about using digital collection search results,click User’s Guide.

Note:
If your library handles course reserves, you can limit your search to materials reserved for courses. Click the Course reserve items only check box. For more information, see “Find an item on reserve”.

3. If you want to search a database other than the library, or select multiple databases to search, click Select Databases and choose the databases.

4. If you want to have the search results sorted by a category other than the one displayed, click the Sort by arrow symbol and select a sorting option.

Relevance sorts titles in the search results so that those that seem most likely to meet your needs appear first in the list. Most Popular sorts titles in the search results so that the titles most frequently checked out or requested over the past 120 days appear first in the list.

When you select a sorting option that combines two categories, the results are sorted by the first category, then by the second.

Note:
When you choose to sort by publication date, the sorting of serial titles in the results may not be obvious since the publication date is not displayed in the brief results for these titles.

5. Click the first Find Any field arrow symbol, and select a search field from the list. For search field descriptions, see “Search for a keyword”.

6. Type the search text in the empty box next to the first field, keeping in mind the following tips:

• Letter case, multiple spaces, and punctuation are ignored. Omit hyphens in numbers. However, you can include the following characters if they immediately precede or follow a letter or number (no space between): + # % $

• You can type a part of a word and use a wildcard character. The wildcard character asterisk (*) represents the rest of the word. For example, if you type King*, the results include words such as King, Kingsley, and Kingford. The question mark (?) represents exactly one character. For example, wom?n finds woman and women.

7. Click the And arrow symbol, and select one of the following operators to combine the first term with the next term:

• Select And to specify that the results must match both the first term and the next term.

• Select Or to specify that the results can match the first term, or the second term, or both.

• Select Not to specify that the results must match the first term, but must not match the second term.

8. Click the second Any field arrow symbol, select a search field from the list, and type the second term in the empty box next to the second field.

Note:
If you do not type any search terms, and just select an option in the Limit by box (see step 2), your results will include all the materials that fit your Limit by selection.

9. If you want to set another pair of search terms, repeat steps 5-8.

When the search is launched, multiple search terms are processed in pairs; then the pairs are combined.

10. If you want to set limits on your search, you can scroll the page to use any or all of these search options:

• Libraries

• Publication dates

• Detailed material types

Important:
“Detailed material types” are defined by the library for the physical items the library owns. The formats in the Limit by box on the search bar refer to general formats and types of materials associated with title entries in the catalog. You can limit a search by format or detailed material type, but not both. If you selected a format in the Limit by box when you set up your search, your format choice is canceled when you set a material type.

• Target audiences

• Collections

• Languages

• Number of titles that appear on each search results page

For more information about these options, click User’s Guide.

11. Click Perform Search.

When the search is finished, the search results list is displayed.

Important:
Search options retain the settings you make throughout your session, unless you reset them to the default values. The links Change Search Options and Reset Search Options on the search bar indicate that search options are set to values different from the default values. To reset the search options to their default values, click Reset Search Options.

• If the search is successful, information about titles is displayed in the search results list.

• If no matches are found, you see a message. You may also see a Did you mean suggestion. You can click the suggestion to search for the suggested term.

Note:
You may also see a more link next to the suggestion. Click the link to see more suggestions.

12. To work with the results, do any of the following actions:

• Navigate the results list and view more information about the titles.

• Narrow your search results or do related searches. .

• Add a title to a title list.

• Place a request for a title, or purchase a title.

For more information, click User’s Guide.

Boolean Searches

With a Boolean search, you can do complex, precise searches by typing CCL (Common Command Language) search commands. The search command can include the following parts:

• The text for which you are searching

• The access points (fields) you want to search; for example, author or title (see “Search Access Point (Field) Codes”).

• Operators (connectors) that link one part of the search with another

Example:
To find the works of author Asimov published in or after 1970, you type the following command:
AU=asimov AND PD >= 1970
AU
specifies the access point Author. The search text for this access point is asimov.
AND is the Boolean operator connecting the two conditions of this search (the author and the date).
PD specifies the access point Publication Date. The search text for this access point is 1970.
The symbol >= is the relative operator greater than or equal to.

Boolean Operators

Tip:
Advanced searching also offers Boolean operators which you can use without typing the CCL command statement. See “Advanced Searches”.

The Boolean operators And, Or, and Not combine search terms:

And - A record must match both the term before and the term after the operator to be included in the search results.

Example:
AU=isaac asimov AND TI=planets
Finds only the items written by Isaac Asimov that have the word planets in the title.

Or - A record can match either the term before or the term after the operator, or both, to be included in the search results.

Example:
AU=isaac asimov OR TI=planets
Finds all items written by Isaac Asimov and all items with the word planets in the title by any author, including Asimov.
If you have a number of terms to combine with OR, type the command this way:
AU={list}asimov, dick, ballard, lem, capek{/list}
You can insert as many terms as you need between {list} and {/list}

Not - A record must match the term before the operator, but not the term after the operator, to be included in the search results.

Example:
AU=isaac asimov NOT TI=planets
Finds only those items written by Isaac Asimov that do not have the word planets in the title.

If you use multiple operators in the same search command, use parentheses to group the operations to be performed.

To search for text that includes an operator or special character as part of the search text, put the text in double quotation marks. For example, to find the title Bud, Not Buddy, type this command:
TI = “bud not buddy”

Relative Operators

Relative operators are symbols that compare search terms:

 

Symbol

Relative Operation

=

Equal to search term

<>

Not equal to a single search term:
PD <> 1970
For a range of dates, use NOT:
NOT PD = 1970-1980.

>=

Greater than or equal to search term

>

Greater than search term

<=

Less than or equal to search term

<

Less than search term

Example:
PD >= 1987
This example finds items published in or after 1987. PD specifies the publication date access point. See “Search Access Point (Field) Codes” for access point codes.

Example:
KW=solar system AND PD < 1932
This example finds items published before 1932 that have the words “solar system” in any record field. KW specifies the keyword access point. See “Search Access Point (Field) Codes” for access point codes.

Search Access Point (Field) Codes

Use these access point codes to specify what fields to search:

 

Access Point

Description

AB

Assigned branch (requires library-specific codes)

AU

Author

AVAILABILITY

Filters search results to titles that have at least one available item. Type AVAILABILITY > 0. Example: To find Harry Potter titles with at least one available item, type TI = Harry Potter AND AVAILABILITY > 0.The AVAILABILITY access point works only for values greater than 0. (AVAILABILITY = 0 is not valid.)

BRS

Polaris bibliographic record set - control number (requires library-specific number)

BRSN

Polaris bibliographic record set - record set name (requires library-specific name)

CALL

Call number

CODEN

Identifier for scientific and technical periodicals

COL

Collection (requires library-specific codes)

DD

Dewey classification

GENRE

Genre

GOV

Superintendent of Documents classification number for government documents

ISBN

International Standard Book Number. Type the wildcard character * at the beginning and end of the number you enter for best results.

ISSN

International Standard Serial Number. Type the wildcard character * at the beginning and end of the number you enter for best results.

KW

Keyword (any field)

LA

Language (see “LA (Language) Codes”)

LC

Library of Congress classification

LCCN

Library of Congress Control Number. Type the wildcard character * at the beginning and end of the number you enter for best results.

MAT

Material type of physical items (requires library-specific codes)

NAL

National Agricultural Library classification

NLC

National Library of Canada classification

NLM

National Library of Medicine classification

NOTE

General notes

OCLC

Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) control number. Type the wildcard character * at the beginning and end of the number you enter for best results.

OCN

Other system control number (requires library-specific codes). Type the wildcard character * at the beginning and end of the number you enter for best results.

OWN

Record owner (requires library-specific codes)

PD

Publication date

PN

Publisher’s number

PUB

Publisher

SE

Series

STATB

Record status (requires library-specific codes)

STRN

Standard Technical Report Number

SU

Subject

TA

Target audience (see “TA (Target Audience) Codes”)

TI

Title

TOM

Format/Type of Material (see “TOM (Format/Type of Material) Codes”)

UDC

Universal Decimal classification

UPC

Universal Price Code number. Type the wildcard character * at the beginning and end of the number you enter for best results.

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LA (Language) Codes

These are some common codes to use with the language access point (LA) in a Boolean (CCL) search. Use the code, not the language name. For example, to specify English, type LA=ENG.

Note:
You can see a complete list of language codes at the Library of Congress Web site:
www.loc.gov/marc/languages

 

Language

Code

Language

Code

Arabic

ARA

Korean

KOR

Bosnian

BOS

Latin

LAT

Chinese

CHI

Multiple Languages

MUL

Czech

CZE

Polish

POL

Danish

DAN

Portuguese

POR

Dutch

DUT

Romanian

RUM

English

ENG

Russian

RUS

French

FRE

Serbian

SCC

German

GER

Sign

SGN

Modern Greek

GRE

Spanish

SPA

Hebrew

HEB

Ukrainian

UKR

Hindi

HIN

Vietnamese

VIE

Italian

ITA

Yiddish

YID

Japanese

JPN

 

 

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TA (Target Audience) Codes

Use these codes with the target audience (TA) access point in a Boolean (CCL) search. Use the code, not the target audience name. For example, to specify a preschool audience, type TA=a.

Note:
Not all bibliographic records include target audience information.

 

Target Audience

Code

Preschool

a

Primary school

b

Elementary and junior high school

c

Secondary (senior high) school

d

Adult

e

Specialized

f

General

g

Juvenile

j

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TOM (Format/Type of Material) Codes

Use these codes with the Type of Material access point (TOM) in a Boolean (CCL) search. Use the format/type of material code, not the name. For example, to specify DVDs, type TOM=DVD.

 

Format/Type of Material

Code

Format/Type of Material

Code

Abstract

abs

Microform

mic

Audio books

abk

Mixed materials

mix

AudioEbook

aeb

Motion picture

mot

Blu-Ray Disc

brd

Music CD

mcd

Book + Cassette

bcs

Musical sound recording

msr

Book + CD

bcd

Newspaper

new

Book

bks

Nonmusical sound recording

nsr

Braille

brl

Periodical

per

Cartographic material

cmt

Printed cartographic material

pcm

Digital media collection

dmc

Printed music

pmu

DVD

dvd

Printed or manuscript music

mus

Ebooks

ebk

Projected medium

pgr

Electronic resources

elr

Serial

ser

Globe

glb

Sound recording

rec

Kit

kit

Three-dimensional object

art

Large print

lpt

Two-dimensional nonprojected graphic

ngr

Manuscript cartographic material

mcm

Videorecording

vid

Manuscript material

mss

Videotape

vcr

Manuscript music

mmu

Visual materials

vis

Map

map

 

 

Do a search by typing a command

Follow these steps to search by typing a Common Command Language (CCL) command.

Note:
For more information about Common Command Language, see “Boolean Operators”, “Relative Operators”, and “Search Access Point (Field) Codes”.

1. Select Search from the menu bar, and select Boolean from the Search submenu.

The Boolean search bar appears.

2. If you want to have the search results sorted by a category other than the one displayed, click the Sort by arrow symbol and select a sorting option.

Relevance sorts titles in the search results so that those that seem most likely to meet your needs appear first in the list. Most Popular sorts titles in the search results so that the titles most frequently checked out or requested over the past 120 days appear first in the list.

When you select a sorting option that combines two categories, the results are sorted by the first category, then by the second.

Notes:
If your library handles course reserves, you can limit your search to materials reserved for courses. Click the Course reserve items only check box. For more information, see “Find an item on reserve”.

When you choose to sort by publication date, the sorting of serial titles in the results may not be obvious since the publication date is not displayed in the brief results for these titles.

3. If you want to set databases to search, click Select Databases, and select databases to search. For more information, click User’s Guide.

Tip:
You can set search options for the Boolean search instead of typing the command variables. For more information about search options, click User’s Guide.

4. Type the CCL command in the Boolean search for box, keeping the following tips in mind:

• Letter case is ignored.

• You can type a part of a word and use a wildcard character. The wildcard character asterisk (*) represents the rest of the word. For example, if you type King*, the results include words such as King, Kingsley, and Kingford. The question mark (?) represents exactly one character. For example, wom?n finds woman and women.

• Use parentheses to group search terms.

Example:
The following command finds works of the author Asimov which have titles with the word foundation, except audio books published after 1990:
(AU=asimov AND TI=foundation) NOT (TOM=abk and PD>1990)
Terms inside the parentheses are processed first, then the entire command.

• To include text that is ordinarily ignored, such as punctuation or Boolean command words in the search text, place the search text in quotation marks.

Example:
To find the title Bud, Not Buddy, type the following command:
TI = “bud not buddy”

5. Click Go.

When the search is finished, the search results list is displayed.

Note:
Some searches may find thousands of titles. You can focus searches to yield fewer but more useful titles. Click User’s Guide for more information.

6. To work with the results, do any of the following actions:

• Navigate the results list and view more information about the titles.

• Narrow your search results or do related searches. .

• Add a title to a title list.

• Place a request for a title, or purchase a title.

For more information, click User’s Guide.

Browsing the Catalog

When you browse the library catalog, you can type just the first few letters or numbers of your search term—an author’s name, a subject, a series name, a title, or a call number. The results list shows the portion of the catalog index that begins with the text you have typed. You can scroll through the index to see more headings or listings. You may also find useful links to related headings or listings. When you select a heading or listing in the index, you see information about the titles associated with the heading or listing.

Browse the catalog

Follow these steps to browse the catalog.

1. Select Search on the menu bar, and select Browse in the search submenu.

2. In the Search for list, select an index option (Title, Author, Subject, Series, or Call Number).

Note:
Call number options may differ depending on the library to which you are currently connected. LC (Library of Congress) and Dewey options display the corresponding call number index drawn from the bibliographic records of the catalog. LC call numbers begin with one or two alphabetic characters (letters). Dewey call numbers begin with numbers. Omit any prefix, such as Ref. Call Number displays the call number index of the individual items on the library shelves, so your results are like a virtual shelf list for the local branch. This option is available only when you are connected to a branch, not the library system.

3. In the that begins with box, type the first few letters or numbers of the the title, author’s last name, the subject word, the series name, or the call number.

4. If you want to change the number of headings or listings to display on a page, click Search options and select a number.

5. Click Go.

The results list displays the catalog headings or listings, and the number of titles associated with each heading or listing.

6. Navigate the index using one of these methods:

• Click <<Previous 10 Headings or Next 10 Headings>> to browse through the index.

• Title listings may show different types of material for the same title, such as Book, DVD, and Videotape. You can click a type of material to see the titles of that type.

Tip:
Cross-references are very useful when you browse the subject index. You can easily go to related subjects by clicking the cross-reference links.

• The headings may include cross-reference links that refer you to related headings. Click a cross-reference link to go to the portion of the index that includes the related heading.

7. Click a heading or listing to display the associated titles.

To return to the headings list, click Go Back to Browse Results at the top or bottom of the page.

Finding Course Reserves

If your library holds items reserved for courses at a school or college, you may be able to search for course reserve information and materials. You can search for course records, which list all the items on reserve for a course, and you can search for specific items on reserve. From your search results, you can locate a reserve item in the library and view its circulation status. You may be able to ask the library to hold a reserved item for you to check out.

Find a course record

Course reserve records store general information about courses that have items on reserve, and provide links to all the items on reserve for the course. Follow these steps to find course reserve records.

1. Click Search on the menu bar, and click Course Reserves in the Search submenu.

2. Type the text to search for in the Course Reserve search for box, keeping these tips in mind:

• Letter case, multiple spaces, and punctuation are ignored. Omit hyphens in numbers.

• You can type more than one word. The results have all the words in the specified field, in the same order you typed them.

• You can type a part of a word and use a wildcard character. The wildcard character asterisk (*) represents the rest of the word. For example, if you type King*, the results include words such as King, Kingsley, and Kingford. The question mark (?) represents exactly one character. For example, wom?n finds woman and women.

• If you are looking for a course name that begins with an article (A, An, The), you must include the article or use a wildcard character. If you are not sure, use the wildcard character.

Example:
To find a course named The Middle Ages, you can type the middle ages, *middle ages, or *middle. If you type middle ages, the search does not find the course.

3. Click the Search by arrow symbol, and select a search field from the list. You have the following options:

Course Name

Course Number/Section

Course Abbreviation

School/Division Name

Department Name

Instructor Name - Primary or alternate instructor (Last name, first name)

4. Click Go.

The results appear in the center area of the page.

5. To see more information about a course, click the course name, the Availability button, or the Full Display button.

6. If necessary, click the link Click here to see items from all branches to see each item associated with the course, including the item location, reserve status, and circulation status. (Click the plus sign by a location to see the listings for that location.)

7. Click Full Display to display more information about the course itself.

Find an item on reserve

When you search for items on reserve, the search results include titles that match your search criteria and have at least one associated item on reserve for a course. Detailed information about any title in the search results shows the course for which an item is reserved. You can link to course information from the search results. Follow these steps to find items on reserve.

1. Click Search on the menu bar, and select any search method except Browse in the Search submenu. See “Searching” on page 15.

2. Select (check) Course reserve items only on the search bar.

3. If you want to find only a certain kind of course reserve material, click the arrow symbol in the Limit by box, and select an option from the list.

Example:
If you want to find only DVDs, select DVD in the Limit by list.

4. Type the text to search for in the search for box, keeping these tips in mind:

• Letter case, multiple spaces, and punctuation are ignored. Omit hyphens in numbers.

• You can type a part of a word and use a wildcard character. The wildcard character asterisk (*) represents the rest of the word. For example, if you type King*, the results include words such as King, Kingsley, and Kingford. The question mark (?) represents exactly one character. For example, wom?n finds woman and women.

• If you leave this box blank and just select an option in the Limit by box (see step 3), your results will include all the course reserve materials that fit your Limit by selection.

5. Click the Search by arrow symbol, and select a search field from the list.

6. Click Go.

When the search is finished, the results are displayed in the center area of the page.

7. To see more information about the items on reserve, click the Availability button.

Availability information is displayed, but the information applies to the item when it is not on reserve.

8. To see more information about a course for which an item is reserved, including the current location of the reserved item, click Course Reserve next to the item in the Item Availability list.

The course record is displayed.

No Results?

If you searched and did not get any results, try these strategies:

• Check your search text:

• If there is a Did You Mean suggestion, click the suggestion to launch a new search.

Note:
You may also see a more link next to the suggestion. Click the link to see more suggestions.

• Click Dictionary on the search submenu to access the dictionary.

• Click Thesaurus on the search submenu to find related words (synonyms).

• Try browsing for titles, authors, or subjects. See “Browsing the Catalog”.

• Click Select Databases and choose search targets beyond the library, if your library offers them.

• If your library offers this feature, click Save Search to run your search automatically at specified intervals. Automatic searches check for items that are new since the last time the search was run. Click User’s Guide for more information.

• Get help from a librarian in person or through these features, if your library offers them:

• Click Ask Us on the toolbar to send an e-mail message to the library. Click the Live Reference Librarian link to talk with a reference librarian online.