Quick reference: Searching authorities in Connexion client
OCLC Connexion interfaces
Use the Connexion client (Windows-based software).
- To open the client interface, on your desktop, click Start > Programs > OCLC Connexion or double-click the client icon ().
Multiscript support for non-Latin script variant headings (for NACO participants)
The following non-Latin scripts are supported for adding variant name headings and notes in authority records and can be used for constructing search terms: Arabic, Chinese, Cyrillic, Greek, Hebrew, Japanese, and Korean. You can enter scripts in the client by installing languages and keyboards using Windows® settings. See documentation for the client for details.
Search and browse authority records
Search - Client
Open the Authorities Search window.
- To open the Authorities Search window in the client, navigate to Authorities > Search > LC Names and Subjects, click the Search LC Names and Subjects button (), or press <Shift><F2>.
- For a command line search: In the Authorities Search window, enter a complete search or browse string in correct search syntax in the Command Line Search field for any of these search types:
- Numeric search
- Text keyword search
- Derived search
- Text browse (scan an index)
Or For a guided search: In the Authorities Search window, use fields and lists in the Keyword/Numeric area to enter search term(s) and select index(es) and/or Boolean operators. The system creates the correct search syntax from your entries. Enter one of these search types:- Numeric search
- Text search using keywords
Note: You must open a different window for guided browsing. See next procedure. See Command line versus guided searching and browsing for more details. - (Optional) Select a check box to show See and/or See Also references in search results.
- Click OK or press <Enter>.
Guided browsing - Client
- To open the Authorities Browse window in the client, navigate to Authorities > Browse > LC Names and Subjects, click the Browse LC Names and Subjects button (), or press <Alt><F2>.
- Enter a browse term in the Browse for field. Do not precede the term with the Scan (sca) command or an index label.
- Select an index from the drop-down list.
- (Optional) Enter a subheading term in the Expanded term field to limit results to headings that contain the term in a subheading.
- Click OK or press <Enter>.
Batch process searches - Client only
Construct and save command line searches and process them all at once in a batch (available in the client only):
- In the Connexion client, navigate to Batch > Enter Authority Search Keys or press <Alt><B><A>.
- Select a local file for storing the searches you enter. The default file is DefaultAuth.auth.db.
- Enter any search type in the Query field, except browse terms, using full search syntax in the same way you construct a command line search, using full search syntax.
- Click Add or press <Enter>.
- Repeat steps 3 and 4 to enter more searches.
Note: There is no limit on the number of searches you can enter. However, the maximum number of search results you can download is 150 records. You can set the number of results to download, in the range 1 to 150, in Tools > Options > Batch tab.
- When finished, click Save.
- When ready, click Batch > Process Batch to run batch processing.
Command line versus guided searching and browsing
Command line search or browse
Experienced searchers can use the Command Line Search box to enter a complete search or browse string in correct search syntax (i.e., enter all parts of a search or browse query in a single string in correct order and with correct spacing).
- To use the Command Line Search field in the client, navigate to Authorities > Search > LC Names and Subjects.
- In the Command Line Search field of the Search window, enter a keyword text or numeric search, a derived search, or a browse query in full syntax, following these guidelines:
- Precede a browse term with the Scan command (sca) followed by a space, but use no command for a search (e.g. sca pn:vivaldi (browse) but pn:vivaldi (search)).
- Precede a search or browse term with a 2-letter index label followed by a colon (:). See the pn: in the example above.
- The index label and colon are optional for a derived search if it is the first or only search term.
- Example: To search for the name heading Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, enter moza,wol,a or pd:moza,wol,a.
- Exception: Corporate/conference/geographic names require a preceding equal sign (=) or index label.
- Example: To search search for the corporate name heading Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory, enter =envi,mon,s or cd:envi,mon,s.
- (Optional) Combine searches in the Command Line Search field by entering Boolean operators (and, or, not) between them. Do not combine browse queries. See Boolean operators for more details (e.g., su:carillon or su:bells).
- (Optional) Use the truncation symbol (*) and wildcard symbols (# or ?) in search terms in place of characters to retrieve different forms of a word. Do not use truncation or wildcards for browsing. Do not use them in non- Latin script searches.
- Required if you use these symbols: Precede a symbol by at least three characters (e.g., ti:librar*). See Truncation and wildcards for more details.
Note: For batch searching in the Connexion client, enter complete search strings as you do for the Command Line Search field. You cannot batch-process browse queries.
Guided search
Searchers who do not want or need to remember index labels and syntax rules can use guided searching and browsing (that is, you enter the parts of a search and let the system create the correct syntax).
- To enter a guided numeric or keyword search in the client, navigate to Authorities > Search > LC Names and Subjects.
- In the Keyword/Numeric Search area of the Search window, enter a keyword text or numeric search term in any Search for field.
- (Optional) Combine search terms.
- To search for multiple terms in a single index:
- Enter the terms in a single Search for field and combine them with Boolean operators (and, or, not) (e.g., pn:woolf, Virginia and ti:between the acts).
- Select an index from the list adjacent to the Search for field.
- To search for multiple terms in multiple indexes:
- Enter up to five search terms in separate Search for fields.
- Select an index from the list to the right of each term.
- Select and, or, or not from lists next to each additional Search for field following the first.
- To search for multiple terms in a single index:
- (Optional) Use truncation and wildcard symbols in search terms as described in step 4 for command line searching.
Note: You cannot enter a derived search or a browse query in the Keyword/Numeric Search area.
Guided browsing
- To enter a guided browse query in the client, navigate to Authorities > Browse > LC Names and Subjects.
- Follow the instructions for Guided browsing - Client.
Nota
The workflows below provide search examples in command line format (i.e., in full search syntax)
Guidelines and examples for search types
Numeric search
Directrices
- ARN: Enter all digits. Leading zeroes are optional.
- LCCN: Enter the year part of the LCCN (2 or 4 digits) and control number, with or without the hyphen. Leading zeroes in the control number are optional. Include or omit an alphabetic prefix.
- ISBN: Enter 10 digits or 13 digits, no hyphens (ISBNs are stored as both 10- and 13-digit numbers). Leading zeroes are optional. Enter x (final character) in upper- or lowercase.
- ISSN: Enter 4 digits, hyphen, 4 digits. Enter final x in upper- or lowercase.
- Numeric indexes are unavailable for browsing.
- Use the LCCN or the ARN for the most precise search.
Ejemplos
Índice | Example |
---|---|
ARN (an:) | an:01450635 or an:1450635 |
LCCN (ln:) |
|
ISBN (bn:) | bn:188610111 or bn:978188610111 |
ISSN (in:) | in:9999-4444x |
Text keyword search
Directrices
- Search terms can be words or phrases.
- Omit prepositions and articles.
- If you enter diacritics, the system removes them automatically.
- Do not enter subfield codes.
- Include the comma between the parts of a name.
- All keyword indexes are also used for browsing.
Ejemplos
Índice | Example Keyword search | Example Browse query |
---|---|---|
Children's Subjects | sj:fantasy | sca sj:fantasy |
Corporate/Conference Names | cn:habitat for humanity | sca cn:habitat for humanity |
Genre | ge:fiction films | sca ge:fiction films |
Geographic Names | gg:fort victoria, zimbabwe | sca gg:fort victoria, zimbabwe |
LC Names | nw:corgi | sca nw:corgi |
LCSH | su:cattle | sca su:cattle |
Personal Name | pn:pascal, blaise | sca pn:pascal, blaise |
Subdivision Headings | sb:criticism | sca sb:criticism |
Title | ti:creative mind | sca ti:creative mind |
Topicals | sp:literary | sca sp:literary |
Browse (scan an index)
How browsing differs from searching
- Searching matches a term anywhere in indexed fields/subfields.
- Browsing matches your term or phrase exactly, character by character, left to right, starting with the first character in an indexed field/subfield.
Directrices
- In the Command Line Search box, include the Scan command (sca) and an index label followed by a colon.
- Example: sca pn:monet, claude
Exclude the command, index label, and colon from guided browsing.
- Example: sca pn:monet, claude
- Guided browsing matches all forms (root) of a heading or you can also enter a subheading (expanded) term to find instances of the heading that have the specified subheading term.
- Example: For guided browsing, enter the heading roads in the Browse for field and then enter construction in the Expanded Term field.
- For a personal name, include the comma after the surname.
- Example: sca pn:mozart, wolfgang amadeus
- Omit initial articles (a, an, the, and non-English equivalents).
- If you enter diacritics, special characters, and/or subfield codes, the system removes them before processing the browse query.
- Browsing provides automatic truncation. Type only as many characters or words as needed.
- Example: For the title Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, enter sca ti:let us now praise
- Do not combine terms or use truncation or wildcards for browsing.
- If you are unsure of an exact browse term, use a keyword search.
See the Text keyword search examples for more examples.
Derived search
How to construct a derived search
Enter a specific number of initial characters from the words in a name, title, or subject, combined with commas in a pattern unique to each index, as shown in this table:
Derived index (label) | Number of characters/pattern | Ejemplos |
---|---|---|
Personal Name (pd:) | 4,3,1 | Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus Enter moza,wol,a or pd:moza,wol,a |
Corporate/Conference/Geographic Name (cd:) | =4,3,1 | American Chemical Society Enter =chem,soc, or cd:chem,soc, Note:
|
Title (td:) | 3,2,2,1 | Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Enter adv,of,hu,f or td:adv,of,hu,f |
Subject (sd:) | 5,3 | civil rights Enter civil,rig or sd:civil,rig |
Directrices
- Even if a search term has fewer words than required for an index pattern, enter all required commas.
- Example: For the title Mrs. Dalloway, enter mrs,da,, or td:mrs,da,,.
- For a corporate, conference, or geographic name, you must precede the search term with the index label or an equal sign (=).
- Do not use non-Latin scripts in derived searches.
- Enter derived searches in the Command Line Search field only.
- Omit stopwords in corporate, conference, and geographic names if they appear in the first position. Include them otherwise.
Stopwords for Corporate/Conference/Geographic Names indexes
& a American an and Association at Australia Board Bureau Canada College Colloquium Commission Committee |
Commonwealth Conference Congress Council Department Dept. Division East Federal for France Great Britain House in India |
Institute International Joint Meeting National North of Office on Organization Parliament School Seminar Senate Society |
South State Subcommittee Symposium the U.N. U. N. United Nations United States University U.S. U. S. West Workshop All names of U.S. states |
Guidelines for stopwords
- Omit stopwords from the first segment of a corporate, conference, or geographic name (cd: or gg: indexes), but include them in other segments.
- Use a stopword if it is the only word.
- Use all stopwords if a search term consists of only stopwords.
Examples of searches that omit or include stopwords
Search for ... | Enter ... |
---|---|
Great Britain Forestry Commission (Omit “Great Britain"—in first position.) |
cd:fore,com, |
African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (Include “Commission” and “on”—not in first position.) |
cd:afri,com,o |
India (Include the word, even though it is in first position—it is the only word.) |
cd:indi,, |
Indiana State University (Use all words—they are all stopwords.) |
cd:indi,sta,u |
Boolean operators, truncation, and wildcards
Operadores booleanos
Enter Boolean operators to combine full searches in the Command Line or enter in a single guided search box to combine multiple terms to search a single index.
Operador | What the operator does |
---|---|
and | Finds records containing all terms anywhere in a record.
|
or | Finds records containing any single term or all terms.
|
not | Excludes records containing the term that follows not.
|
Truncation and wildcards
Use the truncation symbol in search terms to retrieve variant endings.
Symbol | How to use |
---|---|
* (asterisk) | Add to the end of a word to retrieve variant endings.
|
Use wildcard symbols in search terms to mask characters or find variant spellings.
Symbol | How to use |
---|---|
# | Add to the end of a word to retrieve variant endings.
|
? | Replace multiple unknown characters in a word
|
?n | Specify the number of characters to replace (where n = the number of characters, 1-9)
|
Directrices
- Do not use Boolean operators with browse terms.
- Precede truncation and wildcard symbols by at least 3 characters. (e.g., The expressions as* and e?er do not work.)
- Do not use truncation or wildcards in browse terms or in non-Latin script searches.
- As an alternative to using truncation and wildcard symbols in search terms, use browsing instead for automatic truncation.
Indexes
Numeric search indexes
The following numeric search indexes cannot be used for browsing:
Index name (label) | Fields and subfields indexed |
---|---|
ARN (an:) | 001 |
LCCN (ln:) | 010 a z 667 a (see note following this table) |
ISBN (bn:) | 020 a z |
ISSN (in:) | 022 a y z |
ISSN-L (ik:) | 022 l m |
Note: Indexing field 667 for LCCNs helps identify personal names that were previously in undifferentiated authority records, but were subsequently established as separate authority records, using unique control numbers. The index matches only the word undifferentiated (in upper- or lowercase) in field 667. LCCNs in field 667 are not compared or verified with LCCNs in field 010.
Text indexes (keyword search and browse)
The following indexes are available for both searching and browsing, unless noted:
Index name (labels) |
Fields indexed | Subfields indexed (keyword) |
Subfields indexed (browse—root) |
---|---|---|---|
Cartographic Data (cm:) | 034 | d e f g z | No aplicable |
Cataloging source (cs:) | 040 | a c d | No aplicable |
Children’s Subjects (sj:) | 046 | f g | f g |
100, 400, 500, 700 | a b c d e f h j k l m n o p q r s t v x y z | a b c d f h j k l m n o p q r s t | |
110, 410, 510, 710 | a b c d e f g h j k l m n o p q r s t v x y z | a b c d f g h j k l m n o p r s t | |
111, 411, 511, 711 | a b c d e f g h j k l m n o p q r s t v x y z | a b c d f g h j k l m n p q s t | |
130, 430, 530, 730 | a b c d e f g h j k l m n o p q r s t v x y z | a d f g h k l m n o p r s t | |
150, 450, 550, 750 | a b v x y z | a b | |
151, 451, 551, 751 | a v x y z | a | |
180, 480, 580, 780 | v x y z | v x y z | |
181, 481, 581, 781 | v x y z (781 z) | v x y z (781 z) | |
182, 482, 582, 782 | v x y z | v x y z | |
185, 485, 585, 785 | v x y z | v x y z | |
Corporate/ Conference Names (cn: or co:) |
110, 410, 510, 710 | a b c d e n | a b c d e n |
111, 411, 511, 711 | a c d e j n q | a b c d e j n q | |
151, 451, 551, 751 | a | a | |
Descriptive Rules (dx:) | 040 | e | No aplicable |
Entity Attribute (en:) | 046 | f g k l s t | No aplicable |
368 | a b c | No aplicable | |
370 | a b c e f g s t | No aplicable | |
371 | a b c d e m s t z | No aplicable | |
372, 373, 374, 375 | a s t | No aplicable | |
376 | a b c s t | No aplicable | |
377 | a l | No aplicable | |
378 | q | No aplicable | |
380, 381, 384 | a | No aplicable | |
382 | a b d p v | No aplicable | |
383 | a b c d e | No aplicable | |
Género (ge:) | 155, 455, 555, 755 | a v x y z | a |
Geographic Names (gg:) | 151, 451, 551, 751 | a v x y z | a |
Palabra clave (kw:) | All variable fields | All subfields | No aplicable |
LC Names (nw:) See Note 1 below. |
046 | f g | f g |
100, 400, 500, 700 | a b c d f h j k l m n o p q r s t | a b c d e j q | |
110, 410, 510, 710 | a b c d f g h k l m n o p r s t | a b c d e n | |
111, 411, 511, 711 | a c d e f g h j k l n p q s t | a c d e j n q | |
151, 451, 551, 751 | a | a | |
130, 430, 530, 730 | a d f g h k l m n o p r s t | a d g h k l m n o p r s t | |
LCSH (su:) See Note 2 below. |
046 | f g | f g |
100, 400, 500, 700 | a b c d e f h j k l m n o p q r s v x y z | a b c d f h j k l m n o p q r s t | |
110, 410, 510, 710 | a b c d e f g h j k l m n o p q r s v x y z | a b c d f g h j k l m n o p r s t | |
111, 411, 511, 711 | a b c d e f g h j k l m n o p q r s v x y z | a b c d e f g h j k l n p q s t | |
130, 430, 530, 730 | a b c d e f g h j k l m n o p q r s v x y z | a d f g h k l m n o p r s t | |
150, 450, 550, 750 | a b v x y z | a b | |
151, 451, 551, 751 | a v x y z | a | |
180, 480, 580, 780 | v x y z | v x y z | |
181, 481, 581, 781 | v x y z (781 z) | v x y z (781 z) | |
182, 481, 582, 782 | v x y z | v x y z | |
185, 485, 585, 785 | v x y z | v x y z | |
Notas (nt:) | 663, 664 | a b t | No aplicable |
665, 666, 667, 675, 688 |
a | No aplicable | |
670, 678 | a b u | No aplicable | |
680, 681, 682 | a i | No aplicable | |
Personal Names (pn:) | 046 | f g | f g |
100, 400, 500, 700 | a b c d e j q | a b c d e j q | |
Relationship (rx:) | 100, 400, 500, 700 | e j | No aplicable |
110, 410, 510, 710 | e | No aplicable | |
111, 411, 511, 711 | j | No aplicable | |
400, 410, 411, 430, 450, 451, 455, 480, 481, 482, 485 | i 4 | No aplicable | |
500, 510, 511, 530, 550, 551, 555, 580, 581, 582, 585 | i 4 | No aplicable | |
Subdivision Headings (sb:) | 180, 480, 580, 789 | v x y z | v x y z |
181, 481, 581, 781 | v x y z (781 z) | v x y z (781 z) | |
182, 481, 582, 782 | v x y z | v x y z | |
185, 485, 585, 785 | v x y z | v x y z | |
Titles (ti:) See Note 3 below |
100, 400, 500, 700 | f g h k l m n o p r s t | f g h k l m n o p r s t |
110, 410, 510, 710 | d f g h k l m n o p r s t | d f g h k l m n o p r s t | |
111, 411, 511, 711 | d f g h k l n p s t | d f g h k l n p s t | |
130, 430, 530, 730 | a d f g h k l m n o p r s t | a d f g h k l m n o p r s t | |
031 | d t | d t | |
Topicals (sp:) | 150, 450, 550, 750 | a b v x y z | a b |
Note 1: The The LC Names index includes all Library of Congress authority records with the 010 prefix starting with n* (n, nb, no, nr, ns). Note 2: The LCSH index contains all Library of Congress authority records with the 010 prefix sh and sj, as well as X51 headings from authority records with the 010 prefix starting with n* (n, nb, no, nr, ns). Note 3: Subfields for the Titles index for tags X00, X10, X11 are the reverse of subfields indexed for personal, corporate, and conference name indexes. In these notes, X represents any number. |
Derived search indexes
The following derived search indexes are unavailable for browsing:
Index name (label) (pattern) | Fields indexed | Subfields indexed |
---|---|---|
Personal Name (pd:) (4,3,1) | 100, 400, 500, 700 | a |
Corporate, Conference, or Geographic Name (cd:) (=4,3,1) | 110, 410, 510, 710 | a b |
111, 411, 511, 711 | a e | |
151, 451, 551, 751, 781 | a v x y z | |
Title (td:) (3,2,2,1) | 100, 400, 500, 700 | f g h k l m n o p r s t |
110, 410, 510, 710 | d f g h k l m n o p r s t | |
111, 411, 511, 711 | d f g h k l n p s t | |
130, 430, 530, 730 | a d f g h k l m n o p r s t | |
Subject (sd:) (5,3) | 150, 450, 550, 750 | a v x y z |
180, 480, 580, 780 | v x y z | |
181, 481, 581, 781 | v x y z (781 z) | |
182, 482, 582, 782 | v x y z | |
185, 485, 585, 785 | v x y z |