When rows of books are lined on a book holder, bookends are sometimes needed to keep them from slanting. Identification and classification During the 20th century, librarians were concerned about keeping track of the many books being added yearly to the Gutenberg Galaxy. Through a global society called the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA), they devised a series of tools including the International Standard Bibliographic Description (ISBD). ISBN number with barcode Each book is specified by an International Standard Book Number (ISBN), which is unique to every edition of every book produced by participating publishers, world wide. It is managed by the ISBN Society. An ISBN has four parts: the first part is the country code, the second the publisher code, and the third the title code. The last part is a check digit, and can take values from 09 and X (10).
Tartu, 2008. Methodology Guide. 29 pages, with Appendices 51 pages, 4 figures. Format A4. In Estonian language. UNDERGRADUATE WORK, DRAWING UP, GUIDE, PRESENTATION The Guide deals with the presentation requirements of undergraduate's technical research papers and bachelor papers. Separate chapters are about the presentation of tables and drawings, general structure and ordering of the report and contents. There are also some guidelines concerning equations and bibliographic references. Some examples are included. The Guide is topical as all the students of the establishments for higher education are expected to write various student research papers. The aim of the present work was to put up writing regulations/directions for the students to correctly execute their written works, attempting to avoid negligence, oversights, misprints, spelling, grammatical and stylistic errors and mistakes in drawing- ups.
rahvusvaheline puuete liigitus ICOM: International Council of Museums / Rahvusvaheline Muuseuminõukogu IFLA: International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions / Rahvusvaheline Raamatukoguühingute ja -asutuste Liit IKT: info- ja kommunikatsioonitehnoloogia ISAAR: International Standard Archival Authority Record ISAD: International Standard Archival Description / rahvusvahelised arhiivikirjelduse reeglid ISBD: International Standard Bibliographic Description / rahvusvahelised bibliograafilise kirjeldamise reeglid ISO: International Standard Organisation / Rahvusvaheline Standardiorganisatsioon JPEG: Joint Photographic Experts Group / Ühendatud Fotograafiaekspertide Grupp (failivorming avalikuks kasutuseks) KKK: korduma kippuvad küsimused 158 LABsTECH: Laboratories on Science and Technology for the conservation of European
Kanji Gogen Jiten, Gakut¯osha, Tokyo 1975) 87 [Unger 90] J. Marshall Unger, "The Very Idea. The Notion of Ideogram in China and Japan", Monumenta Nipponica vol. 45:4, 1990, pp. 391411 [ 95] , AERA No. 47, 95.10.23, p. 78 (K¯osuke Usukura Nihon no kanji ga kieru , AERA No. 47/1995) [Uyehara 91] Cecil H. Uyehara Japanese Calligraphy: A Bibliographic Study , University Press of America, 1991 [Vaccari 50] Oreste Vaccari and Enko Elisa Vaccari Pictorial ChineseJapanese Characters. A New and Fascinating Method to Learn Ideographs , 1st edition, O. Vaccari, Tokyo 1950. [Vochala 85] Jarom´ý Vochala Chinese Writing System, Minimal Graphic Units , Univerzita Karlova, Praha 1985 [Volk 98] Martin Volk Linguistic Databases , in John Nerborne,
publisher. It is the most concise book on cryptology ever written. Its author had the instinct for the cryptographic jugular, and he compressed into 64 pages virtually the entire known field of cryptology, including polyalphabetics with mixed alphabets, enciphered code, and cipher devices. The book is also one of the most scholarly on cryptology. Its footnotes cite most classical and many modern sources; comments such as "This is not the only historical or bibliographic error for which the Austrian writer must be reproached" show how carefully the author has studied those sources. Its author was born Jean-Guillaume-Hubert-Victor-Frangois- Alexandre-Auguste Kerckhoffs von Nieuwenhof on January 19, 1835, at Nuth, Holland. After getting degrees in letters and in science from the University of Liege, he was hired in 1863 as an instructor in modern languages at the high school at Melun, a large town 25 miles southeast of Paris