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catalog-collection

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빠른 설치

Claude Code

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기본
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
플러그인 명령대체
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git 클론대체
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/catalog-collection

Claude Code에서 이 명령을 복사하여 붙여넣어 스킬을 설치하세요

문서

Catalog Collection

Catalog and classify library or archival materials using standard classification systems and descriptive cataloging practices.

When to Use

  • You are organizing a personal, institutional, or community library from scratch
  • You need to assign call numbers and subject headings to new acquisitions
  • You want to create consistent catalog records for findability
  • You are reclassifying a collection that has outgrown its original system
  • You need to establish authority control for authors, series, or subjects

Inputs

  • Required: Materials to catalog (books, serials, media, archival items)
  • Required: Chosen classification system (Dewey Decimal or Library of Congress)
  • Optional: Existing catalog or inventory to integrate with
  • Optional: Subject heading authority (LCSH, Sears, or custom thesaurus)
  • Optional: MARC-compatible cataloging software (Koha, Evergreen, LibraryThing)

Procedure

Step 1: Choose the Classification System

Select a system that matches the collection's size, scope, and audience.

Classification System Comparison:
+----------------------------+-------------------------------+-------------------------------+
| Criterion                  | Dewey Decimal (DDC)           | Library of Congress (LCC)     |
+----------------------------+-------------------------------+-------------------------------+
| Best for                   | Public/school libraries,      | Academic/research libraries,  |
|                            | personal collections <10K     | collections >10K volumes      |
+----------------------------+-------------------------------+-------------------------------+
| Structure                  | 10 main classes (000-999),    | 21 letter classes (A-Z),      |
|                            | decimal subdivision           | alphanumeric subdivision      |
+----------------------------+-------------------------------+-------------------------------+
| Granularity                | Broad at top levels,          | Very specific; designed for   |
|                            | expandable via decimals       | research-level distinction    |
+----------------------------+-------------------------------+-------------------------------+
| Learning curve             | Moderate — intuitive          | Steeper — requires schedules  |
|                            | decimal logic                 | and tables                    |
+----------------------------+-------------------------------+-------------------------------+
| Browsability               | Excellent for general         | Excellent for subject-deep    |
|                            | browsing                      | collections                   |
+----------------------------+-------------------------------+-------------------------------+

Decision Rule:
- Personal or small community library: DDC
- Academic, research, or large institutional: LCC
- Mixed or uncertain: Start with DDC; migrate to LCC if collection exceeds 10K

Got: A classification system chosen that fits the collection's scale and purpose.

If fail: If neither system fits (e.g., a highly specialized archive), consider a faceted classification or custom scheme, but document the mapping to DDC or LCC for interoperability.

Step 2: Perform Descriptive Cataloging

Create a bibliographic description for each item following standard practice.

Descriptive Cataloging Elements (RDA-aligned):
1. TITLE AND STATEMENT OF RESPONSIBILITY
   - Title proper (exactly as on title page)
   - Subtitle (if present)
   - Statement of responsibility (author, editor, translator)

2. EDITION
   - Edition statement ("2nd ed.", "Rev. ed.")

3. PUBLICATION INFORMATION
   - Place of publication
   - Publisher name
   - Date of publication

4. PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
   - Extent (pages, volumes, running time)
   - Dimensions (cm for books)
   - Accompanying material (CD, maps)

5. SERIES
   - Series title and numbering

6. NOTES
   - Bibliography, index, language notes
   - Special features or provenance

7. STANDARD IDENTIFIERS
   - ISBN, ISSN, LCCN, OCLC number

Cataloging Principle: Describe what you see.
Take information from the item itself (title page first,
then cover, colophon, verso). Do not guess or embellish.

Got: A consistent bibliographic record for each item with enough detail for unique identification and discovery.

If fail: If publication information is missing (common in older or self-published works), use square brackets to indicate supplied information: [ca. 1920], [s.l.] (no place), [s.n.] (no publisher).

Step 3: Assign Subject Headings

Apply controlled vocabulary terms so users can find materials by topic.

Subject Heading Sources:
+------------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Authority                    | Use For                                  |
+------------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| LCSH (Library of Congress    | General and academic collections.        |
| Subject Headings)            | Most widely used worldwide.              |
+------------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Sears List of Subject        | Small public and school libraries.       |
| Headings                     | Simpler vocabulary than LCSH.            |
+------------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| MeSH (Medical Subject        | Medical and health science collections.  |
| Headings)                    |                                          |
+------------------------------+------------------------------------------+
| Custom thesaurus             | Specialized archives or corporate        |
|                              | collections with domain-specific terms.  |
+------------------------------+------------------------------------------+

Assignment Rules:
1. Assign 1-3 subject headings per item (more is noise, fewer is loss)
2. Use the most specific heading available (not "Science" when
   "Marine Biology" exists)
3. Apply subdivisions where helpful:
   - Topical: "Cooking--Italian"
   - Geographic: "Architecture--France--Paris"
   - Chronological: "Art--20th century"
   - Form: "Poetry--Collections"
4. Check authority files for preferred forms before creating new headings
5. Be consistent: if you use "Automobiles" don't also use "Cars" as a heading

Got: Each item has 1-3 subject headings from a controlled vocabulary, applied consistently across the collection.

If fail: If no suitable heading exists in your authority, create a local heading and document it in a local authority file. Review periodically for alignment with the main authority.

Step 4: Assign Call Numbers

Build the shelf address using the chosen classification system.

Dewey Decimal Call Number Construction:
1. Main class number (3 digits minimum): 641.5
2. Add Cutter number for author: .S65 (Smith)
3. Add date for editions: 2023
   Result: 641.5 S65 2023

DDC Main Classes:
  000 - Computer Science, Information
  100 - Philosophy, Psychology
  200 - Religion
  300 - Social Sciences
  400 - Language
  500 - Science
  600 - Technology
  700 - Arts, Recreation
  800 - Literature
  900 - History, Geography

LCC Call Number Construction:
1. Class letter(s): QA (Mathematics)
2. Subclass number: 76.73 (Programming languages)
3. Cutter for specific topic: .P98 (Python)
4. Date: 2023
   Result: QA76.73.P98 2023

Shelving Rule: Call numbers sort left-to-right,
segment by segment. Numbers sort numerically,
letters sort alphabetically, Cutters sort as decimals.

Got: Every cataloged item has a unique call number that determines its shelf position.

If fail: If two items generate the same call number, add a work mark (first letter of title, excluding articles) or a copy number to disambiguate.

Step 5: Create or Update Catalog Records

Enter the cataloged information into your catalog system.

Minimum Viable Catalog Record:
+-----------------+----------------------------------------------+
| Field           | Example                                      |
+-----------------+----------------------------------------------+
| Call Number     | 641.5 S65 2023                               |
| Title           | The Joy of Cooking                           |
| Author          | Smith, Jane                                  |
| Edition         | 9th ed.                                      |
| Publisher       | New York : Scribner, 2023                    |
| Physical Desc.  | xii, 1200 p. : ill. ; 26 cm                 |
| ISBN            | 978-1-5011-6971-7                            |
| Subjects        | Cooking, American                            |
|                 | Cookbooks                                    |
| Status          | Available                                    |
| Location        | Main Stacks                                  |
+-----------------+----------------------------------------------+

If using MARC format:
- 245 $a Title $c Statement of responsibility
- 100 $a Author (personal name)
- 050 $a LCC call number
- 082 $a DDC call number
- 650 $a Subject headings
- 020 $a ISBN

Copy cataloging: Check OCLC WorldCat or your library system's
shared database before creating original records. Someone has
likely already cataloged the same edition.

Got: Each item has a catalog record in the system with all required fields populated. Records are searchable by author, title, subject, and call number.

If fail: If cataloging software is unavailable, a well-structured spreadsheet (with consistent column headings matching the fields above) serves as a functional catalog. Migrate to proper software when available.

Step 6: Organize the Physical Shelf

Arrange materials according to their call numbers.

Shelf Organization Principles:
1. Left to right, top to bottom (like reading a page)
2. Call numbers in strict sort order:
   - DDC: 000 → 999, then Cutter alphabetically
   - LCC: A → Z, then number, then Cutter
3. Spine labels: print or write call number on spine label
   (white label, black text, 3 lines max)
4. Shelf markers: place dividers at major class boundaries
   (every 100 in DDC, every letter in LCC)
5. Shifting: leave 20-30% empty space per shelf for growth
6. Oversize: shelve items taller than 30cm in a separate
   oversize section, with "+q" prefix on call number

Shelf Reading (periodic verification):
- Walk the stacks weekly
- Check that items are in correct call number order
- Reshelve any misplaced items
- Note damaged items for repair or replacement

Got: Materials are physically arranged in call number order with clear spine labels and growth space.

If fail: If space is insufficient, prioritize high-circulation items on accessible shelves and move low-use items to compact storage, noting the location change in catalog records.

Validation

  • Classification system chosen and documented
  • Descriptive cataloging completed for all items with title, author, and publication data
  • Subject headings assigned from a controlled vocabulary (1-3 per item)
  • Call numbers assigned and unique for each item
  • Catalog records created in system or spreadsheet
  • Physical materials shelved in call number order with spine labels
  • Authority control established for consistent name and subject forms

Pitfalls

  • Inconsistent headings: Using both "World War, 1939-1945" and "WWII" defeats the purpose of controlled vocabulary. Pick one authority and stick to it
  • Over-classification: Assigning a 15-digit DDC number to a small personal library adds complexity without benefit. Match granularity to collection size
  • Ignoring copy cataloging: Creating original records when copy records exist wastes time. Always check shared databases first
  • Spine label neglect: A cataloged book without a spine label will be misshelved. Label immediately after cataloging
  • No growth space: Packing shelves to 100% capacity means every new acquisition triggers a chain of shifting. Leave room

Related Skills

  • preserve-materials — Conservation of cataloged materials to maintain their condition
  • curate-collection — Collection development decisions that determine what gets cataloged
  • manage-memory — Organizing persistent knowledge stores (digital parallel to physical cataloging)

GitHub 저장소

pjt222/agent-almanac
경로: i18n/caveman-lite/skills/catalog-collection
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agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

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