marc is a ruby library for reading and writing MAchine Readable Cataloging (MARC). More information about MARC can be found at http://www.loc.gov/marc.
require 'marc'
# reading records from a batch file
reader = MARC::Reader.new('marc.dat', :external_encoding => "MARC-8")
for record in reader
# print out field 245 subfield a
puts record['245']['a']
end
# creating a record
record = MARC::Record.new()
record.append(MARC::DataField.new('100', '0', ' ', ['a', 'John Doe']))
# writing a record
writer = MARC::Writer.new('marc.dat')
writer.write(record)
writer.close()
# writing a record as XML
writer = MARC::XMLWriter.new('marc.xml')
writer.write(record)
writer.close()
# encoding a record
MARC::Writer.encode(record) # or record.to_marc
MARC::Record provides #to_hash
and #from_hash
implementations that deal in ruby
hash's that are compatible with the
marc-in-json
serialization format. You are responsible for serializing the hash to/from JSON yourself.
gem install marc
Or if you're using bundler, add to your Gemfile
gem 'marc'
The Marc binary (ISO 2709) Reader (MARC::Reader) has some features for helping you deal with character encodings in ruby 1.9. It is always recommended to supply an explicit :external_encoding option to MARC::Reader; either any valid ruby encoding, or the string "MARC-8". MARC-8 input will by default be transcoded to a UTF-8 internal representation.
MARC::Reader does not currently have any facilities for guessing encoding from MARC21 leader byte 9, that is ignored.
Consult the MARC::Reader class docs for a more complete discussion and range of options.
The MARC binary Writer (MARC::Writer) does not have any encoding-related features -- it's up to you the developer to make sure you create MARC::Records with consistent and expected char encodings, although MARC::Writer will write out a legal ISO 2709 either way, it just might have corrupted encodings.
When parsing MARCXML with Nokogiri as your XML parser implementation up to
and including version 1.0.2
of this gem, if the XML was badly formed, parsing
would stop and no error would be reported to your code.
If you are using a version > 1.0.2
of ruby-marc
with MRI + Nokogiri, XML
syntax errors will be thrown (and you may need to adjust your code to account
for this). JRuby users: If you are using a version later than 1.0.2
and
using Nokogiri as an XML parser with JRuby as your ruby implementation, XML
syntax errors will still be ignored unless you have Nokogiri version 1.10.2
or later.
Source code at: https://github.com/ruby-marc/ruby-marc/
Find generated API docs at: http://rubydoc.info/gems/marc/frames
Run automated tests in source with rake test
.
Developers, release new version of gem to rubygems with rake release
(bundler-supplied task). Note that one nice thing this will do is automatically
tag the version in git, very important for later figuring out what's going on.
Kevin Clarke ksclarke@gmail.com Bill Dueber bill@dueber.com William Groppe will.groppe@gmail.com Ross Singer rossfsinger@gmail.com Ed Summers ehs@pobox.com