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Library of Congress >> Search
Finding Aids (outline view)

Interpreting Search Results and
Viewing Finding Aids
- If a search term is found in more than one finding aid, and the
default button to organize by "relevancy" has been selected,
a results screen will indicate the number of finding aid sections containing
that term and will list the finding aids and the sections in which search
term/s were found. The list gives the title of the finding aid, identifies
the custodial unit within the Library of Congress that holds the collection,
and states the size of the collection and the file size of the finding aid.
- The list order is based on relevancy ranking criteria; if multiple
search terms are entered, the results screen lists finding aids which
contain those exact words first, followed by those which contain the words
near each other, then those which contain all of the words but not near each
other. Note that different sections of the same finding aid may be listed
separately based on their individual relevancy.
- If a search term is found in more than one finding aid, and the
organize by "finding aid" button has been selected, a results
screen will indicate the number of finding aid sections containing that term
and will list each finding aids with all sections in which search term/s were
found. The list gives the title of the finding aid, identifies the custodial
unit within the Library of Congress that holds the collection, and states
the size of the collection and the file size of the finding aid.
- If a search returns only one finding aid, the full text of that
finding aid will automatically be displayed in HTML format. Links to the "full
view" (unframed
HTML) and "PDF view" (viewable with Adobe
Acrobat Document) are available.
Note the following when deciding among the outline HTML with frames, full
HTML unframed, and PDF versions of the finding aids:
- The default outline version (HTML frames)
can be viewed with any Web browser that supports frames; the browser need
not support Java script. Text-only systems such as Lynx also display the finding
aids reasonably well. Finding aids are delivered in "chunks" which
speed loading search results, and provide easy navigation with and among finding
aids and search results.
- The full version (non-framed HTML) can
be viewed by any Web browser; printing the finding aid and keyword searching
within the document are facilitated. On the other hand, very large finding
aids may cause the browser to load them very slowly or cause the browser to
crash.
- The PDF view can be used to print and view the finding
aid using Adobe
Acrobat Document format. The PDF file also normally loads more quickly
than a very large HTML file.
Outline HTML (framed view)
- In the top frame, the "item list" button returns
you to the search results screen; "next" and "previous"
move you to the next or previous finding aid section in your search results.
Click "new search" to return to the search page, and "help"
to visit this page.
- In the navigation frame (left frame), clicking on the words
in the table of contents moves the view in the right content frame to that
portion of the finding aid. Clicking on a blue arrow facing right will expand
the content listing to display its subordinate parts. To collapse an expanded
listing, click on the blue arrow, which now points down.
- In the content frame (right frame), the top line lists
the number of the finding aid section returned within the search list, along
with a brief version of the collection title. Navigation buttons lead you
to the next (or previous) section of the finding aid currently being displayed,
and offer the option of selecting the full HTML view (see above). At the end
of each content frame section, an navigation button allows you to return to
the next and/or previous section, if appropriate.
- When an HTML finding aid is displayed, the terms searched will be highlighted.
These terms can be located by scrolling through the finding aid, or by performing
a new search within the document using the web browser.
Full HTML (non-framed view)
- At the top of the finding aid, the "item list" button returns
you to the search results screen; "next" and "previous"
move you to the next or previous finding aid in your search results. Click
"new search" to return to the search page.
- The next line lists the number of the finding aid returned within the search
list, along with a brief version of the collection title. Links permit you
to select either the framed HTML view or PDF view as an alternative to the
current display.
- A linking table of contents for the finding aid displays immediately after
the title page of each finding aid.
- When an HTML finding aid is displayed, the terms searched will be highlighted.
These terms can be located by scrolling through the finding aid, or by performing
a new search within the document using the web browser.
PDF View
- Printing from the PDF view provides headers and footers for a more readable
text.
- Links function within the finding aid; links to external files open within
the browser window.
- This view includes a bookmark frame which provides easy navigation within
the finding aid.
Constructing
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