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NAME

MARC::Field - Perl extension for handling MARC fields

SYNOPSIS

  use MARC::Field;

  my $field = MARC::Field->new( 245, '1', '0',
       'a' => 'Raccoons and ripe corn / ',
       'c' => 'Jim Arnosky.'
  );
  $field->add_subfields( "a", "1st ed." );

DESCRIPTION

Defines MARC fields for use in the MARC::Record module. I suppose you could use them on their own, but that wouldn't be very interesting.

EXPORT

None by default. Any errors are stored in $MARC::Field::ERROR, which $MARC::Record usually bubbles up to $MARC::Record::ERROR.

METHODS

new()

The constructor, which will return a MARC::Field object. Typically you will pass in the tag number, indicator 1, indicator 2, and then a list of any subfield/data pairs. For example:

  my $field = MARC::Field->new(
       245, '1', '0',
       'a' => 'Raccoons and ripe corn / ',
       'c' => 'Jim Arnosky.'
  );

Or if you want to add a field < 010 that does not have indicators.

  my $field = MARC::Field->new( '001', ' 14919759' );

tag()

Returns the three digit tag for the field.

indicator(indno)

Returns the specified indicator. Returns undef and sets $MARC::Field::ERROR if the indno is not 1 or 2, or if the tag doesn't have indicators.

is_control_field()

Tells whether this field is one of the control tags from 001-009.

subfield(code)

When called in a scalar context returns the text from the first subfield matching the subfield code.

    my $subfield = $field->subfield( 'a' );

Or if you think there might be more than one you can get all of them by calling in a list context:

    my @subfields = $field->subfield( 'a' );

If no matching subfields are found, undef is returned in a scalar context and an empty list in a list context.

If the tag is less than an 010, undef is returned and $MARC::Field::ERROR is set.

subfields()

Returns all the subfields in the field. What's returned is a list of list refs, where the inner list is a subfield code and the subfield data.

For example, this might be the subfields from a 245 field:

        (
          [ 'a', 'Perl in a nutshell :' ],
          [ 'b', 'A desktop quick reference.' ],
        )

data()

Returns the data part of the field, if the tag number is less than 10.

add_subfields(code,text[,code,text ...])

Adds subfields to the end of the subfield list.

    $field->add_subfields( 'c' => '1985' );

Returns the number of subfields added, or undef if there was an error.

delete_subfield()

delete_subfield() allows you to remove subfields from a field:

    # delete any subfield a in the field
    $field->delete_subfield(code => 'a');

    # delete any subfield a or u in the field
    $field->delete_subfield(code => ['a', 'u']);

If you want to only delete subfields at a particular position you can use the pos parameter:

    # delete subfield u at the first position
    $field->delete_subfield(code => 'u', pos => 0);

    # delete subfield u at first or second position
    $field->delete_subfield(code => 'u', pos => [0,1]);

You can specify a regex to for only deleting subfields that match:

   # delete any subfield u that matches zombo.com
   $field->delete_subfield(code => 'u', match => qr/zombo.com/);

delete_subfields()

Delete all subfields with a given subfield code. This is here for backwards compatability, you should use the more flexible delete_subfield().

update()

Allows you to change the values of the field. You can update indicators and subfields like this:

  $field->update( ind2 => '4', a => 'The ballad of Abe Lincoln');

If you attempt to update a subfield which does not currently exist in the field, then a new subfield will be appended to the field. If you don't like this auto-vivification you must check for the existence of the subfield prior to update.

  if ( $field->subfield( 'a' ) ) {
    $field->update( 'a' => 'Cryptonomicon' );
  }

If you want to update a field that has no indicators or subfields (000-009) just call update() with one argument, the string that you would like to set the field to.

  $field = $record->field( '003' );
  $field->update('IMchF');

Note: when doing subfield updates be aware that update() will only update the first occurrence. If you need to do anything more complicated you will probably need to create a new field and use replace_with().

Returns the number of items modified.

replace_with()

Allows you to replace an existing field with a new one. You need to pass replace() a MARC::Field object to replace the existing field with. For example:

  $field = $record->field('245');
  my $new_field = new MARC::Field('245','0','4','The ballad of Abe Lincoln.');
  $field->replace_with($new_field);

Doesn't return a meaningful or reliable value.

as_string( [$subfields] )

Returns a string of all subfields run together. A space is added to the result between each subfield. The tag number and subfield character are not included.

Subfields appear in the output string in the order in which they occur in the field.

If $subfields is specified, then only those subfields will be included.

  my $field = MARC::Field->new(
                245, '1', '0',
                        'a' => 'Abraham Lincoln',
                        'h' => '[videorecording] :',
                        'b' => 'preserving the union /',
                        'c' => 'A&E Home Video.'
                );
  print $field->as_string( 'abh' ); # Only those three subfields
  # prints 'Abraham Lincoln [videorecording] : preserving the union /'.

Note that subfield h comes before subfield b in the output.

as_formatted()

Returns a pretty string for printing in a MARC dump.

as_usmarc()

Returns a string for putting into a USMARC file. It's really only useful by MARC::Record::as_usmarc().

clone()

Makes a copy of the field. Note that this is not just the same as saying

    my $newfield = $field;

since that just makes a copy of the reference. To get a new object, you must

    my $newfield = $field->clone;

Returns a MARC::Field record.

warnings()

Returns the warnings that were created when the record was read. These are things like "Invalid indicators converted to blanks".

The warnings are items that you might be interested in, or might not. It depends on how stringently you're checking data. If you're doing some grunt data analysis, you probably don't care.

SEE ALSO

See the "SEE ALSO" section for MARC::Record.

TODO

See the "TODO" section for MARC::Record.

LICENSE

This code may be distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.

Please note that these modules are not products of or supported by the employers of the various contributors to the code.

AUTHOR

Andy Lester, <andy@petdance.com>