-<!-- $Id: tools.xml,v 1.23 2003-05-22 16:57:28 mike Exp $ -->
+<!-- $Id: tools.xml,v 1.26 2003-06-20 10:18:05 adam Exp $ -->
<chapter id="tools"><title>Supporting Tools</title>
<para>
<token>Z_RPNQuery</token> structure. Some programmers will prefer to
construct the query manually, perhaps using
<function>odr_malloc()</function> to simplify memory management.
- The &yaz; distribution includes two separate, query-generating tools
+ The &yaz; distribution includes three separate, query-generating tools
that may be of use to you.
</para>
</para>
</sect3>
</sect2>
- <sect2 id="CCL"><title>Common Command Language</title>
+ <sect2 id="CCL"><title>CCL</title>
<para>
Not all users enjoy typing in prefix query structures and numerical
attribute values, even in a minimalistic test client. In the library
- world, the more intuitive Common Command Language (or ISO 8777) has
- enjoyed some popularity - especially before the widespread
+ world, the more intuitive Common Command Language - CCL (ISO 8777)
+ has enjoyed some popularity - especially before the widespread
availability of graphical interfaces. It is still useful in
applications where you for some reason or other need to provide a
symbolic language for expressing boolean query structures.
suggest a few short-hand notations. You can customize the CCL parser
to support a particular set of qualifiers to reflect the current target
profile. Traditionally, a qualifier would map to a particular
- use-attribute within the BIB-1 attribute set. However, you could also
- define qualifiers that would set, for example, the
- structure-attribute.
+ use-attribute within the BIB-1 attribute set. It is also
+ possible to set other attributes, such as the structure
+ attribute.
</para>
<para>
A CCL profile is a set of predefined CCL qualifiers that may be
- read from a file.
+ read from a file or set in the CCL API.
The YAZ client reads its CCL qualifiers from a file named
- <filename>default.bib</filename>. Each line in the file has the form:
+ <filename>default.bib</filename>. There are four types of
+ lines in a CCL profile: qualifier specification,
+ qualifier alias, comments and directives.
</para>
-
- <para>
- <replaceable>qualifier-name</replaceable>
- [<replaceable>attributeset</replaceable><literal>,</literal>]<replaceable>type</replaceable><literal>=</literal><replaceable>val</replaceable>
- [<replaceable>attributeset</replaceable><literal>,</literal>]<replaceable>type</replaceable><literal>=</literal><replaceable>val</replaceable> ...
- </para>
-
- <para>
- where <replaceable>qualifier-name</replaceable> is the name of the
- qualifier to be used (eg. <literal>ti</literal>),
- <replaceable>type</replaceable> is attribute type in the attribute
- set (Bib-1 is used if no attribute set is given) and
- <replaceable>val</replaceable> is attribute value.
- The <replaceable>type</replaceable> can be specified as an
- integer or as it be specified either as a single-letter:
- <literal>u</literal> for use,
- <literal>r</literal> for relation,<literal>p</literal> for position,
- <literal>s</literal> for structure,<literal>t</literal> for truncation
- or <literal>c</literal> for completeness.
- The attributes for the special qualifier name <literal>term</literal>
- are used when no CCL qualifier is given in a query.
- </para>
-
- <example><title>CCL profile</title>
+ <sect4><title id="qualifier-specification">Qualifier specification</title>
<para>
- Consider the following definition:
+ A qualifier specification is of the form:
</para>
- <screen>
- ti u=4 s=1
- au u=1 s=1
- term s=105
- ranked r=102
- </screen>
<para>
- Three qualifiers are defined, <literal>ti</literal>,
- <literal>au</literal> and <literal>ranked</literal>.
- <literal>ti</literal> and <literal>au</literal> both set
- structure attribute to phrase (s=1).
- <literal>ti</literal>
- sets the use-attribute to 4. <literal>au</literal> sets the
- use-attribute to 1.
- When no qualifiers are used in the query the structure-attribute is
- set to free-form-text (105).
+ <replaceable>qualifier-name</replaceable>
+ [<replaceable>attributeset</replaceable><literal>,</literal>]<replaceable>type</replaceable><literal>=</literal><replaceable>val</replaceable>
+ [<replaceable>attributeset</replaceable><literal>,</literal>]<replaceable>type</replaceable><literal>=</literal><replaceable>val</replaceable> ...
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ where <replaceable>qualifier-name</replaceable> is the name of the
+ qualifier to be used (eg. <literal>ti</literal>),
+ <replaceable>type</replaceable> is attribute type in the attribute
+ set (Bib-1 is used if no attribute set is given) and
+ <replaceable>val</replaceable> is attribute value.
+ The <replaceable>type</replaceable> can be specified as an
+ integer or as it be specified either as a single-letter:
+ <literal>u</literal> for use,
+ <literal>r</literal> for relation,<literal>p</literal> for position,
+ <literal>s</literal> for structure,<literal>t</literal> for truncation
+ or <literal>c</literal> for completeness.
+ The attributes for the special qualifier name <literal>term</literal>
+ are used when no CCL qualifier is given in a query.
+ <table><title>Common Bib-1 attributes</title>
+ <tgroup cols="2">
+ <colspec colwidth="2*" colname="type"></colspec>
+ <colspec colwidth="9*" colname="description"></colspec>
+ <thead>
+ <row>
+ <entry>Type</entry>
+ <entry>Description</entry>
+ </row>
+ </thead>
+ <tbody>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>u=</literal><replaceable>value</replaceable></entry>
+ <entry>
+ Use attribute. Common use attributes are
+ 1 Personal-name, 4 Title, 7 ISBN, 8 ISSN, 30 Date,
+ 62 Subject, 1003 Author), 1016 Any. Specify value
+ as an integer.
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>r=</literal><replaceable>value</replaceable></entry>
+ <entry>
+ Relation attribute. Common values are
+ 1 <, 2 <=, 3 =, 4 >=, 5 >, 6 <>,
+ 100 phonetic, 101 stem, 102 relevance, 103 always matches.
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>p=</literal><replaceable>value</replaceable></entry>
+ <entry>
+ Position attribute. Values: 1 first in field, 2
+ first in any subfield, 3 any position in field.
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>s=</literal><replaceable>value</replaceable></entry>
+ <entry>
+ Structure attribute. Values: 1 phrase, 2 word,
+ 3 key, 4 year, 5 date, 6 word list, 100 date (un),
+ 101 name (norm), 102 name (un), 103 structure, 104 urx,
+ 105 free-form-text, 106 document-text, 107 local-number,
+ 108 string, 109 numeric string.
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>t=</literal><replaceable>value</replaceable></entry>
+ <entry>
+ Truncation attribute. Values: 1 right, 2 left,
+ 3 left& right, 100 none, 101 process #, 102 regular-1,
+ 103 regular-2, 104 CCL.
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>c=</literal><replaceable>value</replaceable></entry>
+ <entry>
+ Completeness attribute. Values: 1 incomplete subfield,
+ 2 complete subfield, 3 complete field.
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ </tbody>
+ </tgroup>
+ </table>
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The complete list of Bib-1 attributes can be found
+ <ulink url="http://lcweb.loc.gov/z3950/agency/defns/bib1.html">
+ here
+ </ulink>.
</para>
<para>
- You can combine attributes. To Search for "ranked title" you
- can do
+ It is also possible to specify non-numeric attribute values,
+ which are used in combination with certain types.
+ The special combinations are:
+
+ <table><title>Special attribute combos</title>
+ <tgroup cols="2">
+ <colspec colwidth="2*" colname="name"></colspec>
+ <colspec colwidth="9*" colname="description"></colspec>
+ <thead>
+ <row>
+ <entry>Name</entry>
+ <entry>Description</entry>
+ </row>
+ </thead>
+ <tbody>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>s=pw</literal></entry><entry>
+ The structure is set to either word or phrase depending
+ on the number of tokens in a term (phrase-word).
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry><literal>s=al</literal></entry><entry>
+ Each token in the term is ANDed. (and-list).
+ This does not set the structure at all.
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row><entry><literal>s=ol</literal></entry><entry>
+ Each token in the term is ORed. (or-list).
+ This does not set the structure at all.
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row><entry><literal>r=o</literal></entry><entry>
+ Allows operators greather-than, less-than, ... equals and
+ sets relation attribute accordingly (relation ordered).
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row><entry><literal>t=l</literal></entry><entry>
+ Allows term to be left-truncated.
+ If term is of the form <literal>?x</literal>, the resulting
+ Type-1 term is <literal>x</literal> and truncation is left.
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row><entry><literal>t=r</literal></entry><entry>
+ Allows term to be right-truncated.
+ If term is of the form <literal>x?</literal>, the resulting
+ Type-1 term is <literal>x</literal> and truncation is right.
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row><entry><literal>t=n</literal></entry><entry>
+ If term is does not include <literal>?</literal>, the
+ truncation attribute is set to none (100).
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row><entry><literal>t=b</literal></entry><entry>
+ Allows term to be both left&right truncated.
+ If term is of the form <literal>?x?</literal>, the
+ resulting term is <literal>x</literal> and trunctation is
+ set to both left&right.
+ </entry>
+ </row>
+ </tbody>
+ </tgroup>
+ </table>
+ </para>
+ <example><title>CCL profile</title>
+ <para>
+ Consider the following definition:
+ </para>
+
<screen>
- ti,ranked=knuth computer
- </screen>
- which will use "relation is ranked", "use is title", "structure is
- phrase".
+ ti u=4 s=1
+ au u=1 s=1
+ term s=105
+ ranked r=102
+ date u=30 r=o
+ </screen>
+ <para>
+ Four qualifiers are defined - <literal>ti</literal>,
+ <literal>au</literal>, <literal>ranked</literal> and
+ <literal>date</literal>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ <literal>ti</literal> and <literal>au</literal> both set
+ structure attribute to phrase (s=1).
+ <literal>ti</literal>
+ sets the use-attribute to 4. <literal>au</literal> sets the
+ use-attribute to 1.
+ When no qualifiers are used in the query the structure-attribute is
+ set to free-form-text (105) (rule for <literal>term</literal>).
+ The <literal>date</literal> sets the relation attribute to
+ the relation used in the CCL query and sets the use attribute
+ to 30 (Bib-1 Date).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ You can combine attributes. To Search for "ranked title" you
+ can do
+ <screen>
+ ti,ranked=knuth computer
+ </screen>
+ which will set relation=ranked, use=title, structure=phrase.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Query
+ <screen>
+ year > 1980
+ </screen>
+ is a valid query, while
+ <screen>
+ ti > 1980
+ </screen>
+ is invalid.
+ </para>
+ </example>
+ </sect4>
+ <sect4><title>Qualifier alias</title>
+ <para>
+ A qualifier alias is of the form:
</para>
- </example>
-
+ <para>
+ <replaceable>q</replaceable>
+ <replaceable>q1</replaceable> <replaceable>q2</replaceable> ..
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ which declares <replaceable>q</replaceable> to
+ be an alias for <replaceable>q1</replaceable>,
+ <replaceable>q2</replaceable>... such that the CCL
+ query <replaceable>q=x</replaceable> is equivalent to
+ <replaceable>q1=x or w2=x or ...</replaceable>.
+ </para>
+ </sect4>
+
+ <sect4><title>Comments</title>
+ <para>
+ Lines with white space or lines that begin with
+ character <literal>#</literal> are treated as comments.
+ </para>
+ </sect4>
+
+ <sect4><title>Directives</title>
+ <para>
+ Directive specifications takes the form
+ </para>
+ <para><literal>@</literal><replaceable>directive</replaceable> <replaceable>value</replaceable>
+ </para>
+ <table><title>CCL directives</title>
+ <tgroup cols="3">
+ <colspec colwidth="2*" colname="name"></colspec>
+ <colspec colwidth="8*" colname="description"></colspec>
+ <colspec colwidth="1*" colname="default"></colspec>
+ <thead>
+ <row>
+ <entry>Name</entry>
+ <entry>Description</entry>
+ <entry>Default</entry>
+ </row>
+ </thead>
+ <tbody>
+ <row>
+ <entry>truncation</entry>
+ <entry>Truncation character</entry>
+ <entry><literal>?</literal></entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry>field</entry>
+ <entry>Specifies how multiple fields are to be
+ combined. There are two modes: <literal>or</literal>:
+ multiple qualifier fields are ORed,
+ <literal>merge</literal>: attributes for the qualifier
+ fields are merged and assigned to one term.
+ </entry>
+ <entry><literal>merge</literal></entry>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <entry>case</entry>
+ <entry>Specificies if CCL operatores and qualifiers should be
+ compared with case sensitivity or not. Specify 0 for
+ case sensitive; 1 for case insensitive.</entry>
+ <entry><literal>0</literal></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry>and</entry>
+ <entry>Specifies token for CCL operator AND.</entry>
+ <entry><literal>and</literal></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry>or</entry>
+ <entry>Specifies token for CCL operator OR.</entry>
+ <entry><literal>or</literal></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry>not</entry>
+ <entry>Specifies token for CCL operator NOT.</entry>
+ <entry><literal>not</literal></entry>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <entry>set</entry>
+ <entry>Specifies token for CCL operator SET.</entry>
+ <entry><literal>set</literal></entry>
+ </row>
+ </tbody>
+ </tgroup>
+ </table>
+ </sect4>
</sect3>
<sect3><title>CCL API</title>
<para>
A CQL query is parsed by the <function>cql_parser_string</function>
which takes a query <parameter>str</parameter>.
If the query was valid (no syntax errors), then zero is returned;
- otherwise a non-zero error code is returned.
+ otherwise -1 is returned to indicate a syntax error.
</para>
<para>
<synopsis>
<sect3 id="tools.cql.tree"><title>CQL tree</title>
<para>
- The the query string is validl, the CQL parser
+ The the query string is valid, the CQL parser
generates a tree representing the structure of the
CQL query.
</para>
index set that was not recognised.
</para>
<para>
+ The SRW error-codes may be translated into brief human-readable
+ error messages using
+ <synopsis>
+const char *cql_strerror(int code);
+ </synopsis>
+ </para>
+ <para>
If you wish to be able to produce a PQF result in a different
way, there are two alternatives.
<synopsis>
<screen>
PROTO_Z3950
- PROTO_SR
+ PROTO_GENERAL
</screen>
<para>
- If you don't care about talking to SR-based implementations (few
- exist, and they may become fewer still if and when the ISO SR and ANSI
- Z39.50 documents are merged into a single standard), you can ignore
- this field on incoming packages, and always set it to PROTO_Z3950
- for outgoing packages.
+ Use <literal>PROTO_Z3950</literal> for Z39.50 Object Identifers,
+ <literal>PROTO_GENERAL</literal> for other types (such as
+ those associated with ILL).
</para>
<para>
<para>
again, corresponding to the specific OIDs defined by the standard.
+ Refer to the
+ <ulink url="http://lcweb.loc.gov/z3950/agency/defns/oids.html">
+ Registry of Z39.50 Object Identifiers</ulink> for the
+ whole list.
</para>
<para>