source: trunk/greenorg/macros/english.dm@ 7837

Last change on this file since 7837 was 7837, checked in by mdewsnip, 20 years ago

Added the "National Sciences Digital Library, VNU-HCM" site to the examples page.

  • Property svn:keywords set to Author Date Id Revision
File size: 71.6 KB
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1package Global
2
3_t17_ {
4The downloads available from the <a href="_httppagex_(download)">download</a> page
5are hosted by <a href="http://sourceforge.net">Sourceforge</a>.
6}
7
8
9_textimagepref_ {Preferences page}
10
11_textimagedocs_ {Docs}
12_textimagedownload_ {Download}
13_textimageexamples_ {Examples}
14
15# These are not translated because the pages themselves are not translated
16_textimagefaq_ {FAQ}
17_textimagesupport_ {Support}
18
19
20#------------------------------------------------------------
21# icons
22#------------------------------------------------------------
23
24## "PREFERENCES" ## top_nav_button ## cpref ##
25_httpiconcprefof_ {_httpimg_/cprefof.gif}
26_httpiconcprefon_ {_httpimg_/cprefon.gif}
27
28
29## "docs" ## nav_bar_button ## tdocs ##
30_httpicontdocsof_ {_httpimg_/docsof.gif}
31_httpicontdocson_ {_httpimg_/docson.gif}
32
33## "download" ## nav_bar_button ## tdl ##
34_httpicontdlof_ {_httpimg_/dlof.gif}
35_httpicontdlon_ {_httpimg_/dlon.gif}
36
37## "examples" ## nav_bar_button ## texmpl ##
38_httpicontexmplof_ {_httpimg_/exmplof.gif}
39_httpicontexmplon_ {_httpimg_/exmplon.gif}
40
41# These are not translated because the pages themselves are not translated
42
43## "faq" ## nav_bar_button ## tfaq ##
44_httpicontfaqof_ {_httpimg_/faqof.gif}
45_httpicontfaqon_ {_httpimg_/faqon.gif}
46
47## "support" ## nav_bar_button ## tsup ##
48_httpicontsupof_ {_httpimg_/supof.gif}
49_httpicontsupon_ {_httpimg_/supon.gif}
50
51
52#######################################################################
53
54package home
55
56_t1_ {About Greenstone}
57
58_t2_ {
59Greenstone is a suite of software for building and distributing digital
60library collections. It provides a new way of organizing information and
61publishing it on the Internet or on CD-ROM. Greenstone is produced by the
62<b>New Zealand Digital Library Project</b> at the <b>University of
63Waikato</b>, and developed and distributed in cooperation with
64<b>UNESCO</b> and the <b>Human Info NGO</b>. It is <b>open-source,
65multilingual</b> software, issued under the terms of the GNU General Public
66License.
67}
68
69_namur_{
70The Greenstone project is the seventh recipient of the biennial
71<a href="http://www.info.fundp.ac.be/~jbl/IFIP/award.html">Namur award</a>, which
72recognizes recipients for raising awareness internationally of the social
73implications of information and communication technologies.
74}
75
76_t3_ {
77UNESCO is running regional training workshops on the use of Greenstone.
78In 2003 they were in
79<a href="_httppagex_(report)">Bangalore, India</a> in August; Dakar,
80Senegal in September, and <a href="_httppagex_(reportSuva)">Suva, Fiji</a> in November.
81}
82_t3.save_ {<a href="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=12123&release_id=202808">Here</a> is a package of all material that we prepared for the Suva workshop: lectures, labs, documents, test files, etc. It focuses on building collections with the Librarian Interface.
83Please feel free to use it for learning -- or teaching! -- Greenstone.
84}
85
86_cdrom_ {
87The UNESCO CD-ROM containing Greenstone 2.50, plus all documentation (English/French/Spanish/Russian), plus 11 documented example collections, plus associated software like Java and ImageMagick, is available at no charge from Jean-Claude Dauphin ([email protected]) or Susannah Farey ([email protected]). <a href="_httppagex_(bugs)">Here</a> is a list of known issues, with hints on how to sidestep them.
88}
89
90_gsdl251_ {
91<a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/greenstone/">Download</a> Greenstone v2.51, which includes numerous small bug fixes to v2.50, new LaTeX
92and MP3 plugins, collection-specific macrofiles, the ability to do string
93comparisons ("eq" and "ne") in {If\} statements, and "I'm feeling lucky"
94functionality (like Google). It also contains an upgraded version of pdftohtml
95for better PDF processing. Like 2.50, it includes the Greenstone Librarian Interface (GLI),
96an easy-to-use frontend to Greenstone's collection-building
97functionality.
98}
99
100_upgradeyourgreenstoneinstallation_ {
101If you are running the Local Library server on Windows, you can <a href="http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/greenstone/gsdl-2.50-locallibrary-to-2.51-upgrade.zip?download">download</a> a small package to upgrade from Greenstone 2.50 to 2.51.
102}
103
104_glp251_ {
105<a href="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=12123&package_id=89483">Download</a> all the language interfaces available for the
106Greenstone digital library software (version 2.51 only): the four "core" languages English, French, Spanish, Russian; and interfaces for Arabic, Armenian, Chinese, Croatian, Czech, Dutch,
107Farsi, Finnish, Galician, Georgian, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi,
108Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kannada, Kazakh, Maori, Portuguese
109(Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Serbian, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian.
110}
111
112_support_ {
113We have reorganised our <a href="_gwcgi_?a=p&p=support">Support page</a>, and included some new information about donations to the Greenstone project, contract research and commercial support.
114}
115
116_t4_ {
117<a
118href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/greenstone/">Download</a> Greenstone v2.50.
119The Greenstone Librarian Interface (GLI),
120an easy-to-use frontend to Greenstone's collection-building
121functionality, has been extensively user tested and debugged.
122If you haven't already tried it, now is a great
123time to do so (and if you ran into problems before, please try this new version).
124Greenstone 2.50 also includes the new (and already very popular) PagedImgPlug plugin for
125processing sequences of page images, a new classifier that displays a
126collage of the images in a collection, provision for incremental updates
127of Greenstone in the future, and many other bug fixes and improvements.
128}
129
130_t5_ {
131One of the trickier parts of using Greenstone is coming up with a
132configuration file for your collection. To help learn how to do it,
133several fully-documented example collections have been placed at <a
134href="http://nzdl.org">nzdl.org</a> which explain, on the collection home page, just how they have been put together.
135}
136
137_t6_ {
138The complete Greenstone interface, and all documentation, is available in
139<b>English</b>, <b>French</b>, <b>Spanish</b>, <b>Russian</b> and
140<b>Kazakh</b>. Greenstone also has interfaces in many <a
141href="_httppagex_(intn)">other languages</a>. We are looking for <a
142href="_httppagex_(intn)#maintainers">volunteers</a> to add new language
143interfaces and help maintain existing ones.
144}
145
146_t7_ {
147The aim of the Greenstone software is to empower users, particularly in universities,
148libraries, and other public service institutions, to build their own
149digital libraries. Digital libraries are radically reforming how
150information is disseminated and acquired in UNESCO's partner communities
151and institutions in the fields of education, science and culture around the
152world, and particularly in developing countries. We hope that this
153software will encourage the effective deployment of digital libraries to
154share information and place it in the public domain. Further information
155can be found in the book <a href="http://www.nzdl.org/howto">How to build a
156digital library</a>, authored by two of the group's project members.
157}
158
159_t8_ {
160Also, the collect.cfg files for many of the collections at <a
161href="http://www.nzdl.org">www.nzdl.org</a> have been made available <a
162href="_httppagex_(colcfg)">here</a>.
163}
164
165_t9_ {
166This software is developed and distributed as an international cooperative
167effort established in August 2000 among three parties.
168}
169
170_t10_ {
171New Zealand Digital Library Project at the University of Waikato
172}
173
174_t11_ {
175Greenstone software grew out of this project, and this initiative has been
176endorsed by the Communication Sub-Commission of the New Zealand National
177Commission for UNESCO as part of New Zealand's contribution to UNESCO's
178programme.
179}
180
181_t12_ {
182United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
183}
184
185_t13_ {
186The dissemination of educational, scientific and cultural information
187throughout the world, and particularly its availability in developing
188countries, is central to UNESCO's goals as pursued within its
189intergovernmental Information for All Programme, and appropriate,
190accessible information and communication technology is seen as an important
191tool in this context.
192}
193
194_t14_ {
195The Human Info NGO, based in Antwerp, Belgium
196}
197
198_t15_ {
199This project works with UN agencies and other NGOs, and has established a
200worldwide reputation for digitizing documentation of interest to human
201development and making it widely available, free of charge to developing
202nations and on a cost-recovery basis to others.
203}
204
205_t16_ {
206If you download Greenstone and install it with standard demonstration
207collections, or if you install it from the Greenstone CD-ROM, it will look
208exactly like <a
209href="http://www.nzdl.org/cgi-bin/democols/library">this</a>.
210}
211
212
213#######################################################################
214
215package download
216
217_t18_ {Download Greenstone}
218
219_t19_ {
220Greenstone is open-source software, distributed under the terms of the <a
221href="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html">GNU General Public
222License</a>. It runs on Windows and Unix, and both source code and binaries
223are available for download. It is fully documented in English, French,
224Spanish and Russian.
225}
226
227_t20_ {
228Select the Greenstone distribution you require from the list below. Each
229distribution provides a complete interface in English, French, Spanish and
230Russian.
231}
232
233_t21_ {
234Each distribution also includes the "Greenstone Librarian
235Interface", a graphical tool for building digital libraries. It gives
236you access to Greenstone's functionality from an easy-to-use 'point and
237click' interface. To use this tool you will need a suitable Java Run-time
238Environment, which you can download via <a
239href="http://java.sun.com/j2se/">here</a> -- the latest version is currently 1.4.2 (then choose the JRE, not the SDK).
240}
241
242_t22_ {Windows distribution}
243
244_t23_ {
245This is the distribution you want if you're going to run Greenstone under
246any 32 bit Windows environment (that is, Windows 95/98/Me/NT/2000/XP etc.).
247}
248
249_t24_ {
250Note that Greenstone will also run on 16 bit Windows (that is, Windows
2513.1/3.11). The installer program used by this distribution will not work on
252these versions of Windows however. Please <a
253href="_httppagex_(support)">contact us</a> if you need a version of
254Greenstone for 16 bit Windows.
255}
256
257_t25_ {
258Using this distribution you may either install the "local
259library", the "web library", or install and compile the
260source code (click <a href="_httppagex_(faq-installing)#1">here</a> for a
261description of the differences between the "local library" and
262the "web library"). You will be asked which form of Greenstone
263you want during the installation process.
264}
265
266_t26_ {
267This distribution includes everything you need to run Greenstone (including
268a pre-built demonstration collection) and to build new Greenstone
269collections. Some functionality is not included however, mostly in an
270attempt to keep the distribution as small as possible. See <a
271href="#packages">below</a> for details on how to get this missing
272functionality.
273}
274
275_t27_ {
276This distribution uses a standard Windows installer program, simply
277download the file and double-click it to install (see the <a
278href="_httpguide_(Install,en)">Installer's Guide</a> for more detailed
279installation instructions).
280}
281
282_t28_ {Unix distribution}
283
284_t29_ {
285This is the recommended distribution if you're installing Greenstone on any
286form of Unix.
287}
288
289_t30_ {
290This distribution comes with statically linked linux binaries. However, it
291also contains the Greenstone source code for compiling on other forms of
292Unix (or on linux if you prefer not to use the provided binaries).
293}
294
295_t31_ {
296This distribution includes everything you need to run Greenstone (including
297a pre-built demonstration collection) and to build new Greenstone
298collections. Some functionality is not included however, mostly in an
299attempt to keep the distribution as small as possible. See <a
300href="#packages">below</a> for details on how to get this missing
301functionality.
302}
303
304_t32_ {
305To install this distribution, extract the gzipped tar archive and run the
306<i>Install.sh</i> shell script from within the <i>gsdl-X.XX-unix/Unix</i>
307directory (see the <a href="_httpguide_(Install,en)">Installer's Guide</a> for
308more detailed installation instructions).
309}
310
311_t33_ {Mac OS X distribution}
312
313_t34_ {
314This distribution contains dynamically linked binaries for Mac OS X running
315on PowerPC platforms.
316}
317
318_t35_ {
319This distribution has been tested on Mac OS X 10.2.6 and 10.3.2. It
320includes the pre-built binaries and also includes the demonstration
321collection, pre-built. This distribution also includes the Greenstone
322Librarian Interface for building collections.
323}
324
325_t36_ {Source only distribution}
326
327_t37_ {
328This distribution contains the Greenstone source code along with the same
329demonstration collection as the distributions above (although the
330collection is not pre-built in this distribution).
331}
332
333_t38_ {
334This distribution does not have an automated installation procedure
335(running <i>Install.sh</i> will not work). Unless you're sure you know what
336you're doing you probably want one of the distributions above, both of
337which also contain the Greenstone source. Note that you can obtain an
338up-to-date version of the Greenstone source code at any time by using <a
339href="_httppagex_(cvs)">cvs</a>.
340}
341
342_t39_ {
343The following extra packages may be downloaded and installed along with an
344existing Greenstone installation to add functionality that was left out of
345the distributions above.
346}
347
348_langpack_ {Greenstone Language Pack}
349
350_langpackdesc_ {
351This package contains the interface to Greenstone in various different language versions; see <a href="_httppagex_(intn)">here</a> for details.
352}
353
354_t40_ {Export to CD-ROM package}
355
356_t41_ {
357This package enables the "export to CD-ROM" function from within the Greenstone Librarian Interface and the Collector.
358}
359
360_t42_ {
361To install, simply download the file (it will work on both Windows and Unix
362with Greenstone 2.50) and extract the zip archive into
363the gsdl\\bin\\windows directory of your existing Greenstone installation.
364}
365
366_t43_ {
367The following utilities have been developed to be used along with
368Greenstone.
369}
370
371_dlteachingmaterial_ {A package of all material prepared for various Greenstone workshops.}
372
373_dlteachingmaterialdesc_ {See <a href="_httppagex_(docs)#teachingmaterial">here</a> for details.}
374
375_t44_ {The Organizer}
376
377_t45_ {
378The Organizer is a Windows application useful for automatically generating
379many of the configuration files (metadata.xml, sub.txt etc.) required by
380complex Greenstone collections.
381}
382
383_t46_ {
384To install, simply download and double-click the self-extracting executable
385file.
386}
387
388
389#######################################################################
390
391package examples
392
393_t47_ {Examples of Greenstone in Action}
394
395_t48_ {New Zealand Digital Library Project}
396
397_t49_ {
398A demonstration site set up by the developers of Greenstone, the New
399Zealand Digital Library Project. This site contains many collections,
400ranging from humanitarian information to computer science technical reports
401to demonstration collections of Chinese and Arabic documents.
402}
403
404_t50_ {Russian Greenstone Library}
405
406_t51_ {
407A Greenstone site containing several collections in the Russian
408language. This site was set up by a regional government department in the
409Mari El Republic of the Russian Federation.
410}
411
412_t52_ {Project Gutenberg}
413
414_t53_ {
415An on-going project to produce and distribute free electronic editions of
416literature, Project Gutenberg now contains more than 3,700 titles from
417Shakespeare to Dickens to the Bronte sisters. This site, maintained by
418Ibiblio, one of the original Gutenberg mirror sites, uses Greenstone to
419make the entire Gutenberg collection available in a fully searchable form.
420}
421
422_t54_ {University of Applied Sciences, Stuttgart}
423
424_t55_ {
425Hochschule der Medien - an "Information and Media" digital
426library created by the University of Applied Sciences, Stuttgart, Germany.
427}
428
429_t56_ {Gresham College Archive}
430
431_t57_ {
432A digital library created at Gresham College, London, England.
433}
434
435_t58_ {Center for the Study of Digital Libraries}
436
437_t59_ {
438Texas A&M University - A digital libraries research site containing
439prototypical Greenstone collections with an emphasis on Digital Floras.
440}
441
442_t60_ {Peking University Digital Library}
443
444_t61_ {
445Two experimental collections created at Peking University.
446}
447
448_t62_ {Music Information Retrieval Research}
449
450_t63_ {
451Virtual home of music information retrieval research.
452}
453
454_t64_ {Photograph Album}
455
456_t65_ {
457A collection of photographs taken by <a
458href="mailto:[email protected]">Gordon Paynter</a>.
459}
460
461_t66_ {Washington Research Library Consortium Special Collections}
462
463_t67_ {
464Digital material from the special collections of the eight universities of
465WRLC in Washington, D.C., USA.
466}
467
468_t68_ {Archives of Indian Labour}
469
470_t69_ {
471A collaborative project between the V.V. Giri National Labour Institute and
472the Association of Indian Labour Historians. The Archives of Indian Labour
473are dedicated to preserving and making accessible the fast depleting
474documents on the Indian working class.
475}
476
477_t70_ {NCSI Demonstration Collections}
478
479_t71_ {
480Demonstration collections created by students and staff at the National
481Centre for Science Information, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore,
482India. Many of these collections include content in Kannada and Hindi.
483}
484
485_t72_ {New York Botanical Garden}
486
487_t73_ {
488The rare book digitization project of the LuEsther T. Mertz Library of the
489New York Botanical Garden.
490}
491
492_t74_ {Lehigh University Digital Bridges Collection}
493
494_t75_ {
495A collection containing thirty books about bridges, all of which were
496published between 1811 and 1899. The collection was created at Lehigh
497University, Pennsylvania and features a heavily customized user interface.
498}
499
500_t76_ {Chopin Early Editions}
501
502_t77_ {
503A collection of digital images of early printed editions of musical
504compositions by Fr&eacute;d&eacute;ric Chopin. This collection was created
505by the University of Chicago Library and, once completed, will include its
506entire collection of over 400 Chopin early editions. The greenstone
507collection configuration file for this collection has also been made
508available and can be downloaded <a
509href="http://chopin.lib.uchicago.edu/gsdl/collect/chopin/etc/collect.cfg">here</a>.
510}
511
512_t78_ {Slavonski Brod Public Library}
513
514_t79_ {
515The pilot project of digitization of local studies collection in Slavonski
516Brod Public Library, Croatia.
517}
518
519_ex1t_ {Mirabilia Vicomercati}
520
521_ex1d_ {
522Mirabilia Vicomercati is an on-going project managed by Vimercate Public Library (Milan, Italy), aimed at the digitization of local history primary sources. Several collections will be provided - photographs, postcards, maps, text, reference, multimedia - in order to make accessible, promote and preserve the historical memory of Vimercate and its territory.
523}
524
525_ex2t_ {Illinois Wesleyan University Argus Digital Collection}
526
527_ex2d_ {
528Illinois Wesleyan University's newspaper The Argus has been published under student supervision continuously since 1894. This digital collection is part of an on-going project to preserve and provide access to Argus volumes published from 1894-2000.
529}
530
531_ex3t_ {Human Rights in Argentina}
532
533_ex3d_ {
534This site contains documents, photos and books covering files of children kidnapped during the 1976-1983 dictatorship, leglislation on identity, jurisprudence-related information, and many other items. It was created by the Secretary of Human Rights of Argentina under the Comisi&oacute;n Nacional por el Derecho a la Identidad (CONADI), which is a National Commission that fights for the right that a person has for knowing his or her identity -- particularly when their parents have disappeared.
535}
536
537_ex4t_ {Auburn University Libraries Digital Library}
538
539_ex4d_ {
540This site contains two Greenstone collections. <a href="http://diglib.auburn.edu/gsdl/cgi-bin/library?site=localhost&a=p&p=about&c=postcard">Alabama Postcards</a> has over 300 postcards depicting buildings, natural settings, events and other scenes in various Alabama cities and towns in the early 20th century. These images are categorized by place as well as by title. <a href="http://diglib.auburn.edu/gsdl/cgi-bin/library?site=localhost&a=p&p=about&c=alauths">Alabama Authors</a> gives information about 20th Century Alabama Authors which is maintained and updated by the Alabama Library Association. This collection began life as a printed document created in WordPerfect 5.2 and has been through several iterations before becoming fully searchable under Greenstone.
541}
542
543_ex5t_ {State Library of Tasmania Sheet Music Collection}
544
545_ex5d_ {
546This site makes available about two hundred items from the rich holdings of printed music in the State Library of Tasmania's Heritage Collections. They range from the 1840s to the 1930s and include pieces for piano and other instruments, brass band arrangements and songs of all sorts - popular, sacred, patriotic, and even songs written to encourage tourists to come to Tasmania.
547}
548
549_ex6t_ {Indian Institute of Science Publications Database}
550
551_ex6d_ {
552Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore - 560012, Karnataka, India is a premier institution of advanced research and teaching, with more than 2000 active researchers working in almost all frontier areas of science and technology. Started in 1909 by J.N.Tata, the Institute publishes about 2,000 publications including journal articles, conference publications, patents, reports, books, book chapters every year, according to this study. An effort is made here to compile these publications from several identified sources, remove duplicate records, standardise the metadata details. The database is web enabled using Greenstone.
553}
554
555_ex7t_ {Books from the Past / Llyfrau o'r Gorffennol}
556
557_ex7d_ {
558Books from the Past is an on-line collection of Welsh books of national cultural interest which have long been out of print, and are unlikely to be reprinted by traditional means. The texts are available in two forms - images of the original book pages, together with a fully searchable electronic text which is also suitable for printing. Developed by Culturenet Cymru and the Welsh Books Council, Books from the Past is a resource freely accessible to all. The web site will be developed and expanded over the coming years to include many more books in both English and Welsh languages.
559}
560
561_ex8t_ {Philippine Research, Education and Government Information Network}
562
563_ex8d_ {
564PREGINET is a nationwide broadband network that links academic, research, and government institutions in the Philippines. The Advanced Science and Technology Institute (ASTI) has created a Digital Library platform for use by PREGINET partner institutions. They have built collections of the Philippine Journal on ICT and Microelectronics (PJICTM), PREGINET newsletters, and the ASTI Video collection.
565}
566
567_ex9t_ {Ulukau, the Hawaiian Electronic Library}
568
569_ex9d_ {
570Ulukau makes available resrouces for the use, teaching, and enhancement of the Hawaiian language. It has five collections: "Ka Hoʻoilina: Puke Pai ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi" (The Legacy: Journal of Hawaiian Language Resources), Hawaiian Newspapers, Baibala Hemolele (The Hawaiian Bible), Hawaiian Dictionaries, and Hawaiian Books.
571}
572
573_ex10t_ {Detroit Public Library: E. Azalia Hackley Collection}
574
575_ex10d_ {
576This collection of sheet music consists of over 500 pieces of 19th and 20th century sheet music published between 1799 and 1922. Song themes cover early 19th century plantation life in the American South, the Civil War period, including abolitionism, emancipation and Reconstruction, early 20th century popular music, and the stereotypical themes associated with black face minstrels.
577}
578
579_ex11t_ {Indian Institute of Management, Kozhikode}
580
581_ex11d_ {
582The Indian Institute of Management Kozhikode (<a href="http://www.iimk.ac.in">http://www.iimk.ac.in</a>) is a premier management school set up by the Government of India during 1996. The Center for Development of Digital Libraries of IIMK uses GSDL software for its DL collection development. The DL at IIMK is truly a multi-media, multi-publication type and multi-format library with books, monographs, reports, journals, cases and educational videos forming part of its growing collection. The videos collection is a recent addition which used only open source software and open standards for its entire workflow.
583}
584
585_ex12t_ {National Sciences Digital Library, VNU-HCM}
586
587_ex12d_ {
588This site contains two Greenstone collections. "Library and Information Science" consists of the articles on Information and Library sciences from the Library Club, FESAL, and the Natural Sciences Library Newsletters since 1998. "Library Equipment" has photos of library equipment in some libraries from the USA, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. This site is maintained by the Natural Sciences Library, VNU-HCM.
589}
590
591
592#######################################################################
593
594package docs
595
596_t80_ {Greenstone Documentation}
597
598_t81_ {Manuals}
599
600_t82_ {
601The following Greenstone manuals are available in PDF format for
602download. They're available in English, Spanish, French, Russian and
603Kazakh.
604}
605
606_installersguide_ {Installer's Guide}
607
608_t83_ {english}
609
610_t84_ {spanish}
611
612_t85_ {french}
613
614_t86_ {russian}
615
616_t87_ {kazakh}
617
618_t88_ {
619Describes in detail the Greenstone installation process. Note that the
620<i>Installer's Guide</i> assumes that Greenstone is being installed from a
621CD-ROM distribution. The instructions should be adapted in the obvious way
622when installing from a web download.
623}
624
625_usersguide_ {User's Guide}
626
627_t90_ {
628General details on using Greenstone collections, the Collector web
629interface for building new collections, and Greenstone's administrative
630facilities.
631}
632
633_t92_ {sorry, no kazakh}
634
635_developersguide_ {Developer's Guide}
636
637_t94_ {
638A more detailed description of Greenstone's collection building process,
639including building collections from the command line or DOS prompt. Also a
640description of the structure of the Greenstone runtime system.
641}
642
643_t95_ {From Paper to Collection}
644
645_t96_ {
646A document describing the entire process of creating a digital library
647collection from paper documents. This includes the scanning and OCR process
648and the use of the "Organizer".
649}
650
651_t97_ {Inside Greenstone Collections}
652
653_t98_ {english(HTML)}
654
655_t99_ {english(PDF)}
656
657_t100_ {
658One of the trickier parts of using Greenstone is coming up with a
659configuration file for your collection. To help learn how to do it, this
660document presents, and explains, the configuration files for a few actual
661Greenstone collections, and also gives an example of how Greenstone's
662appearance can be customized. (Note, this document is intended to be used
663with Greenstone version 2.40 and higher.)
664}
665
666_t101_ {MG/MG++}
667
668_t102_ {
669For information about the underlying indexing and retrieval systems used by
670Greenstone, please go <a href="http://www.nzdl.org/html/mg.html">here</a>
671for MG, or download the <a href="_httpdocsdir_/mgpp_user.pdf">MGPP user
672guide</a>.
673}
674
675_teachingmaterial_ {Teaching material}
676
677_teachingmaterialdesc_ {
678
679A package of all material prepared for various Greenstone workshops (<a href="_httpteachingmaterialdistro_">download</a>). These workshops focus on installing Greenstone and building collections with the Librarian Interface. Includes:
680<ul>
681<li>Introduction to the workshop (.html or .pdf)
682<li>Presentations (.pdf)
683<li>Lab instructions (.pdf)
684<li>Lab screenshots (.pdf)
685<li>Test files for several collections (including Word, PDF, HTML, JPG and GIF files)
686</ul>
687
688Please feel free to use these materials for learning -- or teaching! -- about Greenstone.
689<p>
690<b><i>One day course.</i></b>
691Given at Waikato in April 2004. The workshop CD-ROM was the UNESCO Greenstone 2.50 CD-ROM plus test files.
692<p>
693<b><i>Three day course.</i></b>
694Given at Suva, Fiji in November 2003. The workshop CD-ROM contained Greenstone 2.41 along with all teaching material.
695The package contains a .txt file giving the contents of the CD-ROM.
696
697}
698
699_t369_ {User Supplied Documentation}
700
701_t370_ {Customizing the Greenstone User Interface}
702
703_t371_ {
704An illustrated guide to customizing the Greenstone user interface. Written
705by Allison Zhang of the Washington Research Library Consortium
706}
707
708#######################################################################
709
710package support
711
712_t109_ {Greenstone Support}
713
714_tsupportintro_ {
715Want to learn a bit more about Greenstone? Having trouble installing or building collections? There are many sources of help for you to turn to.
716}
717
718_tfaqh_{Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) List}
719_tfaqb_{The FAQ contains a list of common questions to do with Greenstone,
720including how to get the software, installation and running of Greenstone,
721and collection building.}
722
723_tarchh_{Greenstone Mailing List Archives}
724_tarchb_{This is a Greenstone collection containing all the questions and responses posted to the two Greenstone mailing lists. Searching this collection is a good way to find answers to common questions that haven't made it into the FAQ list yet. It is updated regularly.
725}
726
727_tmanualh_{Greenstone Documentation}
728_tmanualb_{There are several manuals and guides that come with Greenstone.
729This page provides links to them all, many of them in multiple languages.}
730
731_tdlbookh_{How to build a digital library}
732_tdlbookb_{What is a digital library? What does it look like? Where does the information come from? How do you put it together? Where to start? This is a book that answers these questions in a plain and straightforward manner, with a strong practical "how to" flavour. The book also describes the Greenstone software.}
733
734_tmaillisth_{Greenstone Mailing Lists}
735
736
737_t104_ {
738There are two mailing lists intended primarily for discussions about the
739Greenstone digital library software. Active users of Greenstone should
740consider joining one or both of these lists and contributing to the
741discussions. <b>Please consult the other information sources</b>, particularly the
742<a href="http://www.nzdl.org/gsarchives">mailing list archives</a>, <b>before posting a question to either list</b>.
743}
744
745_t105_ {Greenstone User's List}
746
747_t106_ {
748This list is for general Greenstone discussions. To send a message to this
749list, address it to <a
750href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a>.
751}
752
753_t107_ {Greenstone Developer's List}
754
755_t108_ {
756This list is for more technical discussions by people developing or
757modifying Greenstone. To send a message to this list, address it to <a
758href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a>. <strong>Note:</strong>
759You need to subscribe to this list before you may post to it.
760}
761
762_tsuppformh_{Web-based Support Form}
763_tsuppformb_{<b>As a last resort</b>, if you are unable to use the mailing lists for some reason, use this web based support form to send a query to the Greenstone support team.}.
764
765
766#######################################################################
767
768package supportform
769
770_tsupportformintro_ {
771To send a query to the Greenstone support staff, please fill in the form
772below and click the "Submit Query" button to submit the query. Please fill in
773the form as fully as possible to aid our staff in giving the best possible
774service.
775
776}
777_t113_ {PERSONAL INFORMATION}
778
779_t114_ {Name}
780
781_t115_ {E-mail address}
782
783_t116_ {SYSTEM INFORMATION}
784
785_t117_ {Operating System}
786
787_t118_ {Windows 95}
788
789_t119_ {Windows 98}
790
791_t120_ {Windows ME}
792
793_t121_ {Windows NT 4}
794
795_t122_ {Windows 2000}
796
797_t123_ {Windows XP}
798
799_t124_ {Windows 3.11}
800
801_t125_ {Windows 3.1}
802
803_t126_ {Linux}
804
805_t127_ {Other (please specify below)}
806
807_t128_ {Other OS}
808
809_t129_ {CPU (type and speed)}
810
811_t130_ {Memory (RAM) in MB}
812
813_t131_ {Web browser}
814
815_t132_ {Netscape 4}
816
817_t133_ {Netscape 4.5}
818
819_t134_ {Netscape 6}
820
821_t135_ {Mozilla}
822
823_t136_ {Internet Explorer 4}
824
825_t137_ {Internet Explorer 5}
826
827_t138_ {Internet Explorer 6}
828
829_t139_ {Other web browser}
830
831_t140_ {Was your browser provided by your internet service provider?}
832
833_t141_ {no}
834
835_t142_ {yes}
836
837_t143_ {don't know}
838
839_t144_ {Is your browser configured to use a proxy?}
840
841_t145_ {Web server}
842
843_t146_ {not applicable}
844
845_t147_ {Apache 1.3}
846
847_t148_ {Apache 2.0}
848
849_t149_ {Microsoft IIS 4.0}
850
851_t150_ {Microsoft IIS 5.0}
852
853_t151_ {Microsoft PWS}
854
855_t152_ {Other server}
856
857_t153_ {GREENSTONE INFORMATION}
858
859_t154_ {Version}
860
861_t155_ {CD-ROM distribution}
862
863_t156_ {Installation type}
864
865_t157_ {local library}
866
867_t158_ {web library}
868
869_t159_ {PROBLEM DESCRIPTION}
870
871_t160_ {Problem type}
872
873_t161_ {question}
874
875_t162_ {problem/error}
876
877_t163_ {suggested enhancement}
878
879_t164_ {other}
880
881_t165_ {Can the problem be reproduced at will?}
882
883_t166_ {Short description}
884
885_t167_ {Long description}
886
887_t168_ {
888(If you are reporting a problem, please go into as much detail as possible.
889Make sure you describe all steps leading up to the problem and include any
890relevant URLs.)
891}
892
893
894#######################################################################
895
896package faq
897
898_greenstonefaq_ {Greenstone FAQ}
899
900_headinggeneral_ {General Information}
901
902_t171_ {What is Greenstone?}
903
904_t172_ {How is Greenstone licensed?}
905
906_t173_ {What platforms will Greenstone run on?}
907
908_t174_ {Are there any mailing lists concerned with Greenstone?}
909
910_t175_ {Are the mailing lists archived anywhere?}
911
912_t176_ {How do I contribute to Greenstone?}
913
914_headingobtaining_ {Obtaining Greenstone}
915
916_t178_ {Where do I get Greenstone from?}
917
918_t179_ {Are there binary distributions of Greenstone available?}
919
920_t180_ {Is Greenstone available on CD-ROM?}
921
922_t181_ {Is the Greenstone source code available via CVS?}
923
924_headinginstalling_ {Installing Greenstone}
925
926_t183_ {How do I compile Greenstone from a source or CVS distribution?}
927
928_t184_ {What is the difference between Greenstone's <i>local library</i> and <i>web library</i>?}
929
930_headingrunning_ {Running Greenstone}
931
932_t186_ {OK, I've installed Greenstone. Now how do I make it go?}
933
934_t187_ {What web browser do I need to view Greenstone collections?}
935
936_t188_ {When I start the Windows local library there are two buttons in the
937dialog box, "Enter Library" and "Restricted
938Version". They both seem to do the same thing, what's the difference?}
939
940_t189_ {So when should I use the "Restricted Version" of the local library?}
941
942_t190_ {When I start the Windows local library my computer asks me to dial
943up my Internet Service Provider. Do I really need to be online to run
944Greenstone?}
945
946_t191_ {I'm trying to use the Windows local library. My web browser is
947starting up as expected but the Greenstone home page never gets loaded or gives an error message. What's wrong?}
948
949_t192_ {Where can I get more Greenstone collections?}
950
951_t193_ {When I attempt to access certain parts of Greenstone I'm asked for
952a username and password. What do I enter?}
953
954_t194_ {When I use the <i>large query box</i> function I occassionally get
955a <i>Not Found</i> error.}
956
957_headingbuilding_ {Building Greenstone Collections}
958
959_tfaqbuildglititle_ {What is the "Greenstone Librarian Interface"}
960
961_t196_ {What is "the Collector"?}
962
963_t197_ {How do I build a collection from the command line or DOS prompt?}
964
965_t198_ {I built a new Greenstone collection on my Windows
966machine. Everything appeared to work fine while building, however when I
967tried to view the collection some of the documents contained no
968text. Sometimes Greenstone appeared to crash completely. What have I done
969wrong?}
970
971_t199_ {Why won't the Collector's "export to CD-ROM" function work?}
972
973_t200_ {I'm trying to use the Collector on Windows 2000 but it's running
974extremely slowly. Is this normal?}
975
976_t201_ {What is "the Organizer"?}
977
978_t202_ {Where do I get the Organizer?}
979
980_t203_ {I'm attempting to build a collection with the collector but it
981keeps failing with an error. What am I doing wrong?}
982
983_t204_ {Where can I find some example collect.cfg configuration files?}
984
985_t205_ {How can I build my collection using MGPP?}
986
987_tfaqbuild11title_ {I've added a new type of classification to my collection. How do I create and add the navigation bar images?}
988
989_tfaqbuildexpattitle_ {How do I fix XML::Parser errors during import.pl?}
990
991_headingplugins_ {More About Plugins}
992
993_tfaqplugins0title_ {Does Greenstone have a plugin for my data format?}
994
995_tfaqplugins1title_ {What metadata is available for each plugin?}
996
997_tfaqplugins2title_ {I'm having problems with my PDF files! What's wrong?}
998
999_t207_ {FAQ Main Page}
1000
1001_t372_ {Show entire FAQ on a single page}
1002
1003_t373_ {Show FAQ on multiple pages}
1004
1005#######################################################################
1006
1007package faqgen
1008
1009_t208_ {
1010Greenstone is a suite of software which has the ability to serve digital
1011library collections and build new collections. It provides a new way of
1012organizing information and publishing it on the Internet or on CD-ROM.
1013}
1014
1015_t209_ {
1016Greenstone is open-source software, distributed under the terms of the <a
1017href="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html">GNU General Public License</a>.
1018}
1019
1020_t210_ {
1021Greenstone has been tested on Windows 3.1/3.11/95/98/Me/NT/2000, most
1022distributions of GNU/Linux, Darwin (Mac OS X), Solaris, and FreeBSD. It
1023should in fact work on any Windows or Unix system. If you use a system
1024other than those mentioned and you find Greenstone doesn't run, please <a
1025href="_httppagex_(support)">contact</a> us.
1026<p>Please note that the downloadable Windows distribution of Greenstone
1027comes with an installer that will not work on 16 bit Windows. If you need
1028to use Greenstone on Windows 3.1/3.11 please <a
1029href="_httppagex_(support)">contact</a> us.</p>
1030}
1031
1032_t211_ {
1033There are two Greenstone mailing lists. You can subscribe to them from the
1034<a href="_httppagex_(docs)#mailing-lists">documentation</a> page.
1035}
1036
1037_t212_ {
1038The most popular mailing list ([email protected]) is
1039archived as a Greenstone collection at <a
1040href="http://www.nzdl.org/cgi-bin/library?a=p&p=about&c=gsarch">www.nzdl.org</a>.
1041Note that this collection is updated only sporadically so may not always be
1042completely up to date.
1043}
1044
1045_t213_ {
1046We welcome contributions or improvements to the Greenstone software!
1047<br />Before you send in any contribution, you first need to make sure that
1048your changes are compatible with the latest snapshop of the Greenstone
1049source code. To get the latest code you'll need to use CVS (see <a
1050href="_httppagex_(cvs)">here</a> for details).
1051<br />You should then send the modified files, along with details of the
1052modifications you've made, to <a
1053href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a>.
1054
1055<p>Before beginning work, you should announce what you're doing on the <a
1056href="mailto:[email protected]">greenstone developer's list</a>
1057to tell us what you plan to do and get some feedback.</p>
1058}
1059
1060
1061#######################################################################
1062
1063package faqob
1064
1065_t215_ {
1066From the greenstone.org <a href="_httppagex_(download)">download</a> page.
1067}
1068
1069_t216_ {
1070Yes. At present there are binary distributions for 32 bit Windows, PowerPC
1071Mac OS X, and i386 linux. They can be downloaded from the <a
1072href="_httppagex_(download)">download</a> page.
1073}
1074
1075_t217_ {
1076While some version 2.37 and 2.38 CD-ROMs have been produced they're not
1077currently being made widely available. You are encouraged to download the
1078latest release of Greenstone from the <a
1079href="_httppagex_(download)">download</a> page. If your internet connection
1080is such that downloading Greenstone isn't possible please <a
1081href="_httppagex_(support)">contact</a> us and we may be able to arrange
1082for a CD-ROM to be sent out.
1083}
1084
1085_t218_ {
1086Yes, see our <a href="_httppagex_(cvs)">CVS page</a> for details.
1087}
1088
1089
1090#######################################################################
1091
1092package faqinst
1093
1094_t220_ {
1095See our <a href="_httpdocsdir_/compiling.html">compiling page</a>.
1096}
1097
1098_t221_ {
1099Firstly, the <i>local library</i> is only available if you're running
1100Greenstone under Windows. It's not yet available on Unix.
1101
1102<p>The major difference between the two is that the <i>local library</i>
1103contains it's own built-in webserver. The <i>web library</i> however,
1104requires an external webserver like Apache or Microsoft IIS. This makes the
1105<i>local library</i> much easier to install and configure than the web
1106library.</p>
1107
1108<p>For this reason, it's recommended that Windows users install the
1109<i>local library</i> unless they're sure that they need the <i>web
1110library</i>. Even if you think you might need the <i>web library</i>, try
1111installing the <i>local library</i> first. You can always uninstall it
1112later and install the <i>web library</i> if you then decide you need
1113it.</p>
1114
1115<p>A situation where the <i>web library</i> may be preferable is if you
1116plan to serve your Greenstone collections as a full-time service on the
1117web. In this case you'll probably want the added stability that running the
1118<i>web library</i> in conjunction with an external webserver can
1119provide.</p>
1120
1121<p>Please note that the <i>local library</i> is quite capable of serving
1122Greenstone collections over a local area network or the web (despite its
1123rather misleading name).</p>
1124}
1125
1126
1127#######################################################################
1128
1129package faqrun
1130
1131_t223_ {
1132If you're using the Windows <i>local library</i> you should be able to
1133simply select "Greenstone Digital Library" from within the
1134programs in your <i>start</i> menu.
1135
1136<p>If you're using the <i>web library</i> things are a little less obvious
1137however. First make sure your webserver is configured correctly and is
1138running (see the <a href="_httppagex_(docs)">Greenstone Installer's
1139Guide</a> and your webserver's documentation for details). You can then
1140simply open your web browser and point it at the URL of Greenstone's
1141library executable. This is dependant on the way you configured Greenstone
1142and your webserver. Typically it might be something like
1143http://localhost/gsdl/cgi-bin/library.exe.</p>
1144}
1145
1146_t224_ {
1147Greenstone relies on a web browser that supports tables, javascript, and in
1148some places, frames. Any reasonably modern browser will do. Examples are
1149Microsoft Internet Explorer 4, Netscape 4, and Mozilla. Newer releases of
1150all these browsers will also work.
1151
1152<p>If you find that your favourite web browser does not work with
1153Greenstone, please <a href="_httppagex_(support)">contact us</a>.</p>
1154
1155<p>Note that there is an exception to the rule that any modern browser will
1156do when running Greenstone. That is when you're using the restricted
1157version of the Windows local library when you must use Netscape. See the
1158discussion below on the differences between the "Restricted
1159Version" and the standard "Enter Library" version of the
1160local library for details.</p>
1161}
1162
1163_t225_ {
1164The webserver built into the local library uses the networking software
1165built into your Windows operating system in order to function. If your
1166computer has never been connected to a network this networking software may
1167not be installed however. For this reason Greenstone comes with some
1168networking software of it's own that it will use if it can't find any
1169installed on your computer.
1170
1171<p>When you click the "Enter Library" button, Greenstone first
1172checks to see if your computer has it's own networking software. If it
1173does, it starts up using that, if not it starts up using it's own
1174networking software.</p>
1175
1176<p>When you click the "Restricted Version" button, Greenstone
1177doesn't bother checking your system for networking software, it just goes
1178ahead and uses it's own.</p>
1179
1180<p>The catch is that there are several limitations with using the
1181Greenstone supplied networking software. The most important limitations are
1182that the local library won't be accessible from the network if run in this
1183way (that is, it really will be "local" to the machine on which
1184it's running) and that it must use a Netscape web browser. Using your
1185computer's built-in networking software is therefore the prefered
1186option.</p>
1187}
1188
1189_t226_ {
1190Since Greenstone will automatically use it's own networking software if it
1191can't find any installed on your computer it should not normally be
1192necessary to run the "Restricted Version" explicitly.
1193
1194<p>Times when it may be necessary are.</p>
1195<ul>
1196<li>If your computer's networking software has been installed incorrectly.</li>
1197<li>If Windows keeps attempting to dial up your internet service provider
1198when you click the "Enter Library" button.</li>
1199</ul>
1200}
1201
1202_t227_ {
1203No you don't need to be online. This is caused by the webserver built into
1204Greenstone's local library sending a message to your computer's networking
1205software to make sure it's functioning correctly. On many Windows systems
1206this causes the familiar dial up dialog box to appear. In most situations
1207you can simply cancel the dialog box and (if required) press your browser's
1208<i>reload</i> button to continue.
1209
1210<p>If this does not solve the problem, try starting the local library by
1211clicking the "Restricted Version" button rather than the
1212"Enter Library" button. See the discussion above on the
1213differences between the standard and restricted versions of the local
1214library for further details.</p>
1215}
1216
1217_t228_ {
1218<ol>
1219<li>Check your web browser's internet proxy settings and turn proxies off (use
1220<i>Edit preferences</i> on Netscape or <i>Internet options</i> on
1221Explorer).</li>
1222
1223<li>If Internet Explorer gives a message saying "The page cannot be
1224displayed" and "Cannot find server or DNS error" at the bottom of the
1225page, check in your network settings that your computer's name is set
1226up correctly. For example, if there is a DNS suffix entered in your
1227TCP/IP properties (in the Control Panel), make sure that your host
1228name and suffix are correct for your computer. If the server is running
1229correctly, you should be able to connect by visiting
1230<a href="http://127.0.0.1/">http://127.0.0.1/</a> in a web browser on the
1231same machine that the local library is running on.</li>
1232
1233</ol>
1234}
1235
1236_t229_ {
1237Collections like those at <a href="http://www.nzdl.org">www.nzdl.org</a>
1238will soon be made available for download.
1239}
1240
1241_t230_ {
1242The initial username required here is <i>admin</i>.
1243
1244<p>If you installed Greenstone using the InstallShield installer on Windows
1245or the Install.sh script on Unix you should have been asked to set a
1246password during the installation procedure.</p>
1247
1248<p>If you didn't, don't worry, the password defaults to being
1249<i>admin</i>.</p>
1250
1251<p>So if you don't know what to enter you should try username =
1252<i>admin</i>, password = <i>admin</i>.<p>
1253}
1254
1255_t231_ {
1256This may be caused by the URL becoming too long for your web
1257browser. Because Greenstone currently stores all state information in the
1258URL, if you do a search for a long phrase the URL can become very
1259long. Different browser's on different platforms have different maximum URL
1260lengths but in general it seems that Netscape can handle longer URLs than
1261can Microsoft Internet Explorer.
1262
1263<p>There is very little you can do to avoid this problem with the way
1264Greenstone is currently implemented (aside from not searching for long
1265phrases). Future versions of Greenstone may store some state information on
1266the server rather than in the URL but this has yet to be implemented.</p>
1267}
1268
1269
1270#######################################################################
1271
1272package faqbuild
1273
1274_tfaqbuildglibody_ {
1275The Greenstone Librarian Interface (GLI) is a graphical tool for building new
1276collections, altering or
1277deleting existing collections, and exporting existing collections to
1278stand-alone CD-ROMs. It allows you to import or assign metadata, and
1279has an interactive collection design module. Launch the GLI under Windows
1280by selecting <i>Greenstone Digital Library</i> from the <i>Programs</i>
1281section of the <i>Start</i> menu and choosing <i>Librarian Interface</i>.
1282Under Linux, run <i>gli.sh</i> from the <i>gsdl/gli</i> directory.
1283For details on using the Librarian Interface see the
1284<a href="_httppagex_(docs)">Greenstone User's Guide</a>.
1285}
1286
1287_t233_ {
1288The Collector is a web interface for collection building, altering and
1289exporting. It predates the Librarian Interface and for most
1290practical purposes, the Librarian Interface should be used instead.
1291To begin using the Collector, click the "The
1292Collector" button on your Greenstone home page. For further details on
1293using the Collector see the <a href="_httppagex_(docs)">Greenstone User's
1294Guide</a>.
1295}
1296
1297_t234_ {
1298It's occasionally preferable to build your Greenstone collections from the
1299command line rather than from the Collector. This allows you greater
1300control over how your new collection turns out. See the <a
1301href="_httppagex_(docs)">Greenstone Developer's Guide</a> for detailed step
1302by step instructions on building collections from the command line.
1303}
1304
1305_t235_ {
1306Are you running Norton Anti-Virus? There are some incompatibilities between
1307Norton and the Greenstone collection building process that cause
1308unpredictable things to happen if you build your collection while Norton is
1309running. Try disabling Norton and rebuilding the collection.
1310
1311<p>If you do not have Norton or disabling Norton does not solve the problem
1312please <a href="_httppagex_(support)">contact us</a> for further help.</p>
1313}
1314
1315_t236_ {
1316If you downloaded Greenstone from the web you will not have all the
1317components required to make the "export to CD-ROM" function
1318work. These extra components have been made available in a separate
1319download which you can get from the <a
1320href="_httppagex_(download)#packages">download</a> page.
1321}
1322
1323_t237_ {
1324Are you using a Netscape web browser with the local library? If so, try
1325using Internet Explorer instead. There are some socket connection problems
1326that show up on Windows 2000 when using Netscape.
1327}
1328
1329_t238_ {
1330The Organizer (also called the "Collection Organizer") is a
1331Windows utility used for automatically generating some of the configuration
1332files (metadata.xml, sub.txt etc.) used by complex Greenstone collections.
1333}
1334
1335_t239_ {
1336From the <a href="_httppagex_(download)#utilities">download</a> page.
1337}
1338
1339_t240_ {
1340There are several reasons that the collector might fail to build a
1341collection and the error messages it produces are not always very helpful.
1342
1343<p>If you changed the default configuration during the <i>configure
1344collection</i> stage you'll need to make sure the changes were valid. For
1345example, if you added a new <i>classify</i> or <i>plugin</i> line you'll
1346need to make sure that the classifier and/or plugin names and arguments are
1347all correct. If they're not the collector will fail. A good test is to
1348build your collection without changing the configuration. If it builds ok
1349with the default configuration but fails after you change the configuration
1350you'll need to look closely at the changes you're making.</p>
1351
1352<p>Another good thing to do if having problems with the collector is to
1353build your collection from the command line instead. You'll get much more
1354feedback to help debug problems when building in this way. For details on
1355how to build a collection from the command line see the <a
1356href="_httppagex_(docs)">Greenstone developer's guide</a>.</p>
1357}
1358
1359_t241_ {
1360The collect.cfg files for many of the collections at <a
1361href="http://www.nzdl.org">www.nzdl.org</a> have been made available <a
1362href="_httppagex_(colcfg)">here</a>.
1363}
1364
1365_t242_ {
1366The <a href="_httpdocsdir_/mgpp_user.pdf">MGPP user manual</a> gives some
1367instructions.
1368}
1369
1370_tfaqbuild11body_ {
1371To create and add the new buttons for a new classifier, there are several macro files that need to be edited. This is an example for the Countries metadata. <i>Countries</i> is the metadata name (or buttonname), <i>count</i> is the short form used in image names, <i>countries</i> is the text that appears on the nav bar buttons and the green title.
1372<p>
1373These lines should all be put next to the other ones ones of the same type. Use Title as an example to search for the approriate place to insert.
1374<p>
1375<i>base.dm:</i>
1376<br>
1377<br>\_Countrieswidth\_ \{\_widthcountx\_ \}
1378
1379<br>\_imageCountries\_ \{\_gsimage\_(\_httpbrowseCountries\_,\_httpicontcountof\_,\_httpicontcounton\_,countries,\_textimageCountries\_)\}
1380<br>\_icontabCountriesgreen\_ \{&lt;img
1381src="\_httpicontcountgr\_" width=\_widthtcountx\_ border=0&gt;\}
1382<br>\_icontabCountriesgreen\_[v=1] \{\_texticontabCountriesgreen\_ \}
1383<p>
1384<i>document.dm:</i>
1385<br>
1386<br>\_textCountriespage\_ \{\_texticonhcount\_ \}
1387
1388<br>\_iconCountriespage\_ \{&lt;img src="\_httpiconhcount\_" width="\_widthhcount\_"
1389height="\_heighthcount\_"&gt;\}
1390<br>\_iconCountriespage\_ [v=1] \{&lt;h2&gt;\_texticonhcount\_&lt;/h2&gt;\}
1391
1392<p>
1393<i>english.dm:</i>
1394<br>
1395<br>\_textimageCountries\_ \{Browse by countries\}
1396<br>\_texticontabCountriesgreen\_ \{Countries\}
1397<br>\_texticonhcount\_ \{Countries\}
1398<br>\_textCountriesshort\_ \{access publications by country\}
1399<br>\_textCountrieslong\_ \{&lt;p&gt;You can &lt;i&gt;access publications by country&lt;/i&gt; by
1400pressing the &lt;i&gt;countries&lt;/i&gt; button. This brings up a list of countries. \}
1401<br>
1402<br>## "countries" ## nav\_bar\_button ## tcount ##
1403<br>\_httpicontcountgr\_ \{\_httpimg\_/tcountgr.gif\}
1404<br>\_httpicontcountof\_ \{\_httpimg\_/tcountof.gif\}
1405<br>\_httpicontcounton\_ \{\_httpimg\_/tcounton.gif\}
1406<br>\_widthtcountx\_ \{87\}
1407
1408<br>## "countries" ## green_title ## h_count ##
1409<br>\_httpiconhcount\_ \{\_httpimg\_/h\_count.gif\}
1410<br>\_widthhcount\_ \{200\}
1411<br>\_heighthcount\_ \{57\}
1412
1413
1414<p>
1415The images that are needed are the nav bar images, and the title image with the green bar in the background. There are 3 nav bar images: <i>tcountgr.gif</i> is the green one and <i>tcounton.gif</i> and <i>tcountof.gif</i> are the two yellow ones for the rollover effect.
1416<i>h_count.gif</i> is the title image.
1417
1418<p>These images can be generated by copying the two ## blocks from above into a temp file and running translate.pl on it eg.
1419
1420<br>translate.pl -language_symbol en temp.dm
1421
1422<p>To add the images in other languages, you need to edit the appropriate language macro file, and add the same items as for english.dm. And run the translate script to generate the images.
1423<p>English versions of the images should be placed in the $GSDLHOME/images directory, while other language versions should be placed in the appropriate subdirectory of $GSDLHOME/images, for example $GSDLHOME/images/fr for french images.
1424}
1425
1426_tfaqbuildexpatbody_ {
1427Our prebuilt Linux and Mac OS X Greenstone distributions are built on machines using Perl 5.6, and these distributions contain a few binary perl modules. These cause problems if you are using a recent version of perl like 5.8 or 5.8.1 (you can type "perl -v" from the command line to see the version).
1428<p>
1429On the Mac, our distribution contains modules for both perl 5.6 and 5.8 and the correct one should (hopefully) be installed.
1430<p>
1431A typical error message during import.pl would be:
1432<p>
1433Uncaught exception from user code: Can't load '/home/httpd/gsdl/perllib/cpan/auto/XML/Parser/Expat/Expat.so' for module XML::Parser::Expat: /home/httpd/gsdl/perllib/cpan/auto/XML/Parser/Expat/Expat.so: undefined symbol: PL_sv_undef at /usr/lib/perl5/5.8.0/i386-linux-thread-multi/DynaLoader.pm line 229. at /home/httpd/gsdl/perllib/cpan/XML/Parser.pm line 14
1434<p>
1435To remedy this, you need to remove the "gsdl/perllib/cpan/XML" and "gsdl/perllib/cpan/auto" directories. Then you need to install the perl XML::Parser natively for your system, and get Greenstone to use this instead.
1436<p>
1437On redhat or mandrake, install the .rpm named "perl-XML-Parser", on debian, install the "libxml-parser-perl" package. For other Linuxes, use your distribution's package, or you can get it from <a href="http://search.cpan.org/~msergeant/XML-Parser-2.34/">http://search.cpan.org/~msergeant/XML-Parser-2.34/</a>.
1438<p>
1439You may also need to get Expat, available from <a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/expat/">http://sourceforge.net/projects/expat/</a>.
1440
1441}
1442#######################################################################
1443
1444package faqplugins
1445
1446
1447_available_ {
1448
1449See <a href="_gwcgi_?a=p&p=plugins">this page</a>.
1450
1451}
1452
1453# base puts in surrounding <p> and </p>, so skip first and last ones
1454#
1455_metadata_ {
1456
1457"Default" means that the metadata fields will be automatically assigned (or
1458extracted if possible), while the "Available fields" lists other items
1459of metadata that the plugin may be able to assign based on any arguments
1460given to that plugin in the <tt>collect.cfg</tt> file.
1461All plugins are derived from BasPlug, and have following metadata fields:
1462
1463<table border="1">
1464<tr>
1465 <th> </th>
1466 <th> Default fields </th>
1467 <th> Available fields </th>
1468</tr>
1469<tr>
1470 <td> BasPlug </td>
1471 <td> Language, Encoding, Source </td>
1472 <td> FirstNNNN, kea, Acronym </td>
1473</tr>
1474</table>
1475</p>
1476
1477<p>
1478In addition, many plugins have additional fields available:
1479<table border="1">
1480
1481<tr>
1482 <th> Plugin name </th>
1483 <th> Default fields </th>
1484 <th> Available fields </th>
1485</tr>
1486
1487<tr>
1488 <td> BibTexPlug </td>
1489 <td> Title, Creator, Abstract, Author, Booktitle, Chapter, Copyright, Date,
1490 Edition, Editor, EntryType Journal, Keywords, Month, Note, Number,
1491 Pages, Publisher, PublisherAddress, Volume, Year </td>
1492 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1493</tr>
1494
1495<tr>
1496 <td> DBPlug </td>
1497 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1498 <td> (arbitrary metadata field names based on Database configuration file)
1499 </td>
1500</tr>
1501
1502<tr>
1503 <td> EMAILPlug </td>
1504 <td> Date, DateText, From, FromAddr, FromName, Headers, Subject,
1505 Title (based on subject, from, and date), To
1506 </td>
1507 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1508</tr>
1509
1510<tr>
1511 <td> ExcelPlug </td>
1512 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1513 <td> (all fields as in HTMLPlug) </td>
1514</tr>
1515
1516<tr>
1517 <td> HTMLPlug </td>
1518 <td> Title, URL </td>
1519 <td> Author, Creator, Email (others as found in the <tt>-metadata_fields</tt> option) </td>
1520</tr>
1521
1522<tr>
1523 <td> ImagePlug </td>
1524 <td> Image, ImageHeight, ImageSize, ImageType, ImageWidth, ScreenHeight,
1525 screenicon, ScreenSize, ScreenType, ScreenWidth, Source, srclink,
1526 srcicon, Thumb, ThumbHeight, ThumbType, ThumbWidth </td>
1527 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1528</tr>
1529
1530<tr>
1531 <td> IndexPlug </td>
1532 <td> as in the <tt>index.txt</tt> file </td>
1533 <td> (use metadata.xml files instead of using this plugin) </td>
1534</tr>
1535
1536<tr>
1537 <td> MARCPlug </td>
1538 <td> Creator, Description, MarcIdentifier, MarcSource, URL, Publisher,
1539 Relation, Rights, Subject, Title, Type </td>
1540 <td> (Metadata fields as in the <tt>marctodc.txt</tt> file) </td>
1541</tr>
1542
1543<tr>
1544 <td> OAIPlug </td>
1545 <td> URL, (all metadata in <tt>.oai</tt> markup file) </td>
1546 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1547</tr>
1548
1549<tr>
1550 <td> PDFPlug </td>
1551 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1552 <td> (all fields in HTMLPlug) </td>
1553</tr>
1554
1555<tr>
1556 <td> PPTPlug </td>
1557 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1558 <td> (all fields in HTMLPlug) </td>
1559</tr>
1560
1561<tr>
1562 <td> PSPlug </td>
1563 <td> Title </td>
1564 <td> Date, Pages, (all fields in TextPlug) </td>
1565</tr>
1566
1567<tr>
1568 <td> ReferPlug </td>
1569 <td> Abstract, BookConfOnly, Booktitle, Copyright, Creator, Date, Editor,
1570 Keywords, Journal, JournalsOnly, Number, Pages, Publisher,
1571 Publisheraddr, Report, Title, Volume </td>
1572 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1573</tr>
1574
1575<tr>
1576 <td> RTFPlug </td>
1577 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1578 <td> (all fields in HTMLPlug) </td>
1579</tr>
1580
1581<tr>
1582 <td> SRCPlug </td>
1583 <td> Title, filename, includes, class, classdecl </td>
1584 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1585</tr>
1586
1587<tr>
1588 <td> TEXTPlug </td>
1589 <td> Title </td>
1590 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1591</tr>
1592
1593<tr>
1594 <td> UnknownPlug </td>
1595 <td> (as given in the <tt>-assoc_field</tt> plugin argument) </td>
1596 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1597</tr>
1598
1599<tr>
1600 <td> WordPlug </td>
1601 <td>&nbsp;</td>
1602 <td> (all fields in HTMLPlug) </td>
1603</tr>
1604
1605</table>
1606</p>
1607
1608<p>See section two of the _docs:developersguide_ for information about
1609options to plugins, or run the <tt>pluginfo.pl</tt> command on the
1610plugin name after setting up your environment for Greenstone.
1611(For example, "<tt>perl&nbsp;-S&nbsp;pluginfo.pl&nbsp;BasPlug</tt>".)
1612</p>
1613
1614<p>
1615In addition, every document can be manually assigned arbitrary metadata
1616fields and values through use of <tt>metadata.xml</tt> files, as discussed
1617in the manual.
1618}
1619
1620# base puts in surrounding <p> and </p>, so skip first and last ones
1621#
1622_pdfproblems_ {
1623PDF is a "page description language". This means that the document contains
1624objects and commands such as "draw this text here" and "draw this
1625image here".
1626</p>
1627
1628<p>
1629Greenstone uses an external program called "<tt>pdftohtml</tt>" to
1630extract text out of PDF files. Sometimes, there is no text that can be
1631extracted. This often depends on how the PDF was created.
1632
1633<ol>
1634<li>Adobe Acrobat Writer can be used to create PDFs from paper
1635documents that are scanned in by a scanner. In this case, the PDF file
1636contains images of text, rather than computer-readable text. Therefore,
1637<tt>pdftohtml</tt> cannot find any text to extract.</li>
1638
1639<li>Some programs (such as older versions of <tt>GNU ghostscript</tt>,
1640which is used by <tt>ps2pdf</tt> on Unix computers) sometimes create
1641"bitmap fonts", which means that every character in the document is
1642really an image rather than a computer readable letter. The
1643<tt>LaTeX</tt> type-setting program sometimes does this when the
1644"Computer Modern Roman" font is used.</li>
1645
1646<li>Certain characters and character combinations may be extracted incorrectly,
1647depending on the program that generated the PDF file. For example, "ligatures"
1648such as "fi", "fl", "ff" and "ffl" are often rendered using a special glyph
1649rather than as individual characters, and this information may be lost in
1650the textual representation. Also, some PDF generating programs may not
1651correctly encode accented characters. For example, to draw a lowercase "u"
1652with an umlaut accent, LaTeX draws a "u" and then draws an umlaut accent over
1653it. This means that <tt>pdftohtml</tt> will extract two separate characters
1654('š' and 'u') rather than a single accented character (Ì).</li>
1655
1656<li>PDF contains pieces of text, and coordinates for where that text
1657should be displayed. This means that <tt>pdftohtml</tt> may
1658incorrectly guess the order that the text fragments are supposed to
1659occur in. For example, for text that is in two or more columns, the text
1660may be extracted as the first sentence of each column, then the second
1661sentence of each column, and so on. In this case, the extracted text
1662is still usable for indexing purposes, but should not be displayed.
1663
1664In this case, a format statement should be added to the <tt>collect.cfg</tt>
1665file to provide a link to the original PDF file but not to the extracted
1666text, such as:
1667<center>
1668<small><tt>format SearchVList "&lt;td valign=top&gt;[srclink][srcicon][/srclink]&lt;/td&gt; &lt;td&gt;[srclink][Title][/srclink]&lt;/td&gt;"</tt></small>
1669</center>
1670</li>
1671
1672<li>Because of the way that images are embedded in PDF files,
1673<tt>pdftohtml</tt> occasionally extracts an image upside-down, or mirrored.
1674This appears to be a bug in the program.</li>
1675
1676</ol>
1677}
1678
1679#######################################################################
1680
1681package cvs
1682
1683_cvstitle_ {CVS}
1684
1685_cvscheckout_ {
1686To check out the Greenstone source code from our server do the following:
1687}
1688
1689_cvsglicheckout_ {
1690To check out the Greenstone Librarian Interface source code, change to the gsdl directory and do the following:
1691}
1692
1693_cvsupdate_ {
1694Once you have the code you may update it at any time by changing to the
1695gsdl directory and typing:
1696}
1697
1698_notice_ {Note about versions}
1699
1700_recentversion_ {Make sure that your version of CVS is 1.11 or later. Some
1701operating systems (including Mac OS X and Solaris) have older versions
1702that can not connect to a non-default port. This causes an error such
1703the following:}
1704
1705_download_ {You can download pre-compiled packages of recent versions of CVS
1706from <a href="http://ftp.cvshome.org/release/binary/">http://ftp.cvshome.org/release/binary/</a>.}
1707#######################################################################
1708
1709package colcfg
1710
1711_t246_ {Collection Configuration File Samples}
1712
1713_t247_ {collect.cfg file}
1714
1715_t248_ {Acronym Extraction Demo}
1716
1717_t249_ {Agricultural Information Modules}
1718
1719_t250_ {Arabic Collection}
1720
1721_t251_ {Bibliotheque pour le Developpement}
1722
1723_t252_ {Chinese Demonstration collection}
1724
1725_t253_ {Collection on Critical Global Issues (2nd edition)}
1726
1727_t254_ {Colt Bibliography}
1728
1729_t255_ {Computer Science Bibliographies}
1730
1731_t256_ {The Computists' Weekly}
1732
1733_t257_ {Crystal}
1734
1735_t258_ {FAO document repository}
1736
1737_t259_ {FAO on the Internet (1998)}
1738
1739_t260_ {Food and Nutrition Library 1.1}
1740
1741_t261_ {Greenstone Archives}
1742
1743_t262_ {HCI Bibliography}
1744
1745_t263_ {Humanity Development Library}
1746
1747_t264_ {Indigenous Peoples}
1748
1749_t265_ {Kiwi Aircraft Images}
1750
1751_t266_ {Language Extraction Demo}
1752
1753_t267_ {Medical and Health Library}
1754
1755_t268_ {MSWord and PDF Demonstration}
1756
1757_t269_ {Music Videos}
1758
1759_t270_ {OAI Plugin demo}
1760
1761_t271_ {Poverty Alleviation}
1762
1763_t272_ {Project Gutenberg}
1764
1765_t273_ {TidBITS}
1766
1767_t274_ {Virtual Disaster Library}
1768
1769_t275_ {Women's History}
1770
1771_t276_ {World Environment Library}
1772
1773_t277_ {Youth Oral History}
1774
1775
1776#######################################################################
1777
1778package intn
1779
1780_t278_ {Internationalizing Greenstone}
1781
1782_t279_ {There are several different levels of Greenstone language support.}
1783
1784_t280_ {Core languages}
1785
1786_t281_ {
1787English, French, Spanish, and Russian are Greenstone core languages. For
1788these there is a full translation, including interface, documentation,
1789sample collections, installation instructions. They have been produced in
1790conjunction with UNESCO and are distributed with all versions of
1791Greenstone, including the CD-ROM version. They are updated whenever the
1792CD-ROM is re-issued (so far, approximately once a year).
1793}
1794
1795_t282_ {Full translation}
1796
1797_t283_ {
1798Full translations of Greenstone include the interface and all the
1799documentation. Translating the documentation is a big job, and so far,
1800apart from the UNESCO-supported CD-ROM project, there is only one example
1801-- Kazakh. We would like to encourage more people to do full translations.
1802}
1803
1804_t284_ {Maintained interface-only translation}
1805
1806_t285_ {
1807"Maintained" translations include the language interface and a
1808designated person who updates it. The Greenstone interface has been
1809translated into many languages. However, the system is growing and language
1810interfaces become out-dated as new features are added to the software. For
1811each language, we are hoping to find a volunteer who undertakes to
1812periodically maintain the interface for that language.
1813}
1814
1815_t286_ {Unmaintained interface-only translation}
1816
1817_t287_ {
1818The interface comes in two parts: a "core" part that contains the
1819basic digital library interface, and an "auxiliary" part that
1820concerns functionality that is generally only used by the library
1821maintainer (e.g. the Administration pages and the Collector). Many language
1822interfaces just contain the core part; since the core changes relatively
1823slowly these are mostly fairly complete. However, some unmaintained
1824translations are rather out of date.
1825}
1826
1827_t288_ {In progress}
1828
1829_t289_ {For some languages, the translation process is still in progress.}
1830
1831_t290_ {
1832When you download Greenstone, the core language interfaces (English,
1833French, Spanish and Russian) come automatically. The other languages are
1834provided in a separate package which can be <a
1835href="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=12123&release_id=173035">downloaded</a>
1836and installed as required. This makes the downloads smaller, and for those
1837who do not need all the languages Greenstone is slightly smaller and
1838faster.
1839}
1840
1841_tnzdl_ {NZDL Project}
1842
1843_tunesco_ {UNESCO}
1844
1845_t291_ {Here is a summary of the languages currently supported:}
1846
1847_t292_ {Language}
1848
1849_t293_ {Status}
1850
1851_t294_ {Maintainer}
1852
1853_t302_ {core}
1854
1855_t313_ {full}
1856
1857_t300_ {maintained}
1858
1859_t296_ {unmaintained}
1860
1861_t298_ {in progress}
1862
1863_beingupdated_ {being updated}
1864
1865_t295_ {Arabic}
1866
1867_armenian_ {Armenian}
1868
1869_lng5_ {Bosnian}
1870
1871_catalan_ {Catalan}
1872
1873_t297_ {Chinese}
1874
1875_lng4_ {Croatian}
1876
1877_t299_ {Czech}
1878
1879_t301_ {English}
1880
1881_t303_ {Dutch}
1882
1883_farsi_ {Farsi}
1884
1885_t304_ {French}
1886
1887_lng1_ {Finnish}
1888
1889_t305_ {Galician}
1890
1891_georgian_ {Georgian}
1892
1893_t306_ {German}
1894
1895_t307_ {Greek}
1896
1897_t308_ {Hebrew}
1898
1899_lng2_ {Hindi}
1900
1901_hungarian_ {Hungarian}
1902
1903_t309_ {Indonesian}
1904
1905_t310_ {Italian}
1906
1907_t311_ {Japanese}
1908
1909_lng3_ {Kannada}
1910
1911_t312_ {Kazakh}
1912
1913_latvian_ {Latvian}
1914
1915_t314_ {Maori}
1916
1917_marathi_ {Marathi}
1918
1919_t315_ {Nepalese}
1920
1921_t316_ {Portuguese (Brazil)}
1922
1923_t317_ {Portuguese (Portugal)}
1924
1925_romanian_ {Romanian}
1926
1927_t318_ {Russian}
1928
1929_t319_ {Serbian}
1930
1931_t320_ {Spanish}
1932
1933_t321_ {Thai}
1934
1935_t322_ {Turkish}
1936
1937_t323_ {Ukrainian}
1938
1939_t324_ {Vietnamese}
1940
1941_t325_ {Information for language maintainers}
1942
1943_t326_ {
1944There are two methods for working with Greenstone language interface (apart
1945from editing the macro files directly, which is not recommended).
1946}
1947
1948_t327_ {Spreadsheet}
1949
1950_t328_ {
1951We send you an Excel spreadsheet that contains all the English text
1952strings, with empty cells for the translation. You fill it in and return
1953it, and we install it in Greenstone. This method is probably the best for
1954large-scale translation, but requires Microsoft software.
1955}
1956
1957_t329_ {Greenstone Translator's Interface}
1958
1959_t330_ {
1960The Greenstone translator's interface is a Web tool that presents the
1961English text strings needing translation, and provides boxes for entering
1962the translated text. Once submitted, translations are stored in the
1963appropriate language file. The system automatically determines which text
1964strings need translating or updating, and can easily be used to update a
1965language interface.
1966}
1967
1968_t331_ {
1969Generally it is best to use the spreadsheet to create the basic interface
1970and the translation interface to fine tune or update it in the future. In
1971either case you need a username and password, which we supply to designated
1972Greenstone language maintainers.
1973}
1974
1975_t331extra_ {If you are interested, you can play with
1976an open version of the system by logging into <a
1977href="http://www.nzdl.org/cgi-bin/translate/library">this page</a> with
1978username "guest" and no password, though if you do this you cannot save the
1979results.
1980}
1981
1982_t332_ {
1983To register as a designated Greenstone language maintainer, please send a
1984request to Michael Dewsnip (<a
1985href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a>). As
1986soon as you receive your password please change it by going to <a
1987href="http://www.nzdl.org/cgi-bin/translate/library">this page</a>,
1988choosing the administration option, clicking the "change password" option
1989on the left hand side, and following the instructions.
1990}
1991
1992_t333_ {
1993As soon as you log in, the front page of the translator's interface is
1994presented to you. Read the instructions and start translating! You don't
1995have to translate all the strings in one session -- you can stop and
1996continue work later. There is a link at the bottom of each page under the
1997"submit" button that allows you to view a Greenstone site in the language
1998you have chosen, and see your translations take effect. (However, the
1999images are not yet created as you go.)
2000}
2001
2002_t334_ {Language-dependent text in Greenstone}
2003
2004_t335_ {
2005For your information and interest, the language-dependent text in
2006Greenstone comes in these places. We do not attempt to translate the
2007comments that appear in program code, scripts, or configuration files. Our
2008guideline is that non-programming users doing standard things with
2009Greenstone should be able to work entirely in their own language.
2010}
2011
2012_t336_ {User interface}
2013
2014_t337_ {Core}
2015
2016_t338_ {Text used in the basic digital library interface for Greenstone}
2017
2018_t339_ {On-line help for the basic digital library interface}
2019
2020_t340_ {Auxiliary}
2021
2022_t341_ {Text that is generally directed at the library maintainer (e.g. the
2023Administration pages and the Collector)}
2024
2025_t342_ {Text used in the Greenstone Librarian Interface}
2026
2027_t343_ {Text in scripts for running (and compiling) the GLI}
2028
2029_t344_ {The gli.txt help file}
2030
2031_t345_ {On-line help for the GLI}
2032
2033_t346_ {Collection building}
2034
2035_t347_ {Option descriptions and error messages in perl scripts, and plugins
2036and classifiers}
2037
2038_t348_ {Images}
2039
2040_t349_ {Text strings that appear in images that form part of the user
2041interface}
2042
2043_t350_ {Documentation}
2044
2045_t351_ {Manuals}
2046
2047_t352_ {Installer's guide (35 pp.)}
2048
2049_t353_ {User's guide (50 pp.)}
2050
2051_t354_ {Developer's guide (115 pp.)}
2052
2053_t355_ {From Paper to Collection (45 pp.)}
2054
2055_t356_ {Installation}
2056
2057_t357_ {Unix}
2058
2059_t358_ {Text in install.sh and setup.bash.}
2060
2061_t359_ {We do not translate text strings that appear during the
2062configuration process (./configure), because people installing programs on
2063Unix usually do so using English.}
2064
2065_t360_ {Windows}
2066
2067_t361_ {Text in the InstallShield installer used for Greenstone, and
2068setup.bat.}
2069
2070_t362_ {InstallShield comes with many different languages, and we are not
2071responsible for these translations.}
2072
2073_t363_ {Both}
2074
2075_t364_ {The install.txt file}
2076
2077_t365_ {Licence}
2078
2079_t366_ {
2080The GNU General Public Licence is written in English, and official
2081translations into other languages do not exist. However, an unofficial
2082translation is appended to the licence text that is presented during the
2083installation process.
2084}
2085
2086_t367_ {Sample Collections}
2087
2088_t368_ {Collection configuration files for sample collections supplied with
2089Greenstone.}
2090
2091
2092
2093######################################################################
2094# 'preferences' page
2095package preferences
2096######################################################################
2097
2098
2099#------------------------------------------------------------
2100# text macros
2101#------------------------------------------------------------
2102
2103_textpresentationprefs_ {Presentation preferences}
2104_textlanguage_ {Interface language:}
2105_textencoding_ {Encoding:}
2106_textformat_ {Interface format:}
2107_textgraphical_ {Graphical}
2108_texttextual_ {Textual}
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