++ Jonathan and Bill.
1.) Do you have any thoughts on extending traject to index other types of
data--say MODS--into solr, in the future?
2.) What's the etymology of 'traject'?
- Tom
On Oct 14, 2013, at 8:53 AM, Jonathan Rochkind wrote:
Jonathan Rochkind (Johns Hopkins) and Bill Dueber
'traject' means to transmit (e.g., trajectory) -- or at least it did,
when people still used it, which they don't.
The traject workflow is incredibly general: *a reader* sends *a record* to *an
indexing routine* which stuffs...stuff...into a context object which is
then sent to *a writer*. We
Yep, what Bill said, I have had thoughts of extending it to other types
of input too, it was part of my original design goals.
In particular, I was thinking of extending it to arbitrary XML.
Unlike MARC, there are many other options for indexing XML into Solr
(assuming that's your end goal),
Jonathan, Bill,
Very interesting--thanks for the replies. While I'm not sure I understand what
indexing arbitrary XML into solr might look like, this does prompt me to think
it would be interesting to look at Trajecting up some EAD (may I use it as a
verb?) into solr, for finding aid
Jonathan Rochkind (Johns Hopkins) and Bill Dueber (University of
Michigan), are happy to announce a robust, feature-complete beta release
of traject, a tool for indexing MARC data to Solr.
traject, in the vein of solrmarc, allows you to define your indexing
rules using simple macro and