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- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!news.acns.nwu.edu!telecom-request
- Date: Sat, 2 Jan 1993 15:16:38 -0600
- From: TELECOM Moderator <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
- Subject: Volume 12 Accelerated Index Now Available
- Message-ID: <telecom13.1.2@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Organization: TELECOM Digest
- Sender: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Approved: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Submissions-To: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Administrivia-To: telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Telecom-Digest: Volume 13, Issue 1, Message 2 of 13
- Lines: 81
-
- The Accelerated Index to TELECOM Digest Volume 12 subjects and authors
- is now available in the Telecom Archives for grabbing via anonymous
- ftp lcs.mit.edu.
-
- It is called an accelerated index since it points to other large files
- which contain clusters of back issues (in groups of 50) where the
- subject or author will be located.
-
- A typical entry in the index will look like this:
-
- 12/101-150: Article Title Here (First Last Name of Author Here)
- 12/101-150: Re: Response to Article Here (First Last Name of Author)
-
- This would tell you to go to the sub-directory in the archives for
- Volume 12, and pull the large file named 'vol12.iss101-150'. When you
- have that file available to you, then use grep or other methods of
- searching within that file for the desired articles and authors.
- Author's names are always in (parenthesis) but sometimes were
- shortened in the header (i.e. John Smith became J. Smith or J Smith)
- as needed to make it fit on the line in the Digests from which the
- index was created. Searching for the last name is better than the full
- name since these variances could cause you to miss some entries.
-
- The Accelerated Index is sorted in alphabetical order, with "Re:"
- ignored where it appears. You can dump it out to a printer if
- desired, however the file is about 9500 lines in length. All articles
- with identical names will usually have one without 'Re:' and one or
- more with 'Re:' on the front. Where titles are identical (since the
- 'Re:' if it exists is ignored in the alphabetical sort) the sorting
- then continues by *first* name of author. As an example, "Re: My Life
- Story" by Adam Smith would appear before "My Life Story" by John
- Higdon.
-
- Depending on the name of the original author, the original article
- (that is, the one without 'Re:' on the front) may appear anywhere in
- the cluster of identically-named articles. If you see more than one
- identical titles and none of them say 'Re:', then it is likely the
- 'Re:' was somehow overlooked in processing -or- they are two articles
- with similar material but both are 'original'.
-
- Conversely, if you see one or more articles with 'Re:' and no
- offsetting original article (the one in the bunch without 'Re:' on the
- front) one of two things is possible: either there was no 'original
- article', i.e. I screwed up in the original publication or the thread
- started in Volume 11 and the (Re:)plies got carried over to Volume 12.
-
- Some help is available in the use of the Accelerated Index within
- the index itself: grep -i "Intro:" for several lines of help at the
- start of the file.
-
- A companion file covers volumes 9-10-11 from 1989 through 1991. It is
- set up the same way, and is in excess of 24,000 lines. I was thinking
- about merging volume 12 into the earlier index, but there were some
- problems with that, namely the sorting of entries got very difficult,
- and anyway, some of you already have the earlier edition. Besides,
- there are simply too many small sites where a file of some 35,000
- lines in total simply could not be handled.
-
- Final note:
-
- If you are at a UUCP or BBS site, I strongly recommend you seek
- permission from your system administrator before hauling such big
- files across the wire; and make sure you have room on your spool for
- the uncompressed results.
-
- Remember, these two index files to subject and author names are in
- compressed format in the archives. (They have the suffix '.Z' after
- their name.) You must use binary mode to transfer them via ftp, or
- else the results will be trashed when you try to uncompress them.
-
- I hope these indexes to subjects and authors in TELECOM Digest since
- April, 1989 will be useful to you. It is strongly recommended you have
- a good working knowledge of the 'grep -i' command and can be creative
- in your use of 'grep' for searching for the best results. Let me know
- how it works for you.
-
-
- Patrick Townson
- TELECOM Moderator
-
-