Thank you Hans! Now that I have scanned 430 pages on a tabletop scanner I appreciate the work that is put into runeberg much more.
Some issues needs clearing though, like why the images won't show in the project. Also I realised that I missed 8 pages while scanning, not strange since I almost fell asleep in front of the scanner a few times ;). But I was wondering how to add pages to an existing project, do I simply use the upload page and just use the existing folder for the project?
Again thank you for your hard work. Simen Bjelke
Hans Persson wrote:
tor 2006-10-26 klockan 07:50 +0200 skrev Simen Bjelke:
I have finaly gotten around to scan the rest of Volume 1 of "Urda, et norsk antikvarisk Tidskrift". And now I want to upload it. But on the upload page there are several things that I need help with, the "verkskod" and the "författarkod". How do I know what code to use?
I have now added some error checks to the upload script. Please try to upload your scanned work now.
You need to figure out a suitable "verkskod" yourself. This is what will appear as the URL for the work (after "runeberg.org"). I would suggest "urda/1889" for the volume of 1889, etc. To add a later volume, give the "verkskod" for the next volume as "urda/1890", and so on.
"författarkod" is one or more name code for the authors of the work (or nothing, if none is given). To find the codes you need, go to http://runeberg.org/search.pl. Search for the each author of the work. Click the link for the right person. You should now be on an author presentation page with a URL looking something like http://runeberg.org/authors/ibsen.html. In the case of Henrik Ibsen (whose author page this is), the "författarkod" is "ibsen". That is, the "författarkod" is the part between the last "/" and the concluding ".html". If an author you need isn't present in our database, you will have to mail us to add him/her first.
I'm aware that this could be a whole lot more user friendly, but I'm afraid this is how it works right now.
Let me know if you have any problems uploading the new work.
Hans