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[[History of Spain#Germanic Occupation of Hispania|Gothic]]
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DS is the history of Germany
At least according to the Library of Congress catalog online.
Any sources for this article??
Moncrief 16:20, 27 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Deletion Objection
Unfortunately, for us to have a listing of the Dewey Decimal Classification, the Chinese Library Classification, the Nippon Decimal Classification, and the Colon Classification system, and not to have a complete listing of the classification system of the single greatest library in the United States of America (and possibly the world) is a little unfair. LOC Classification is used in a great number of college and research libraries, and I think giving a full account of the system--with links--is worthy of an article. Granted the articles I've created aren't wikified, but I like to get the lists up first before completely linking them. If you want to avoid , we can put the entire classification on one page, but it would be inordinately long.
NielsenGW 06:23, 18 November 2006 (UTC)reply
My main concern is that this will end up in a massive number of articles which seem listcruft. I think perhaps an "overview" page (such as is already given at
Comparison of Dewey and Library of Congress subject classification is probably pretty sufficient-it's a lot more encyclopedic as an overview of the topic, rather then going into the minutiae. That should be left to external links. Maybe an "overview" table similar to the Dewey one could be done, with the main "letter" categories and wikilinks?
Seraphimblade 14:21, 18 November 2006 (UTC)reply
On the
Wikipedia:Contents page, there is a link to the classification systems, where I think it was the intent to organize the articles into the relevant classes, subclasses, and areas of organization. Main classes A, B, C, P, and Q are fleshed out with links. I hope and plan to do this with the other classes. I think it's more of an indexing technique rather than an actual encyclopedia article.
NielsenGW 17:16, 18 November 2006 (UTC)reply