Sandbox

In the Sandbox you can find examples of how Summa is being used.

State and University Library

The search at the State and University Library is (of course) powered by Summa.

OpenSearch

The search website at the State and University Library is OpenSearch enabled. This means for instance that it is possible to add the search from the State and University Library to the Firefox search bar.

Summa Gadget

A gadget for iGoogle.

It allows you to search the materials at the State and University Library and shows the first 5 hits in a compact format. Clicking on a hit will take you to the full record at our regular search website.

To try it out go to your iGoogle page, and click "Add stuff..." then click on "Add feed or gadget" in the menu on the left. In the input field enter the following url:

http://www.statsbiblioteket.dk/search/summagadget.xml

Summa Ubiquity Command

This adds a command called summa to Ubiquity allowing you to easily search the materials at the State and University Library. It shows the first 5 hits in a compact format. Clicking on a hit will take you to the full record at our regular search website.

To try it out you first need to install the Ubiquity Firefox extension. After having restarted Firefox go to the Summa Command's github page. There you will be presented with a message allowing you to subscribe to the command. As Ubiquity considers all sources to untrusted you will have to acknowledge a security warning message before actually being able to install the command (read here for more details).

Using your new command should now be as simple as pressing the Ubiquity hotkey and entering summa followed by your query. Read the Ubiquity Tutorial for more information.

As of 2009-07-13 the command has been updated to the Parser 2 format used by Ubiquity 0.5.

Other sites

XSLTs for inspiration

The XSLTs provided here are all free to use, but we offer no guarantee that they are actually useful. Likewise we cannot be held accountable for errors or faults contained within these files.

The files are provided "as-is" under the MIT License.

They are meant to be used as a source of inspiration, as they do contain a few minor dependencies on internal code - for instance used to translate labels to human readable strings in different languages.

Stuff

Sandbox (last edited 2010-03-11 13:18:13 by localhost)