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The best way to display compound objects really depends on the nature of
the compound objects. For example, the optimal display for a book stored as
a compound object will be very different than an art object taken from
various vantage points or a dataset. Likewise, whether you can get away
with not creating/displaying metadata for components of compound objects
depends on the use case. If you could say a bit more about what kind of
compound objects you have and what system(s) you are migrating to, people
could probably give you better advice.

kyle


On Wed, Jan 28, 2015 at 1:43 PM, Laura Buchholz <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:

> We're migrating from CONTENTdm and trying to figure out how to display
> compound objects (or the things formerly known as compound objects) and
> metadata for the end user. Can anyone point me to really good examples of
> displaying items like this, especially where the user can see metadata for
> parts of the whole? I'm looking more for examples of the layout of all the
> different components on the page (or pages) rather than specific image
> viewers. Our new system is homegrown, so we have a lot of flexibility in
> deciding where things go.
>
> We essentially have:
> -the physical item (multiple files per item of images of text, plain
> text, pdf)
> -metadata about the item
> -possibly metadata about a part of the item (think title/author/subjects
> for a newspaper article within the whole newspaper issue), of which the
> titles might be used for navigation through the whole item.
>
> I think Hathi Trust has a good example of all these components coming
> together (except viewing non-title metadata for parts), and I'm curious if
> there are others. Or do most places just skip creating/displaying any kind
> of metadata for the parts of the whole?
>
> Thanks for any help!
>
> --
> Laura Buchholz
> Digital Assets Specialist
> Reed College
> 503-517-7629
> [log in to unmask]
>