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#1 |
Addict
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: EU
Device: Kobo Aura ONE, Kobo Libra H20
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I know this question has been posted several times but I don't seem to find a definite answer.
We are 3 users at home: my wife, my daughter and me. I need to set up my calibre library so we can have the following categories:
Worth mentioning that the same book can be in the different categories at the same time. For instance, a book that my wife has tagged as read but is on my daughter's reading queue but at the same time in none of my categories...or viceversa - they love fantasy books while I'm more a James Ellroy kind of type ![]() When I was the only calibre library user - for a very short time until my family members discovered the joys of ebooks - I used to have a custom boolean column with YES/NO, then I had a star rating system but none of these approaches seem to cut it. I've read some of you use tags for this categorizing but I can't seem to find a satisfying solution to my issue. What do you think would be the best approach? Many thanks PF |
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#2 |
Sigil & calibre developer
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Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Florida, USA
Device: Nook STR
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Custom column for each person.
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#3 |
Wizard
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Tempe, AZ, USA, Earth
Device: JetBook Lite (away from home) + 1 spare, 32" TV (at home)
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As user_none said, create a custom column for each person. It can be as simple as a yes/no column named READ. Unlike most people, I prefer a bass ackwards approach. I made a star rating type column named UNREAD. No stars means the book has been read. One star means unread. Two stars means the book is on my reading list. I use three stars for the next few books I plan on reading, such as books in a series I'm working on. Four stars is for the book I'm currently working on. I can tell the status of a book at a glance this way.
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#4 |
Wizard
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Tag plus a saved search. So, if you tag your daughter's unread books as 'Daughter-new' or something, you can set up a saved search for this tag. When she logs on, all she has to do is select her saved search from the drop-down and see all her books.
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#5 |
Addict
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Many thanks, guys.
I'll probably go with a custom boolean column per user. |
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#6 |
Groupie
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Brampton ON
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I've worked out a system that works for me. Maybe you can adjust/improve. I have a Hotness column, a Status column and a Genre column. Hotness (H on screen), is a numeric column with 1 being the value for wanting to read it NOW! 2 is for the next book in series that I follow and 3 is non-books, such as news articles, short story collections, etc. I used to have a 9 default Hotness rating, but leaving it blank for books you get from where ever, but don't immediately plan to put on the Kindle, can have a blank hotness rating. If I think something with a higher hotness rating than 1 will get lost in the shuffle (a next volume of a series, for example). I will delete the book off the device in calibre, change the hotness setting, and re-send. Mostly, however, I seem to be able to forego this step. Afterall, I was really hot to trot over the earlier book in the series.
I use the Status column (S) to indicate whether the book is on my kindle (3), to be exported to my kindle on the next update (X), read (R) or is a problem (P). The P's are almost always Doc's that I haven't printed to HTML yet. The genre column is a reduction of the tags column to a series of two letters per tag. I use very few generic tags, but if you are a heavy tags user, then create a genre column directly and use it for short-form values like My, SF, Sp, Ro, etc. On update Saturday, I sort the database by Hotness reversed, then by Status. It's easy to find the various sections when the Kindle is plugged in. A 3 status with no On Device setting is a book that I've read and deleted from the Kindle. I change the status to R and then rate the book. X status books are sent to the Kindle, and then the X is mass changed to a 3. That's it for the calibre handling of the operation. Note, you can assign status's for multiple readers, if you choose. I'd still keep it as one letter, by YMMV. On the Kindle, I sort by title and I get all of the hottest books up front. Then they are segmented by the genre tag. So, I will see [1My] for a bunch of titles, [1NF] for a couple more, then the [1SF], etc. I usually have about three pages of 'hot' titles. After the hot ones come follow-up books in series, books I 'think' I want to read, but don't excite me and new authors I'm going to try out ... when I get the itch to experiment or want to read what everybody else seems to be reading. While I have a LOT of books in Calibre, I try to keep the selection actually on the reader down in the sub-100 area. That ALWAYS leaves me with enough choice. When I finish reading a book, it's HOME, select Most Recent, Left and delete the book. Then I select By Title and instantly I have a 2-3 page list of what I am interested in, sorted by genre. And I try to switch genre with each book, unless I've got a trilogy going that's all hot for me. chrome://informenter/skin/marker.png Other people use collections and my system, while easy to adapt to multiple people, is single reader-focused. But I find that the time spent clicking on the Kindle is incredibly short. And thus, I get more reading done. Which, afterall, is the goal of any organizational system. |
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