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What's the ISBN?
2 Answers
I want to give my parents at school the ISBN of the stories their children have enjoyed this year.
When I go on Amazon though, there is an ISBN 10 and an ISBN 13 - which is the right one? Or should I give both?!
When I go on Amazon though, there is an ISBN 10 and an ISBN 13 - which is the right one? Or should I give both?!
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The 13-digit code was introduced on January 1, 2007 - prior to that, the 10-digit code was used.
Different editions of the same title, as well as hard/soft covers will have different numbers.
If it were me, I'd give both numbers, the title & the author - then the parents can't complain that they weren't given enough information!
Hope this helps & good luck!
Different editions of the same title, as well as hard/soft covers will have different numbers.
If it were me, I'd give both numbers, the title & the author - then the parents can't complain that they weren't given enough information!
Hope this helps & good luck!
Currently, both are in use as the trade is in the middle of a 'phasing in' period that lasts until (as far as I know) around 2011/2012.
Older titles/editions will still have only 10-digit ISBNs, most current titles have both, and a few are now produced with just the 13-digit ISBN.
I would suggest that if you have both, then quote them. The database used by bulk suppliers and places like Amazon (plus most library systems) will currently accommodate both and, if you type in one, will automatically generate the other.
As Lie-in King advises, it's good to quote author and full title as well, because any ISBN only refers to one edition, which may not be available, although others are - and then the opportunity has been missed.
Older titles/editions will still have only 10-digit ISBNs, most current titles have both, and a few are now produced with just the 13-digit ISBN.
I would suggest that if you have both, then quote them. The database used by bulk suppliers and places like Amazon (plus most library systems) will currently accommodate both and, if you type in one, will automatically generate the other.
As Lie-in King advises, it's good to quote author and full title as well, because any ISBN only refers to one edition, which may not be available, although others are - and then the opportunity has been missed.