in his well-known handbook on excerpting methods (
De arte excerpendi, 1689).
Carl Linnaeus, an 18th-century naturalist who formalized
binomial nomenclature, is said to have "invented the index card" though there is room for dispute about whether he alone was the index card's inventor. Linnaeus had to deal with a conflict between needing to bring information into a fixed order for purposes of later retrieval, and needing to integrate new information into that order permanently. His solution was to keep information on particular subjects on separate sheets, which could be complemented and reshuffled. In the mid 1760s Linnaeus refined this into what are now called index cards. Index cards could be selected and moved around at will to update and compare information at any time. In the late 1890s,
edge-notched cards were invented, which allowed for easy sorting of data by means of a needle-like tool. These edge-notched cards were phased out in the 1980s in favor of computer databases, and they are no longer sold. James Rand, Sr.'s Rand Ledger Company (founded 1898) with its Visible Ledger system, and his son
James Rand, Jr.'s
American Kardex dominated sales of index card filing systems worldwide through much of the 20th century. "Kardex" became a common noun, especially in the medical records field where "filing a kardex" came to mean filling out a patient record on an index card. Library
card catalogs as currently known arose in the 19th century, and
Melvil Dewey standardized the index cards used in library card catalogs in the 1870s.
Vladimir Nabokov wrote his works on index cards, a practice mentioned in his work
Pale Fire. ==See also==