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Python classes for Bible Verse and Passage - useful for storing, comparing, and formatting Bible references. Also includes Django form classes to make it easy to add Bible references to your Django models.

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Python Classes for manipulating Bible references

Python classes for Bible Verse and Passage - useful for storing, comparing, and formatting Bible references. Also includes Django form classes to make it easy to add Bible references to your Django models.

Note that this module does not let you actually pull and display the text of a Bible verse or passage - it is just for working with and displaying the reference to the verses. Other tools and APIs can be used to grab and display the actual verse text for a reference.

Including the translation in a Verse object is optional, but if used, the omitted verses will be accounted for when interacting with the Verse or Passage that it is in. Passages can not combine two Verse objects that are not from the same translation. While any translation can be entered and stored in the objects, the only ones with special data are: ESV, RSV, NIV, NASB, NRSV, NCV, and LB.

Verse Object

Attributes

  • book (book of Bible: 1-66)
  • chapter (chapter number)
  • verse (verse number)
  • translation (string: "ESV", "NASB", etc - or None)

Methods

  • str(self) # normalized string output (for saving to database)
  • format(self, format_string) # outputs a nicely formatted string

Passage Object

Attributes

  • start (Verse object)
  • end (Verse object)

Methods

  • len(self) # total number of verses included in passage
  • str(self) # normalized string output (for saving to database)
  • contains(self, verse) # checks to see if a Verse is included in the Passage
  • format(self, format_string) # outputs a nicely formatted string

Installation

Clone this repository into a folder named "bible" in your Python path. Alternatively - if you don't need the bleeding-edge updates and patches - you can use easy_install:

easy_install bible

That should get you up and running without having to mess with cloning or anything.

Example Usage

Be sure you have this repository cloned into a folder named "bible" in your Python path before trying any of the examples below. The examples below show commands and output as entered using the Python interactive terminal.

Using Verse Objects:

>>> import bible

>>> v1 = bible.Verse('rom1:1')
>>> v1.book
45
>>> v1.format('B C:V')
Romans 1:1
>>> str(v1)
45-1-1

>>> v = bible.Verse('Romans 17:1')
...
RangeError: There are not that many chapters in Romans

>>> v = bible.Verse('Gen 1:50')
...
RangeError: There is no verse 50 in Genesis 1

>>> v = bible.Verse('1-1-1')
>>> v = bible.Verse('gen1:1')
>>> v = bible.Verse('Genesis 1:1')
>>> v = bible.Verse(1,1,1)

Using Passage Objects:

>>> import bible

>>> v1 = bible.Verse('rom1:1')
>>> v2 = bible.Verse('rom1:8')
>>> p = bible.Passage(v1,v2)
>>> p.start.verse
1
>>> p.end.verse
8
>>> len(p)
8
>>> Verse('rom1:4') in p
True
>>> p.format('B C:V to b:c:v')
Romans 1:1 to Romans 1:8
>>> p.format()
Romans 1:1-8
    
>>> p = bible.Passage(v1,v2)
>>> p = bible.Passage(v1, 'Romans 1:8')
>>> p = bible.Passage('rom1:1','rom1:8')

Django Forms

We've added a few additional classes to make it easy for you to use the bible module in your Django models. Here's how:

from bible.djangoforms import VerseField

class Scripture(models.Model):
    """Sample model class using the VerseField type from the bible module"""
    start_verse = VerseField()
    end_verse = VerseField()

Used in the Django admin, or in your own forms, this will let the user enter a verse in plain English, and attempt to interpret it into a Verse object. If an exception is thrown, it will be passed through to the form for the user to fix it.

In the specific example above, given a model with start and end verses, a Passage object could be created in your view by combining the two Verse objects:

from bible import Passage
from myproject.myapp.models import Scripture

s = Scripture.objects.get(id=1)
passage = Passage(s.start_verse, s.end_verse)

Which would then let you do something like this in your templates, assuming you passed the passage variable in to the template context:

{{ passage.smart_format }}

There are no template tags or filters built in to the module yet, but they would definitely be a good addition (thinking specifically of implementing a template filter for Verse.format() like the date filters built in to Django)

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Python classes for Bible Verse and Passage - useful for storing, comparing, and formatting Bible references. Also includes Django form classes to make it easy to add Bible references to your Django models.

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