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BIBLE(1)		    General Commands Manual		      BIBLE(1)

NAME
       bible - Lookup words and	verses in the Bible (King James	version)

SYNOPSIS
       bible [-f] [-l columns] [-m memlimit] [-p path-list] [-d	datafile-name]
       [verse-reference(s)]

DESCRIPTION
       Bible  writes  the  text	of specified Bible verses to stdout.  The text
       used is the Authorized (King James) version.  Commands may be given ei-
       ther on the command line, or interactively.  Bible  also	 supports  in-
       stant  searches for verses containing a particular word,	or combination
       of words.  The program uses a specially-compressed  form	 of  the  text
       that allows for rapid random access, while still	compressing the	origi-
       nal  4.4	 Mbyte	text into less than 1.8	Mbytes (plus the "concordance"
       data file, which	requires nearly	900 Kbytes).

   Options
       The options to bible are:

       -f	      Toggles special output formatting	(pretty-printing).  By
		      default, pretty-printing is on (a	 change	 from  earlier
		      versions).   When	pretty-printing	is off,	bible precedes
		      each verse with its book/chapter/verse reference.	  When
		      pretty-printing  is  on,	the  book name and chapter are
		      printed on a line	by themselves, and only	when the chap-
		      ter or book changes.  The	start of  each	verse  is  in-
		      dented  and  preceded by the verse number.  The book and
		      chapter names are	separated from the text	by blank lines
		      to facilitate post-processing by other tools such	as ad-
		      just.  Pretty-printing activates automatic line breaks (
		      -l)

       -l columns     When pretty-printing is off, bible prints	one verse  per
		      line,  even though the text may be much longer than will
		      fit on a single line of a	display.  This is  very	 handy
		      when the output will be processed	by other programs, but
		      it  doesn't  look	very nice.  The	-l option sets a limit
		      on the length of an output line, causing bible to	 break
		      lines (only between words) to fit.  The columns argument
		      is  optional; if it is not specified, bible will use the
		      value of the COLUMNS environment variable	minus one.  If
		      COLUMNS is not set a default value of 79 is used.

       -m memlimit    Bible normally allocates up to 1 megabyte	for buffers to
		      store uncompressed text.	If the -m option  is  present,
		      bible will set the limit to memlimit kilobytes.

       -p path-list   Bible  normally searches for the text data file first in
		      the current directory, and then in /usr/local/lib.   The
		      -p  option may be	used to	change the search path.	 Path-
		      list should be a list of directories, each separated  by
		      a	space (be sure to escape them from the shell).

       -d filename    Bible  normally  expects to find the text	data in	a file
		      named  bible.data,   and	 the   concordance   data   in
		      bible.data.conc.	 If  the  -d  option is	present, bible
		      will look	for a text data	file  named  filename,	and  a
		      concordance data file named filename.conc	instead.

   Verse References
       Bible  accepts verse references in a variety of forms, including	single
       verses and verse	ranges.	 For example:

	   Jn3:16, john3:16,17 ps1:1-6

       Most recognizable abbreviations are allowed, and	 spelling  errors  are
       ignored	if  the	 book can be made out in the first few characters.  No
       distinction is made between upper and lower case.  Multiple  references
       may be provided on an input line, delimited by spaces or	commas.

       Verse and chapter will be silently coerced into a realistic range, e.g.
       "Ps1:87"	 will  be treated as Psalm 1:6 since there are only six	verses
       in Psalm	1, and "Rev99:99" will be treated  as  Revelation  22:21  (the
       last  verse  in	the  Bible).  A	book name by itself is assumed to be a
       reference to chapter 1, verse 1 of that book, i.e. "Acts" is  the  same
       as "Acts1:1".  Similarly, a book	and chapter without a verse is assumed
       to refer	to verse one of	that chapter.

       A range of verses may be	printed	by giving a starting and ending	refer-
       ence, separated by a hyphen ("-").  For example,	"Gen1:1-Rev22:21" will
       dump the	entire text (about 4.4 MB).

       Bible keeps track of your current context and will attempt to interpret
       references in that context.  For	example	if you request "John1:1", fol-
       lowed  by  "3:16", and then "17", the second reference is assumed to be
       within the book of John,	and the	third is assumed to be within  chapter
       3  of  that  book.  An empty reference, e.g. a blank line on the	input,
       will show the next verse	following the last one displayed.

       More examples of	legal verse references:

	   psalms1

	   Psalms

	   Romans3:23 5:8 6:23

	   1

	   5:1

	   1-22

   Concordance (Word Searches)
       Bible includes a	concordance, with which	you can	immediately  find  all
       the verses in which a word appears.  The	??word command will select all
       the  references	that  include  word.  Bible will display the number of
       matching	references, if any, but	since the number could be quite	large,
       it won't	actually list the references until you ask.

       In order	to list	the references from a word search, the ?list  (or  ?l)
       command	is  used.   Likewise, to print the full	text of	the verses se-
       lected by a word	search,	use the	?view (or ?v) command.

       The lists for multiple words may	be combined using the  ?and  word  and
       ?or  word  commands.   First create a reference list using the ??  com-
       mand.  For example,

	   ??faith

       will find 231 references	to the word "faith".  To narrow	the list  fur-
       ther, the command

	   ?and	love

       will  inform  you that, while there were	281 references to "love", only
       16 of them were also in the previous  reference	list  (i.e.  contained
       both words).  The "combined list" of 16 references produced by the ?and
       word  command  is  the  intersection of the two lists, and replaces the
       original	reference list.

       The ?list and ?view commands will now apply to the combined list.   You
       can continue to apply the ?and command to the combined list.  For exam-
       ple,

	   ?and	hope

       will  further  narrow the combined list to only two references.	Typing
       ?view then displays the full text:

	   1 Thessalonians 1

	     3 Remembering without ceasing your	work of	faith, and labour of
	   love, and patience of hope in our Lord Jesus	Christ,	in the
	   sight of God	and our	Father;

	   1 Thessalonians 5

	     8 But let us, who are of the day, be sober, putting on the
	   breastplate of faith	and love; and for an helmet, the hope of  sal-
       vation.

       The  ?or	 word  command	is similar to ?and, but	it produces a combined
       reference list that is the union	of the two lists.  In other words, the
       list includes those verses in which either of the words	appears.   For
       example

	   ??angels
	   ?or angel

       will find all 283 verses	in wich	either word is used.

       By  default,  reference	lists  cover  the entire Bible.	 But for those
       times when it is	useful to limit	them to	a particular  section  of  the
       text, bible provides the	?in verse range	command.  For example

	   ?in mt1:1-rev22:21

       will  limit future reference lists to the New Testament.	 If you	have a
       current reference list, references that fall outside the	limits will be
       dropped.	 Note that only	a contiguous range of verses may be used.   To
       reset the limits	so that	the whole text is searched, the	command	is ?in
       all.

   Interactive Use
       For  interactive	 use, invoke bible without any verse references	on the
       command line.  You should see a prompt displayed:

	   Bible(KJV) [Gen1:1]>

       Typing ?	 will print a command summary.

       The program accepts three types of interactive command input:

	      	 Bible verse references, as described above.
	      	 Concordance (word search)  commands,  also  described	above.
		 These commands	are: ??, ?list,	?view, ?and, ?or, and ?in.
	      	 Miscellaneous program control commands:

	      ?, ?h, ?help   Prints help text.
	      ?f	     Toggles output formatting modes.
	      ?wfile	     Begin  writing program output to a	file.  If file
			     exists, output is appended	to  what's  there  al-
			     ready.
	      ?w	     Stop writing to a file.
	      >, <	     Toggle  the  direction  (forward  or backward) in
			     which bible will move through  the	 text  when  a
			     blank line	is entered.
	      q, ?bye, ?exit, ?quit, ?q
			     End the program.

BUGS
       References  to  the  one-chapter	 books of Philemon and 3 John are non-
       standard	in that	they require a dummy chapter number.  For example, use
       Phm1:5 instead of Phm5 to get verse 5.

       The possessive form 's is handled strangely by  the  Concordance.   The
       apostrophe  has been removed and	the s has been treated as if it	were a
       separate	word.  So, for example,	if you wanted to find  all  references
       to  "refiner's" you would have to first search for "refiner" (using the
       command ??refiner) and then combine it with a search for	"s" (?and s).

       The convention for handling partial verse specifications	can be clumsy.
       A book name by itself, e.g. "Matthew" is	taken as a reference to	 verse
       1:1  of	that  book.   So ?in matt results in a range limit of a	single
       verse (Mt1:1) instead of	the whole book as one might hope.   Similarly,
       ?in mt-rev results in a range of	Matthew	1:1 to Revelation 1:1, instead
       of extending all	the way	to Revelation 22:21.

FILES
       /usr/local/lib/bible.data
       /usr/local/lib/bible.data.conc

SEE ALSO
       Rev3:20

AUTHOR
       Chip Chapin, Hewlett Packard Company (chip@cup.hp.com).

       The current version uses	Lempel-Ziv-Welch compression on	the data file,
       though  I  modified the "compress" program to emit checkpoints at known
       intervals to facilitate random access to	the data.  I call this	simple
       technique  "windowed compression", and it could be used for any similar
       application.  The data file can still be	uncompressed using  the	 stan-
       dard "compress" utility if my file header is removed.

       I  would	like to	gratefully acknowledge the contribution	of the authors
       of the compress program,	which I	modified for use in the	 text  storage
       component  of  bible.   As  listed  in  the  compress sources they are:
       Spencer W. Thomas, Jim McKie, Steve Davies,  Ken	 Turkowski,  James  A.
       Woods, Joe Orost.

       Matthew	Vernon	<matthew@debian.org>  has  substantially updated a the
       code of this package. His alterations  are  made	 available  under  the
       terms  of  the  GNU General Public Licence, version 2 or	later, as pub-
       lished by the Free Software Foundation.

				January	8, 1993			      BIBLE(1)

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