NAME
Bible::Reference - Simple Bible reference parser, tester, and canonicalizer
VERSION
version 1.12
SYNOPSIS
use Bible::Reference;
my $r = Bible::Reference->new;
$r = Bible::Reference->new(
bible => 'Protestant', # or "Orthodox" or "Catholic"
acronyms => 0, # or 1
sorting => 1, # or 0 to preserve input order
add_detail => 0, # or 1 to add implied chapter and verse detail
);
$r = $r->in('Text with I Pet 3:16 and Rom 12:13-14,17 references in it.');
my $refs = $r->refs;
# 'Romans 12:13-14, 17; 1 Peter 3:16'
my $books = $r->as_books;
# [ 'Romans 12:13-14, 17', '1 Peter 3:16' ]
my $verses = $r->as_verses;
# [ 'Romans 12:13', 'Romans 12:14', 'Romans 12:17', '1 Peter 3:16' ]
my $hash = $r->as_hash;
# { 'Romans' => { 12 => [ 13, 14, 17 ] }, '1 Peter' => { 3 => [16] } }
my $array = $r->as_array;
# [[ 'Romans', [[ 12, [ 13, 14, 17 ]]]], [ '1 Peter', [[ 3, [16] ]]]]
my $text = $r->as_text;
# 'Text with 1 Peter 3:16 and Romans 12:13-14, 17 references in it.'
$r = $r->in('More text with Romans 12:16, 13:14-15 in it.'); # appends "in"
$r = $r->clear; # clears "in" data but not anything else
my @books = $r->books;
my @sorted = $r->sort( 'Romans', 'James 1:5', 'Romans 5' );
$r->bible('Orthodox'); # switch to the Orthodox Bible
$r->acronyms(1); # output acronyms instead of full book names
$r->sorting(0); # deactivate sorting of references
$r->add_detail(1); # turn on adding chapter and verse detail
$r->require_verse_match(1); # require verses in references for matching
$r->require_book_ucfirst(1); # require book names to be ucfirst for matching
DESCRIPTION
This module is intended to address Bible reference canonicalization. Given some input, the module will search for Bible references, canonicalize them, and return them in various forms desired. It can return the canonicalized within the context of the input string or strings as well.
The module supports the Protestant Bible by default and by configuration setting also the Orthodox Bible and the current Catholic Bible.
There are also some potentially useful helper methods.
METHODS
new
A typical instantiation method that accepts some settings, all of which can later be fetched and changed with accessors.
my $r = Bible::Reference->new(
bible => 'Protestant', # or "Orthodox" or "Catholic"
acronyms => 0, # or 1
sorting => 1, # or 0 to preserve input order
);
See the below accessor methods for details on these settings.
bible
This accessor method gets and sets the current Bible to use. By default, the Bible is the Protestant Bible (since this is most common). Other Bibles supported are the Orthodox and current Catholic Bibles.
You can set the value to any substring of the name.
$r->bible('c'); # sets Bible to "Catholic"
acronyms
This accessor method gets and sets the boolean setting of whether to return full book names (which is the default) or acronyms.
$r->acronyms(0); # default
$r->in('Rom 1:1')->refs; # returns "Romans 1:1"
$r->acronyms(1);
$r->in('Rom 1:1')->refs; # returns "Ro 1:1"
sorting
This accessor method gets and sets the boolean setting of whether or not to return references sorted (which is the default) or in their input order.
$r->sorting(1); # default
$r->in('Jam 1:1; Rom 1:1')->refs; # returns "Romans 1:1; James 1:1"
$r->sorting(0);
$r->in('Jam 1:1; Rom 1:1')->refs; # returns "James 1:1; Romans 1:1"
Note that within a single given reference, chapters and verses will always be returned sorted and canonicalized.
in
This method accepts string input that will get parsed and canonicalized by the module. The method returns a reference to the object.
$r = $r->in('Text with I Pet 3:16 and Rom 12:13-14,17 references in it.');
The method is also additive, in that if you call it multiple times or with a list of input strings, the object stores them all (until you call clear
).
$r->in('Text with I Pet 3:16 and Rom 12:13-14,17 references in it.');
$r->in('More text with Roms 12:16, 13:14-15 in it.');
$r->in(
'Even more text with Jam 1:5 in it.',
'And one last bit of text with 1 Cor 12:8-12 in it.',
);
clear
This method clears all input provided via in
and returns a reference to the object.
$r = $r->clear; # clears "in" data but not anything else
refs
This method returns all references found within the input. It does so as a single string using canonical reference format.
my $refs = $r->refs;
# 'Romans 12:13-14, 17; 1 Peter 3:16'
The "canonical reference format" is as follows: Book names are proper-noun cased followed by a single space. If the book name has a number prefix, it is in numeric form followed by a single space. Chapter numbers are next, followed by a ":" and verses. For uninterrupted ranges of verses, the "-" character is used. Interrupted verses (i.e. "14, 17") are displayed with a comma and space between them.
Multiple book references are separated by a ";" and space. Multiple chapters within the same book are separated by a space and comma: "Romans 12:14, 17:18; 1 Peter 3:16" Therefore, whole chapters that follow chapters with verses will repeat of the book name (for disambiguation). Whole chapters that only follow whole chapters will not repeat the book name.
as_books
This method is the same as refs
except that it returns a list or arrayref (depending on context) of canonicalized references by book.
my $books = $r->as_books;
# [ 'Romans 12:13-14, 17', '1 Peter 3:16' ]
my @books = $r->as_books;
# 'Romans 12:13-14, 17', '1 Peter 3:16'
as_chapters
This method is the same as as_books
except that it returns a list or arrayref (depending on context) of canonicalized references by book and chapter.
as_runs
This method is the same as as_chapters
except that it returns a list or arrayref (depending on context) of canonicalized references by verse run. A "verse run" is a set of verses in an unbroken list together.
my $books = $r->as_runs;
# [ 'Romans 12:13-14', 'Romans 12:17', '1 Peter 3:16' ]
as_verses
This method is the same as as_books
except that it returns a list or arrayref of independent verses,
my $verses = $r->as_verses;
# [ 'Romans 12:13', 'Romans 12:14', 'Romans 12:17', '1 Peter 3:16' ]
my @verses = $r->as_verses;
# 'Romans 12:13', 'Romans 12:14', 'Romans 12:17', '1 Peter 3:16'
as_hash
This method returns the references output like refs
would except that the output is a hash or hashref (depending on context) of a tree of data.
my $hash = $r->as_hash;
# { 'Romans' => { 12 => [ 13, 14, 17 ] }, '1 Peter' => { 3 => [16] } }
my %hash = $r->as_hash;
# 'Romans' => { 12 => [ 13, 14, 17 ] }, '1 Peter' => { 3 => [16] }
as_array
This method is the same as as_hash
except that the output is an array or arrayref (depending on context) of a tree of data.
my $array = $r->as_array;
# [[ 'Romans', [[ 12, [ 13, 14, 17 ]]]], [ '1 Peter', [[ 3, [16] ]]]]
my @array = $r->as_array;
# [ 'Romans', [[ 12, [ 13, 14, 17 ]]]], [ '1 Peter', [[ 3, [16] ]]]
as_text
This method returns a text string or, if there were multiple calls to in
, an array or arrayref of text strings (depending on context), of the input string or strings with the references found therein canonicalized.
my $text = $r->as_text;
# 'Text with 1 Peter 3:16 and Romans 12:13-14, 17 references in it.'
$r->clear;
$r->in('Text with I Pet 3:16 and Rom 12:13-14,17 references in it.');
$r->in('More text with Roms 12:16, 13:14-15 in it.');
$r->in(
'Even more text with Jam 1:5 in it.',
'And one last bit of text with 1 Cor 12:8-12 in it.',
);
my @text = $r->as_text;
# 'Text with 1 Peter 3:16 and Romans 12:13-14, 17 references in it.',
# 'More text with Romans 12:16, 13:14-15 in it.',
# 'Even more text with James 1:5 in it.',
# 'And one last bit of text with 1 Corinthians 12:8-12 in it.',
books
This method returns a list or arrayref (depending on the context) of books of the Bible, in order.
my @books = $r->books;
my $books = $r->books;
set_bible_data
If the preset Bibles are not going to cover your own needs, you can set your own Bible data for use within the module with this method. It returns the instantiated object, so you can chain it like so:
my $r = Bible::Reference->new->set_bible_data(
'Special' => [
[ 'Genesis', 'Ge', 'Gn', 'Gen' ],
[ 'Exodus', 'Ex', 'Exo' ],
[ 'Leviticus', 'Lv', 'Lev' ],
[ 'Numbers', 'Nu', 'Nm', 'Num' ],
[ 'Deuteronomy', 'Dt', 'Deu' ],
],
);
The method expects two inputs: a string that will be used as the label for the Bible and an arrayref of arrayrefs. Each sub-arrayref must contain at least 2 strings: the first being the full-name of the book, and the second the canonical acronym. Subsequent matching acronyms can optionally be added. These are acronyms that if found will match to the book, in addition to the canoniocal acronym.
When you call this method with good input, it will save the new Bible and internally call bible()
to set the new Bible as active.
expand_ranges
This is a helper method you'll likely not need to use directly, but it's provided just in case you do. It requires 2 strings: a book name and a chapter/verse ranges string. It will return a string represented the "expanded" chapter/verse range.
$r->expand_ranges( 'Mark', '1:3-7' );
# returns "1:3, 4, 5, 6, 7"
$r->expand_ranges( 'Mark', '4:37-5:9' );
# returns "4:37, 38, 39, 40, 41; 5:1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9"
get_bible_structure
This method will return an arrayref containing an arrayref per book (in order) that contains two elements: the name of the book and an arrayref of the maximum verse number per chapter.
identify_bible
This method is to help identify which Bible to use if you aren't sure. It requires a list of strings as input, each string representing a book from the Bible you're trying to identify. This method will then try to match these book names across all Bibles and will return an array of the most likely Bibles for your inputs.
For example:
my $bibles = $r->identify_bible( 'Gen', 'Lev', '3 Mac' );
The above will return:
[
{
name => 'Orthodox',
count => 3,
books => [ 'Genesis', 'Leviticus', '3 Maccabees' ],
},
],
HANDLING MATCHING ERRORS
By default, the module does its best to find things that look like valid references inside text. However, this can result in the occational matching error. For example, consider the following text input:
This is an example of the 1 time it might break.
It also breaks if you mention number 7 from a list of things.
Legal opinions of judges 3 times said this would break.
With this, we'd falsely match: Thessalonians 1, Numbers 7, and Judges 3.
There are a couple things you can do to reduce this problem. You can optionally set require_verse_match
to a true value. This will cause the matching algorithm to only work on reference patterns that contain what look to be verses.
You can optionally set require_book_ucfirst
to a true value. This will cause the matching algorithm to only work on reference patterns that contain what looks like a book that starts with a capital letter (instead of the default of any case).
Another option to consider is adjusting the minimum_book_length
value. It sets the minimum length of characters to match a book name. It's default set to 3. Given a book like "Genesis", this will mean "Gen" and "Gene" and "Genes" matches, but "Ge" won't.
SEE ALSO
You can look for additional information at:
AUTHOR
Gryphon Shafer <gryphon@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is Copyright (c) 2017-2050 by Gryphon Shafer.
This is free software, licensed under:
The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible)