Thanks for these Bible reading tips. It's unrelated to sripping off the verse numbering metadata, but I thought I'd share one of my currently favorite my favorite tools, given we're suddenly on the topic of Bible study ... I'm fascinated by comparing different translations. As one who doesn't know Greek or Hebrew, comparing translations seems to be the closest I can come to ferreting out shades of meaning that may lurk in the original and sometimes get lost in translation. For that, I rely on hand editing a URL. Here's an example URL pointing to the levitical code that promotes accessibility. yes, the Bible does indeed require accessibility! <smile> https://biblehub.com/leviticus/19-14.htm Perhaps I should turn this into a script someday. But, editing the URL is by hand is so easy, I haven't bothered yet. Enjoy! Janina Linux for blind general discussion writes: > Tim here. If you don't mind the King James Version (though I prefer > NIV, HCSB/CSB, or Young's Literal Translation, am now curious to > try the CJB at your recommendation), my Debian repo has a "bible-kjv" > package. As an added advantage, it works entirely locally so I don't > need to be online to use it. > > It doesn't directly have a way to remove verse references, but a > little post-processing with sed(1) can take care of that: > > $ bible -f luke7:1-9 | sed 's/^[^[:space:]]*[[:space:]]//' > > That puts each verse on its own line, and the sed command strips off > the reference at the beginning of each line. You can pipe those > results through fmt(1) to re-wrap to a fixed line-length (which might > be easier if you're reading via a Braille output device) > > $ bible ... | fmt -w 40 > > or specify a ridiculously high width if you want it as one large > paragraph (which might read more cleanly if you use text-to-speach) > > $ bible ... | fmt -w 99999 > > That said, thanks for sharing this additional option! > > -Tim > > > > On June 14, 2020, Linux for blind general discussion wrote: > > Hi all. As a Christian, I always try to read the Bible. At least a > > little. As much as my wondering mind can remember to. I find verse > > numbers just distract me, in speech or braille. So, I tried a few > > different options, the “flat” World English Bible, or the “New > > English Translation reader’s edition”. Those were both out-of-date, > > because haha, who needs a Bible without verses? I mean, you can > > just look passed them, right? I mean, you can see, right? I mean, > > blind people are like, given sight by Jesus so they can read the > > Bible with their eyes, right? Yeah, I’m pretty cynical. > > > > I like the CJB (Complete Jewish Bible”. Not because I’m a Jew, but > > because I enjoy the freshness of having the original name in all > > their Jewishness, so that I don’t feel like I’m reading the same > > old book that our culture has absorbed and made commonplace and, > > well, ordinary. At least, that’s how it feels to me. But of course, > > there’s not a verse-number-less version of that translation, at > > least, not that I’ve found. > > > > What I /have/ found is Bible Fetch, a command-line fetcher for the > > quite inaccessible Bible Gateway site. Sure, you can read the Bible > > there, but try changing reading settings, like turning off verse > > numbers. At least on the Mac with Safari, I found it impossible. If > > you can get it working on another browser, I’ll gladly use that. > > For Bible Fetch, you just download the repository > > <https://github.com/covode/bible-fetch>, install the needed Python > > 3 scripts, and just run: > > > > #+begin_code shell > > ./bible gen1 —version cjb > > #+end_code > > > > You can even pipe it to a file for easier reading. Note for > > Emacspeak users, paragraphs are not wrapped, so you may need to M-X > > fill-individual-paragraphs to make things better. Note that you > > cannot fetch whole books. I know, it sucks, but I doubt this was > > designed to be an actual Bible-reading tool, more just a reference > > tool. And yes, verse numbers are hidden by default; yay! If you > > need them though, you’ll find the argument for that in the > > repository’s readme file. > > > > In conclusion, while Bible reading sites are often hard to use, for > > me at least, and I’m not always on my phone, there are tools that > > work around this a bit. I don’t like verse numbers either, and none > > of the Bible apps I’ve used, and no usable Bible site so far, > > offers the ability to hide them. Bible Fetch gets around this well, > > and hides verse numbers by default. It can’t download whole books, > > but for viewing the Bible a chapter at a time, it works well. > > _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing > > list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx > > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list > > > _______________________________________________ > Blinux-list mailing list > Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list -- Janina Sajka Linux Foundation Fellow Executive Chair, Accessibility Workgroup: http://a11y.org The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) Chair, Accessible Platform Architectures http://www.w3.org/wai/apa _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list