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ISOQUERY(1) ISOQUERY(1)

NAME

isoquery - Search and display various ISO codes (country, language, ...)

SYNOPSIS

isoquery [OPTION...] [ISO codes]

DESCRIPTION

This manual page documents briefly the isoquery command. It can be used to generate a tabular output of the ISO standard codes provided by the package iso-codes. It parses the JSON files and shows all included ISO codes or just matching entries, if specified on the command line. Moreover, it's possible to get all available translations for the ISO standard.

OPTIONS

This program follows the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes ('-'). isoquery supports the following options:

The ISO standard to use. Possible values: 639-2, 639-3, 639-5, 3166-1, 3166-2, 3166-3, 4217, 15924 (default: 3166-1)
Use PATHNAME as prefix for the data files (default: /usr/share/iso-codes/json)
Use this LOCALE for output
Name for the supplied codes (default)
Official name for the supplied codes. This may be the same as --name (only applies to ISO 3166-1)
Common name for the supplied codes. This may be the same as --name (only applies to ISO 639-2, 639-3, and 3166-1)
-0, --null
Separate entries with a NULL character instead of newline
Show country flags with regional indicator symbol letters (only applies to ISO 3166-1)
Show summary of options
Show program version and copyright

EXAMPLES

If called without any command line options, isoquery will put out a table of all ISO 3166-1 codes. The first three columns contain the alpha-2 code, the alpha-3 code, and the numerical code assigned to the country listed in the fourth column.

$ isoquery
AW      ABW     533     Aruba
[...]
ZW      ZWE     716     Zimbabwe


If you need only some countries, you can specify any of the codes in the first three columns to cut down the output.

$ isoquery so nor 484
SO      SOM     706     Somalia
NO      NOR     578     Norway
MX      MEX     484     Mexico


Should you need the translations of the countries' names, just specify in which LOCALE you'd like to see the output. Please note that the original English name will be shown if there is no translation available for the specified LOCALE.

$ isoquery --locale=nl fr de es
FR      FRA     250     Frankrijk
DE      DEU     276     Duitsland
ES      ESP     724     Spanje


If your terminal supports the unicode regional indicator symbol letters, you can use the --flag command line option. Those letters can be displayed as a country flag.

$ isoquery --flag --locale=nl fr de es
FR      FRA     250     🇫🇷      Frankrijk
DE      DEU     276     🇩🇪      Duitsland
ES      ESP     724     🇪🇸      Spanje


All of the above works for different ISO standards as well, so you can switch to the more extensive standard ISO 3166-2 by using the --iso command line option. The columns are ISO 3166-2 code, subset type (e.g. State, Province, etc.), parent, and name. The third column (parent) may be empty.

$ isoquery --iso=3166-2
AD-02   Parish          Canillo
[...]
ZW-MW   Province        Mashonaland West


Codes which have been deleted from ISO 3166-1 are available in ISO 3166-3. The columns are alpha-3 code, alpha-4 code, numeric code, comment, withdrawal date, and name. The columns for numeric code, comment, and withdrawal date may be empty.

$ isoquery --iso=3166-3
AFI     AIDJ    262             1977    French Afars and Issas
ANT     ANHH    532             1993-07-12      Netherlands Antilles
[...]
YUG     YUCS    891             1993-07-28      Yugoslavia, Socialist Federal Republic of
ZAR     ZRCD    180             1997-07-14      Zaire, Republic of


For ISO 639-2, the first three columns are the alpha-3 code, the bibliographic code, and the alpha-2 code. The second and third columns may be empty.

$ isoquery --iso=639-2
aar             aa      Afar
abk             ab      Abkhazian
ace                     Achinese
[...]
zun                     Zuni
zxx                     No linguistic content; Not applicable
zza                     Zaza; Dimili; Dimli; Kirdki; Kirmanjki; Zazaki


You can trim down the results by specifying only some codes. Moreover, the option to get translated names is also available.

$ isoquery --iso=639-2 --locale=pt vi bo kl
vie             vi      Vietnamita
bod     tib     bo      tibetano
kal             kl      Kalaallisut; Greenlandic


If you want to use ISO 639-3, the displayed columns are alpha-3, scope, type, alpha-2, bibliographic, and the language name. Both alpha-2 and bibliographic may be empty.

$ isoquery -i 639-3 aal new spa guc
aal     I       L                       Afade
new     I       L                       Newari
spa     I       L       es              Spanish
guc     I       L                       Wayuu


ISO 639-5 is also available. The displayed columns are alpha-3 and name.

$ isoquery -i 639-5 aus tut
aus     Australian languages
tut     Altaic languages


You can get selected translations of currency names from the ISO 4217 standard by using the following command. The first two columns are the alpha-3 code and the numerical code assigned to the currency.

$ isoquery --iso=4217 --locale=da cad 392
CAD     124     Canadisk dollar
JPY     392     Yen


If you need to get script names, you can use the ISO 15924 table. The first two columns are the alpha-4 code and the numerical code assigned to the script.

$ isoquery --iso=15924 jpan latn 280
Jpan    413     Japanese (alias for Han + Hiragana + Katakana)
Latn    215     Latin
Visp    280     Visible Speech


FILES

By default, the JSON files provided by the iso-codes package will be used.

/usr/share/iso-codes/json/iso_639-2.json
/usr/share/iso-codes/json/iso_639-3.json
/usr/share/iso-codes/json/iso_639-5.json
/usr/share/iso-codes/json/iso_3166-1.json
/usr/share/iso-codes/json/iso_3166-2.json
/usr/share/iso-codes/json/iso_3166-3.json
/usr/share/iso-codes/json/iso_4217.json
/usr/share/iso-codes/json/iso_15924.json

AUTHOR

Dr. Tobias Quathamer <toddy@debian.org>

2022-06-13 3.3.0