pyisbn
is a GPL v3 licensed module for working with various book
identification numbers. It includes functions for conversion, verification and
generation of checksums. It also includes basic classes for representing ISBNs
as objects.
See the doc
directory for installation instructions and usage information,
you can also view the content online.
pyisbn
does not depend on any modules that aren’t included in Python’s
standard library, and as such should run with Python 3.8 or newer [1]. If
pyisbn
doesn’t work with the version of Python you have installed, open an
issue and I’ll endeavour to fix it.
The module have been tested on many UNIX-like systems, including Linux and OS X, but it should work fine on other systems too.
[1] | Versions v1.2 and earlier will run on older Python versions, right back to 2.4. |
The simplest way to show how pyisbn
works is by example, and here goes:
>>> import pyisbn >>> Permutation_City = "1-85798-218-5" >>> pyisbn.validate(Permutation_City) True >>> pyisbn.convert(Permutation_City) '9781857982183'
or using the object pattern use:
>>> Permutation_City = pyisbn.Isbn10("1-85798-218-5") >>> Permutation_City.validate() True >>> Permutation_City.convert() '9781857982183' >>> print(Permutation_City) ISBN 1-85798-218-5
All independent functions and classes contain (hopefully) useful docstrings.
Now that pyisbn
1.0 has been released the API will is frozen, and any
changes which aren’t backwards compatible will force a major version bump.
I’d like to thank the following people who have contributed to pyisbn
.
- Christopher Wells
- James Gaffney
- hbc (bcho)
- Wen Heping
- Max Klein (notconfusing)
- Matt Leighy
- Nathaniel M. Beaver (nbeaver)
- Randy Syring (rsyring)
- Stephen Thorne
- Kevin Simmons
If I’ve forgotten to include your name I wholeheartedly apologise. Just drop me a mail and I’ll update the list!
If you find any problems, bugs or just have a question about this package either file an issue or drop me a mail.
If you’ve found a bug please attempt to include a minimal testcase so I can reproduce the problem, or even better a patch!