The following features not available in the Gospel demo work with the
whole Bible version:

At  the  "find:" prompt you can type a single word or  expression.   The
verses  matching  the  typed  specification  will  be   displayed.    In
expressions,  words  must  have  a trailing space.   Up to  4  (in  this
version)  levels of parenthesis may be used.   Upper and lower case  are
not distinct and may be used interchangably.

If  more than a page of verses is to be displayed,  you will be prompted
after 24 lines to hit return for 1 more line,  space for the next  page,
or  Q to quit.   There is no way of paging backwards currently,  but you
can get the index back using #0 (described later), but without the words
highlighted.

Words  of  Christ  will be in red if a color monitor  is  used.   It  is
designed  for  medium  resolution,   lines  may  be  truncated  in   low
resolution, or it will overflow the page boundary.

To  use an external file,  prefix it with an at sign (@).   This can  be
done at the find: prompt or on the command line.

You can also use the command line available using shell programs as in:
     % godspeed alpha philadelphia

this may be combined with i/o redirection and the external file:

    % godspeed @data.bat >output.log

Of course, the .ttp dialog box can be used instead of a shell.

****
You  can also use >pathspec immediately after the find prompt to open  a
file for output (you will not see it, but it will be sent to the file or
device  such as prn:).   If you wish to append to an existing file,  use
>>pathspec.  To  close  the file and return to normal  printing,  use  >
alone.

find:>list.out Alpha .a Omega   ;file is opened, word is searched for...
find:>                          ;file is closed, back to console
find:>>list.out @test.gsp       ;add the results of test.gsp to the end
find:>temp.out                  ;open a new file (old one is closed)

Some  punctuation  may be found as well.   Wildcards  may  be  used.   ?
matches any individual character, * matches any string.  Any string that
does  not  match any word or combination will bring up a short  list  of
surrounding  valid  words.   Both  types can be  intermixed  freely.   *
matches a string of 0 characters (or anything longer).

To  find  punctuation,  surround the punctuation with either  single  or
double quotes as in "." or '('.

        joy*    matches joy, joyful, joyous, joyfully, etc.
        m?      matches me, my
        y?u*d   matches you-ward

(Index expressions are any expression yielding a valid index of verses)

There are 4 logical operators available, A,B are index expressions:
        .A      And - print only verses containing both A and B
        .O      Or - print verses containing either A or B
        .N      Not - print verses containing A but not B
        .X      Exclusive Or - print verses containing either A or B but
                not both at the same time.

                Abraham .o Isaac .o Jacob
                will find all verses containing any of the three words.
                Abraham .a Isaac .a Jacob
                Abraham Isaac Jacob
                .a is a default.  This will find verses containing all 3 words.

        There is also an expression to expand context,  the [l,r]. [2,3]
        applied  to another expression will add 2 verses before,  and  3
        verses after each selected verse in the expression.  This can be
        applied anywhere after an index expression.  Examples:

        Alpha [1,2]
                Find all occurences of "alpha" with extra context.
        Abraham [0,25] Isaac [25,0]
                Find all places where Abraham and Isaac occur within  25
                verses of each other and interviening context
        Abraham [0,25] Isaac [25,0] .a (Abraham .O Isaac )
                as above, but only the individual verses

There  are saved indicies and index variables.   They are prefixed  with
the pound sign and are followed by a number.   #0 contains the result of
the  last search.   You can use an equals after a first specification to
save an index (then #0 will not be saved)

        find:alpha
        - finds occurences of alpha
        find:#1= #0
        - saves them in index 1
        find:#2= philadelphia
        - saves index of philadelphia in index 2
        find:#1 .a #2
        - finds alpha .a philadelphia

Individual book/chapter/verse specifications can be found.

The following abbreviations are used:

        GEN   EXO   LEV   NUM   DEU   JOS   JUD   RUT   1SA   2SA   1KI
        2KI   1CH   2CH   EZR   NEH   EST   JBO   PSA   PRO   ECC   SOL
        ISA   JER   LAM   EZE   DNL   HOS   JOE   AMO   OBA   JON   MIC
        NAH   HAB   ZEP   HAG   ZEC   MAL   MAT   MAR   LUK   JOH   ACS
        ROM   1CO   2CO   GAL   EPH   PHI   COL   1TH   2TH   1TI   2TI
        TIT   PHM   HEB   JAM   1PE   2PE   1JO   2JO   3JO   JDE   REV

Note  that  they are the first letters of the book except  for  Job-JBO,
Daniel-DNL, Acts-ACS, Philemon-PHM (PHIllipians), Jude-JDE (JUDges) Song
of Solomon is SOL.

You can specify a book with just the 3 letter abbreviation, or follow it
with either a chapter number or a chapter and verse:

        GEN - the book of Genesis
        2CO 1 - the first chapter of second Corinthians
        JOH 3 16 - the verse John 3:16.

You  can specify enumerated verses or ranges as well by using  ,  or  -:
(note that the context is the smallest unit last used, so Book x-y means
chapters  x-y,  while book x:y-z means chapter x,  verses y-z,  and this
applies to commas.   This can be overridden by explicitly using  chapter
and verse,  so book x:y-z:w is how to get around this.  The colon can be
replaced with a space, joh 3 16 <=> joh 3:16

        MAT-REV - the New Testament
        MAT 5-7 - The sermon on the mount
        PSA 42,47,52:3-5,7,ECC 1,3:5
                         ^verse 7
                psalms  42,   47,  psalm  52:  verses  3,  4,  5,and  7,
                Ecclesiastes chapter 1, and verse 5 of chapter 3
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