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python-iso639
python-iso639
is a Python package for ISO 639 language codes, names, and
other associated information.
Current features:
- 🌐 A representation of languages mapped across ISO 639-1, 639-2, and 639-3.
- 🔎 Functionality to “guess” what a language is for a given unknown language code or name.
- 🚀 Optimized for speed in retrieving language information.
Installation
pip install python-iso639
Usage
python-iso639
revolves around a Language
class.
Instances of Language
have attributes and methods that you will find useful.
Note that while the package name registered on PyPI is python-iso639
,
the actual import name during runtime is iso639
(which means you should do import iso639
in your Python code).
Creating Language
Instances
Create a Language
instance by one of the class methods.
from_part3
, with an ISO 639-3 code
>>> import iso639
>>> lang1 = iso639.Language.from_part3('fra')
>>> type(lang1)
<class 'iso639.language.Language'>
>>> lang1
Language(part3='fra', part2b='fre', part2t='fra', part1='fr', scope='I', type='L', name='French', comment=None, other_names=None, macrolanguage=None, retire_reason=None, retire_change_to=None, retire_remedy=None, retire_date=None)
Fast object instantiation for retrieving language information (run on Python 3.13, macOS 15.3.1, Apple M1 Pro)
In [1]: import iso639
In [2]: %timeit iso639.Language.from_part3("fra")
217 ns ± 0.139 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1,000,000 loops each)
From Another ISO 639 Code Set or a Reference Name
>>> lang2 = iso639.Language.from_part2b('fre') # ISO 639-2 (bibliographic)
>>> lang3 = iso639.Language.from_part2t('fra') # ISO 639-2 (terminological)
>>> lang4 = iso639.Language.from_part1('fr') # ISO 639-1
>>> lang5 = iso639.Language.from_name('French') # ISO 639-3 reference language name
A LanguageNotFoundError
is Raised for Invalid Inputs
>>> iso639.Language.from_part3('Fra') # The user input is case-sensitive!
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
LanguageNotFoundError: 'Fra' isn't an ISO language code or name
>>>
>>> iso639.Language.from_name("unknown language")
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
LanguageNotFoundError: 'unknown language' isn't an ISO language code or name
Accessing Attributes
>>> lang1
Language(part3='fra', part2b='fre', part2t='fra', part1='fr', scope='I', type='L', name='French', comment=None, other_names=None, macrolanguage=None, retire_reason=None, retire_change_to=None, retire_remedy=None, retire_date=None)
>>> lang1.part3
'fra'
>>> lang1.name
'French'
Comparison
>>> lang1 == lang2 == lang3 == lang4 == lang5 # All are French
True
>>> lang6 = iso639.Language.from_part3('spa') # Spanish
>>> lang1 == lang6 # French vs. Spanish
False
>>> 'French' == lang1.name == lang2.name == lang3.name == lang4.name == lang5.name
True
>>> lang6.name
'Spanish'
Guess a Language: Classmethod match
You don’t know which code set or name your input is from?
Use the match
classmethod:
>>> lang1 = iso639.Language.match('fra')
>>> lang2 = iso639.Language.match('fre')
>>> lang3 = iso639.Language.match('fr')
>>> lang4 = iso639.Language.match('French')
>>> lang1 == lang2 == lang3 == lang4
True
By default, the classmethod match
supports case-insensitive matching
and ignores leading/trailing whitespace.
To enforce exact matching instead, pass in exact=True
:
>>> lang5 = iso639.Language.match('FRA')
>>> lang6 = iso639.Language.match('fra ')
>>> lang7 = iso639.Language.match('french')
>>> lang4 == lang5 == lang6 == lang7
True
>>> iso639.Language.match("french", exact=True)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
LanguageNotFoundError: 'french' isn't an ISO language code or name
The classmethod match
is particularly useful for consistently
accessing a specific attribute from unknown inputs, e.g., the ISO 639-3 code.
>>> 'fra' == lang1.part3 == lang2.part3 == lang3.part3 == lang4.part3 == lang5.part3 == lang6.part3 == lang7.part3
True
If there’s no match, a LanguageNotFoundError
is raised,
which you may want to catch:
>>> try:
... lang = iso639.Language.match('not gonna find a match')
... except iso639.LanguageNotFoundError:
... print("no match found!")
...
no match found!
Macrolanguages and Alternative Names
>>> language = iso639.Language.match('yue')
>>> language.name
'Yue Chinese' # also commonly known as Cantonese
>>> language.macrolanguage
'zho' # Chinese
>>> language.other_names
[Name(print='Yue Chinese', inverted='Chinese, Yue')]
>>> for name in language.other_names:
... print(f'{name.print} | {name.inverted}')
...
Yue Chinese | Chinese, Yue
Retired Language Codes:
>>> language = iso639.Language.match('bvs')
>>> language.part3
'bvs'
>>> language.name
'Belgian Sign Language'
>>> language.status
'R' # (R)etired
>>> language.retire_reason
'S' # (S)plit
>>> language.retire_change_to is None
True
>>> language.retire_remedy
'Split into Langue des signes de Belgique Francophone [sfb], and Vlaamse Gebarentaal [vgt]'
>>> language.retire_date
datetime.date(2007, 7, 18)
Into the Weeds
Attributes of a Language
Instance
A Language
instance has the following attributes:
None
?
Description
part3
str
✗
ISO 639-3 code
part2b
str
✓
ISO 639-2 code (bibliographic)
part2t
str
✓
ISO 639-2 code (terminological)
part1
str
✓
ISO 639-1 code
scope
str
✗
One of {(I)ndividual, (M)acrolanguage, (S)pecial}
type
str
✓
One of {(A)ncient, (C)onstructed, (E)xtinct, (H)istorical, (L)iving, (S)pecial} [1]
status
str
✗
One of {(A)ctive, (R)etired}, describing the ISO 639-3 code
name
str
✗
Reference language name in ISO 639-3
comment
str
✓
Comment from ISO 639-3
other_names
List[Name]
✓
Other print and inverted names [2]
macrolanguage
str
✓
Macrolanguage
retire_reason
str
✓
Retirement reason, one of {(C)hange, (D)uplicate, (N)on-existent, (S)plit, (M)erge}
retire_change_to
str
✓
ISO 639-3 code to which this language can be changed, if retirement reason is one of {(C)hange, (D)uplicate, (M)erge}
retire_remedy
str
✓
Instructions for updating this retired language code
retire_date
datetime.date
✓
The date the retirement became effective
[1] If the ISO 639-3 code is retired, then the type
attribute is None
,
because its value is not clearly discernible from the SIL data source.
[2] A Name
instance has the attributes print
and inverted
,
for the print name and inverted name, respectively.
If reference name, print name, and inverted name are all the same, then
that particular (print name, inverted name) pair is excluded from
the other_names
attribute.
For example, for Spanish (ISO 639-3: spa), one (print name, inverted name)
pair is (Spanish, Spanish) from the SIL data source, but this pair is
excluded from its list of other_names
.
How Language.match
Matches the Language
At a high level, Language.match
assumes the input is more likely to be
a language code rather than a language name.
Beyond that, the precise order in matching is as follows:
- ISO 639-3 codes (among the active codes)
- ISO 639-2 (bibliographic) codes
- ISO 639-2 (terminological) codes
- ISO 639-1 codes
- ISO 639-3 codes (among the retired codes)
- ISO 639-3 reference language names
- ISO 639-3 alternative language names (the “print” ones)
- ISO 639-3 alternative language names (the “inverted” ones)
As soon as a match is found, Language.match
returns a Language
instance.
If there isn’t a match, a LanguageNotFoundError
is raised.
Language
is a dataclass
The Language
class is a dataclass.
All functionality of
dataclasses
applies to Language
and its instances,
e.g., dataclasses.asdict
:
>>> import dataclasses, iso639
>>> language = iso639.Language.match('fra')
>>> dataclasses.asdict(language)
{'part3': 'fra', 'part2b': 'fre', 'part2t': 'fra', 'part1': 'fr', 'scope': 'I', 'type': 'L', 'status': 'A', 'name': 'French', 'comment': None, 'other_names': None, 'macrolanguage': None, 'retire_reason': None, 'retire_change_to': None, 'retire_remedy': None, 'retire_date': None}
Constants
DATA_LAST_UPDATED
: The release date of the included language code data from SIL>>> import iso639 >>> iso639.DATA_LAST_UPDATED datetime.date(2025, 1, 15)
ALL_LANGUAGES
: The list of allLanguage
objects based on the included language code data>>> import iso639 >>> type(iso639.ALL_LANGUAGES) <class 'set'> >>> len(iso639.ALL_LANGUAGES) 8307
Links
- Author: Jackson L. Lee
- Source code: https://github.com/jacksonllee/iso639
License and Data Source
The python-iso639
code is released under an Apache 2.0 license.
Please see LICENSE.txt
for details.
The data source that backs this package is the
language code tables published by SIL.
The tables are included in this package under src/iso639/_data/
.
They are the UTF8-encoded *.tab
tab-separated files bundled as a ZIP archive file,
typically found at a URL that looks like
https://iso639-3.sil.org/sites/iso639-3/files/downloads/iso-639-3_Code_Tables_YYYYMMDD.zip
(replace YYYYMMDD
with the data release date).
Note that SIL resources have their terms of use.
Why Another ISO 639 Package?
Both packages iso639 and iso-639 exist on PyPI. However, as of this writing (May 2022), they were last updated in 2016 and don’t seem to be maintained anymore for updating the language codes. pycountry is a great package, but what if you want a more lightweight package with just the language codes only and not the other stuff? :-)
If you ever notice that the upstream ISO 639-3 tables from SIL have been updated and yet this package isn’t using the latest data, please ping me by opening a GitHub issue.