Skip to content

EarthmanMuons/spellout

spellout

Convert characters into spelling alphabet code words.

CI status


A command-line application for transforming text strings into corresponding code words based on predefined spelling alphabets, like the NATO phonetic alphabet. These alphabets are designed to enhance verbal clarity, especially when spelling out words over low-fidelity voice channels.

Examples

$ spellout Example123!
ECHO x-ray alfa mike papa lima echo One Two Tree Exclamation

$ spellout --alphabet us-financial Example123!
EDDIE xavier adam mary peter larry eddie One Two Three Exclamation

$ spellout --nonce-form Rust
'R' as in ROMEO, 'u' as in uniform, 's' as in sierra, 't' as in tango

$ spellout --verbose Aaron "Bull Schaefer"
Aaron -> ALFA alfa romeo oscar november
Bull Schaefer -> BRAVO uniform lima lima Space SIERRA charlie hotel alfa echo foxtrot echo romeo

$ spellout -- --help
Dash Dash hotel echo lima papa

$ spellout "So πŸ“ž me, maybe?"
SIERRA oscar Space πŸ“ž Space mike echo Comma Space mike alfa yankee bravo echo Question

spellout will also read lines from standard input (stdin):

$ cat secrets | spellout --verbose
4PN%mAnt -> Fower PAPA NOVEMBER Percent mike ALFA november tango
5Jzd}y(d -> Fife JULIETT zulu delta RightBrace yankee LeftParens delta
BTW{2J~l -> BRAVO TANGO WHISKEY LeftBrace Two JULIETT Tilde lima

Usage

In operation, spellout preserves the original capitalization of letters by returning either lowercase or uppercase code words. It similarly converts known digits and other symbols into code words, while unrecognized characters are returned unconverted.

Each string will have its output printed on a separate line. Using -- will stop the program from interpreting subsequent arguments as options.

Usage: spellout [OPTIONS] [STRING]...

Arguments:
  [STRING]...  An input character string to convert into code words

Options:
  -a, --alphabet <ALPHABET>    Which spelling alphabet to use for the conversion
  -o, --overrides <OVERRIDES>  Define overrides for spelling alphabet code words
      --dump-alphabet          Display the spelling alphabet and exit
  -n, --nonce-form             Expand output into nonce form like "'A' as in ALFA"
  -v, --verbose                Use verbose output
  -h, --help                   Print help (see more with '--help')
  -V, --version                Print version

Environment Variables

Some options can alternatively be provided by setting environment variables (the command-line arguments take precedence). To set the variables, use: export VARNAME=value, where VARNAME is the name of the environment variable and value is the desired setting.

SPELLOUT_ALPHABET

This environment variable determines the spelling alphabet to use for the conversion.

Default: nato

Possible values:

  • jan: Use the JAN (Joint Army/Navy) spelling alphabet.
  • lapd: Use the LAPD (Los Angeles Police Department) spelling alphabet.
  • nato: Use the NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) spelling alphabet. This is the default setting.
  • royal-navy: Use the Royal Navy spelling alphabet.
  • us-financial: Use the United States Financial Industry spelling alphabet.
  • western-union: Use the Western Union spelling alphabet.
SPELLOUT_OVERRIDES

Default: None

This environment variable allows you to define overrides for spelling alphabet code words. Provide a comma-separated list of character=word pairs like "a=apple,b=banana".

SPELLOUT_NONCE_FORM

Default: false

Setting this environment variable to any non-falsey value enables the nonce form output, which expands conversions into a form like "'A' as in ALFA".

SPELLOUT_VERBOSE

Default: false

Setting this environment variable to any non-falsey value enables the verbose output, which will include the input characters along with each line's output.

Installation

Precompiled Binaries

Precompiled binaries for various architectures are provided in the Releases section of our GitHub repository. Download the appropriate release archive for your system and extract the contents.

The extracted directory contains:

  • The spellout binary, which is the main application. Ensure to place it in a directory listed in your system's PATH to make it globally accessible.
  • Auxiliary assets, including shell completions and a manual page in ROFF format. Install these according to your operating system's standard instructions.

Building from Source

After installing Rust, to build the binary and install it on your system under the ~/.cargo/bin/ directory, run the following command:

cargo install --locked --git https://github.com/EarthmanMuons/spellout/ spellout

Credits

spellout was inspired by the output from the no-longer-in-existence WinGuides Secure Password Generator that disappeared back in January 2007, and the similarly inspired Lingua::Alphabet::Phonetic::Password Perl module written by James FitzGibbon.

License

spellout is distributed under the terms of both the Apache License (Version 2.0) and the MIT License.

See LICENSE-APACHE and LICENSE-MIT for details.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

If you would like to contribute to the project, please read our guide for contributors.