acountry
The acountry command line tool is a simple tool used to get information about any country in the world. It is designed to quickly provide relevant information about a country without the need for extensive internet searching.
When using the acountry tool, you can easily retrieve details about a country's name, capital, population, area, GDP, currency, languages spoken, timezones, calling code, and flag emoji representation.
The tool is written in Python and utilizes a RESTful API to gather country-related data from reliable sources. It requires an active internet connection to fetch the information.
With acountry, you can simply input the name of a country as an argument and quickly view the requested details on your command line interface. It provides a convenient way to access basic information about multiple countries without needing to visit different websites.
acountry also allows you to search for countries using their ISO 3166 country codes. This enables users to obtain information about a country even if they only know the code.
The output of the acountry tool is presented in a clear and readable format, making it easy to understand the information displayed.
The tool is lightweight and fast, ensuring instant access to country data without any unnecessary delays.
acountry is designed to be user-friendly, allowing individuals of different technical backgrounds to utilize it effortlessly.
It is an open-source tool, which means it can be freely modified, shared, and distributed by anyone.
acountry is continuously maintained and updated to ensure accurate and up-to-date information about countries across the globe.
List of commands for acountry:
-
acountry:tldr:08e2a acountry: Print extra [d]ebugging output.$ acountry -d ${example-com}try on your machineexplain this command
-
acountry:tldr:2bbab acountry: Print a country where an IPv4 address or host is located.$ acountry ${example-com}try on your machineexplain this command
-
acountry:tldr:999b0 acountry: Print more [v]erbose information.$ acountry -v ${example-com}try on your machineexplain this command