Difference between revisions of "$asc"

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(just a little explanation)
m (added a /asc snippet)
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  //echo -a $asc([[$?]])
 
  //echo -a $asc([[$?]])
 
Type the character you want the ascii value of in the prompt and press enter. This is necessary as you can't use something like 'echo -a $asc(,)', as mIRC would think the comma is seperating parameters and so return '* Too many parameters: $asc'.
 
Type the character you want the ascii value of in the prompt and press enter. This is necessary as you can't use something like 'echo -a $asc(,)', as mIRC would think the comma is seperating parameters and so return '* Too many parameters: $asc'.
 +
 +
== Little snippet ==
 +
You can also use an alias to find out ASCII value of char(s), usage: /asc ab '''→''' a = 97, b = 98
 +
alias asc {
 +
  var %x = 1,%y
 +
  while (%x <= $len($1-)) {
 +
    var %y = %y $mid($1-,%x,1) = $asc($mid($1-,%x,1)) $+ $chr(44)
 +
    inc %x
 +
  }
 +
  echo -a $left(%y,-1)
 +
}
  
 
== See Also ==
 
== See Also ==

Revision as of 10:37, 20 October 2006

Returns the ascii number of the character C.

$asc(C)

Example

echo -a $asc(A) ; returns 65.


To get the ascii value of a character, just type:

//echo -a $asc($?)

Type the character you want the ascii value of in the prompt and press enter. This is necessary as you can't use something like 'echo -a $asc(,)', as mIRC would think the comma is seperating parameters and so return '* Too many parameters: $asc'.

Little snippet

You can also use an alias to find out ASCII value of char(s), usage: /asc ab a = 97, b = 98

alias asc { 
 var %x = 1,%y 
 while (%x <= $len($1-)) { 
   var %y = %y $mid($1-,%x,1) = $asc($mid($1-,%x,1)) $+ $chr(44) 
   inc %x 
 } 
 echo -a $left(%y,-1) 
}

See Also

$chr returns the character of an ascii number.