Difference between revisions of "If-Then-Else"
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if (*bat* iswm $1-) | if (*bat* iswm $1-) | ||
− | allows a character before the string and after it, but there's no need for it | + | allows a character before the string and after it, but there's no need for it. |
Revision as of 23:55, 27 November 2005
Contents
If-then-else statements
The If-then-else statement allows you to compare values and execute different parts of a script based on that comparison.
if (v1 operator v2) { commands1 } elseif (v1 operator v2) { commands2 } else { commands3 }
If the first statement (line) is $true, commands inside the first brackets are executed. If the first if-statement returns $false, script starts looking for an elseif-statement. An elseif-statement is only triggered if the group's if-statement returned $false before. And at last, if none of the if or elseif statements were triggered, commands in else-statement are executed.
One if structure/group can consist of one main if-statement, after it there can be 0 .. N elseif-statements. There can be only one else, which can be understood as the default statement, if none one before were triggered. There doesn't need to be else-statement though.
Every if statement is handled separatly and none of others affect in another.
if (A) { ... } elseif (B) { if (C) { ... } elseif (D) { ... } elseif (E) { ... } else { F } } elseif (G) { ... } else { H }
If structure would be hierarchical represented it would look something like this
A If A is true, execute its commands and return B If B is true, \ C check if C, D or E returns true D E F If none of these got triggered, return F G G is checked only if A or B were not triggered H If none of previous wasn't matches, H is returned
The Operators
== equal to === equal to (case-sensitive) != not equal to < less than > larger than >= larger than or equal to <= smaller than or equal to // v2 is a multiple of v1 \\ v2 is not a multiple of v1 & bitwise comparison isin string v1 is in string v2 isincs string v1 is in string v2 (case sensitive) iswm wildcard string v1 matches string v2 iswmcs wildcard string v1 matches string v2 (case sensitive) isnum number v1 is a number in the range v2 which is in the form n1-n2 (v2 optional) isletter letter v1 is a letter in the list of letters in v2 (v2 optional) isalnum text contains only letters and numbers isalpha text contains only letters islower text contains only lower case letters isupper text contains only upper case letters ison nickname v1 is on channel v2 isop nickname v1 is an op on channel v2 ishop nickname v1 is a halfop on channel v2 isvoice nickname v1 has a voice on channel v2 isreg nickname v1 is a normal nick on channel v2 ischan if v1 is a channel which you are on. isban if v1 is a banned address in internal ban list isaop if v1 is a user in your auto-op list for channel v2 (v2 optional) isavoice if v1 is a user in your auto-voice list for channel v2 (v2 optional) isignore if v1 is a user in your ignore list with the ignore switch v2 (v2 optional) isprotect if v1 is a user in your protect list for channel v2 (v2 optional) isnotify if v1 is a user in your notify list.
To negate an operator you can prefix it with an ! exclamation mark.
Few examples
if (cat isin $1-)
matches for "a cat", catalog and any string where "cat" is in.
iswm stands for is wildcard match.
Operators:
* 0..N character ? 1 character & 1 word (1-N non-space characters)
if (*bat* iswm $1-)
allows a character before the string and after it, but there's no need for it.
if (ca?* iswm $1-)
requires one character after "ca" and allows 0..N character after it. So it would match for cat, cab, cabin etc.
if (I & you iswm $1-)
matches any string that consists of "I + one word + you".
Not all comparations need two parameters:
if ($1- isupper)
returns true, if $1- oly contain uppercase letters. So ABCD returns true, but even one lowercase letter makes it return false.
Combining comparisons
You can combine comparisons by using the && for AND and || for OR characters.
var %c = 5 if (%c < 6) && (%c > 0) ; returns true because %c is both, smaller than 6 and greater than 0 if (%c < 6) || (%c isalpha) ; returns true because %c is lower than 6. ; note that %c is not alphapetical and returns false, but || matches for 1 .. N true values. if (%c < 6) && (%c isalpha) ; returns false if (%c < 6) && (%c !isalpha) ; ! negates the operator, this this returns true
NOTE this article covers only if-then-else string operators, so you can't use
if (foo isin test.txt)
to check content of text-files. You can use $read instead to read the content of a text file and then use the return value returned by that $read.