$comchan
From Scriptwiki
Returns the names of channels which both you and nick are on.
$comchan(nick,N)
$comchan can have the following properties:
Property | Meaning |
op | returns $true if you're an op on the channel |
help | returns $true if you have help on the channel |
voice | returns $true if you have voice on the channel |
Example
This example will return all comchans you have with someone:
; begin a new alias, we want to have something like $comchans(<nick>). ; If calling from inside an event, $comchans would return for $nick alias comchans { ;Check to see if nick was given, if not yet $nick is present, use that. if (!$1) && ($nick) tokenize 32 $nick ;If no $nick present and no nick given, return false. elseif (!$1) return $false var %i = $comchan($1,0), %comchans ; begin to loop through all comchans ; and set %comchans to all common channels, seperated by space (ascii 32) while (%i) var %comchans = $addtok(%comchans,$comchan($1,%i),32), %i = %i - 1 ; return %comchans if set, if null return $false return $iif(%comchans,%comchans,$false) }
Note
You should note when using $comchan within the on nick event the IAL has already updated so you must use $newnick not $nick. Here is an example:
; Trigger when someone changes their nick. on ^*:nick: { ; Set %i to the total amount of common channels you and the person changing their nick have in common. var %i = $comchan($newnick,0) while (%i) { ; echo with the color of a nick change to the %i'th common channel the message reguarding the nick change. echo $color(nick) -t $comchan($newnick,%i) * $nick changed their nickname to $newnick ; Decrease the value of %i so we don't message the same channel twice. dec %i } ; halt the mIRC default action for this event. (must use the ^ prefix with the event for this to work.) haltdef }
See Also
- $chan. List all open channel windows.