Difference between revisions of "Nick"

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(Adding information about what nicknames are valid and what is not,)
m (sp. truncate)
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The example below will only match if the whole nickname is valid, so it won't trumpcate the nickname:
+
The example below will only match if the whole nickname is valid, so it won't truncate the nickname:
 
  /^([a-z\Q\|[]^_`{}-\E](-\w\Q\|[]^_`{}-\E)*)$/i
 
  /^([a-z\Q\|[]^_`{}-\E](-\w\Q\|[]^_`{}-\E)*)$/i
 
== See Also ==
 
== See Also ==

Revision as of 18:49, 25 November 2005

Changes your nickname.

/nick new-nick

Note:

  • Valid nickname charactors are as follows: 0-9a-z\[]^_`{|}-
  • A nickname must also not begin with a numeric or a hyphen (-).
  • Some ircd reserve single charaecter nicknames for service bots, QuakeNET is an example of this.

Here is an exmample to check if %nick is a valid nickname or not:

var %nick = /V/alid
if ($regex(%nick,%i,/^([a-z\Q\|[]^_`{}-\E](-\w\Q\|[]^_`{}-\E)*)/i)) {
  echo -ag $regml(1) is a valid nickname!
}
else { echo -ag %nick is not a valid nickname! }

Note: The above example, if you feed it \Valid!nvalid it would return it as a valid nickname, although the only valid part of the nick, is \Valid. If you type /nick \Valid!nvalid the ircd would trim the nick to \Valid, this is why in the echo of a valid nickname we use $regml(1) instead of %nick, this is a back reference to the valid nickname captured.

If you also want to check that the nickname is atleast two characters long you can replace the * with a + this will make sure that the second exists:

/^([a-z\Q\|[]^_`{}-\E](-\w\Q\|[]^_`{}-\E)+)/i


The example below will only match if the whole nickname is valid, so it won't truncate the nickname:

/^([a-z\Q\|[]^_`{}-\E](-\w\Q\|[]^_`{}-\E)*)$/i

See Also

Raws related to /nick