Difference between revisions of "Noop"

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  noop $regex(I have 6 brothers,/I have (\d+) brothers/) | [[echo|echo -ag]] The number of brothers is [[$regml|$regml(1)]]
 
  noop $regex(I have 6 brothers,/I have (\d+) brothers/) | [[echo|echo -ag]] The number of brothers is [[$regml|$regml(1)]]
  
'''Note:''' This command came in mirc 6.17, for older versions [[echo|.echo -qg]] would be the same thing (the dot to make it silent and -q not to show it, if it was silent), or you could even use //.xyzzy ;).
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'''Note:''' This command came in mirc 6.17, for older versions [[echo|.echo -qg]] would be the same thing (the dot to make it silent and -q not to show it, if it was silent), or you could even use .[[xyzzy]]
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[[Category:Commands]]
 
[[Category:Commands]]

Latest revision as of 01:55, 22 June 2013

Noop is a command that does literally nothing and doesn't care about any parameters.

/noop

What is it good for, then?

It is a handy command when you need to evaluate some identifier without using the actual result. For example, you may want to evaluate a $regex identifier without using the information how many results it returns, just to later use the back-references it creates. Another example is $findfile which has a command option in itself, and therefore doesn't need any outside commands to handle its results.

Examples

For example:

noop $regex(I have 6 brothers,/I have (\d+) brothers/) | echo -ag The number of brothers is $regml(1)

Note: This command came in mirc 6.17, for older versions .echo -qg would be the same thing (the dot to make it silent and -q not to show it, if it was silent), or you could even use .xyzzy