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485 lines
17 KiB
ReStructuredText
*****************************************************
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Using commands.wrap to parse your command's arguments
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*****************************************************
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This document illustrates how to use the new 'wrap' function present in Supybot
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0.80 to handle argument parsing and validation for your plugin's commands.
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Introduction
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============
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To plugin developers for older (pre-0.80) versions of Supybot, one of the more
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annoying aspects of writing commands was handling the arguments that were
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passed in. In fact, many commands often had to duplicate parsing and
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verification code, resulting in lots of duplicated code for not a whole lot of
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action. So, instead of forcing plugin writers to come up with their own ways of
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cleaning it up, we wrote up the wrap function to handle all of it.
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It allows a much simpler and more flexible way of checking things than before
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and it doesn't require that you know the bot internals to do things like check
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and see if a user exists, or check if a command name exists and whatnot.
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If you are a plugin author this document is absolutely required reading, as it
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will massively ease the task of writing commands.
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Using Wrap
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==========
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First off, to get the wrap function, it is recommended (strongly) that you use
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the following import line::
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from supybot.commands import *
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This will allow you to access the wrap command (and it allows you to do it
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without the commands prefix). Note that this line is added to the imports of
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plugin templates generated by the supybot-plugin-create script.
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Let's write a quickie command that uses wrap to get a feel for how it makes our
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lives better. Let's write a command that repeats a string of text a given
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number of times. So you could say "repeat 3 foo" and it would say "foofoofoo".
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Not a very useful command, but it will serve our purpose just fine. Here's how
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it would be done without wrap::
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def repeat(self, irc, msg, args):
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"""<num> <text>
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Repeats <text> <num> times.
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"""
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(num, text) = privmsg.getArgs(args, required=2)
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try:
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num = int(num)
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except ValueError:
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raise callbacks.ArgumentError
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irc.reply(num * text)
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Note that all of the argument validation and parsing takes up 5 of the 6 lines
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(and you should have seen it before we had privmsg.getArgs!). Now, here's what
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our command will look like with wrap applied::
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def repeat(self, irc, msg, args, num, text):
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"""<num> <text>
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Repeats <text> <num> times.
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"""
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irc.reply(text * num)
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repeat = wrap(repeat, ['int', 'text'])
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Pretty short, eh? With wrap all of the argument parsing and validation is
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handled for us and we get the arguments we want, formatted how we want them,
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and converted into whatever types we want them to be - all in one simple
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function call that is used to wrap the function! So now the code inside each
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command really deals with how to execute the command and not how to deal with
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the input.
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So, now that you see the benefits of wrap, let's figure out what stuff we have
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to do to use it.
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Syntax Changes
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==============
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There are two syntax changes to the old style that are implemented. First, the
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definition of the command function must be changed. The basic syntax for the
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new definition is::
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def commandname(self, irc, msg, args, <arg1>, <arg2>, ...):
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Where arg1 and arg2 (up through as many as you want) are the variables that
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will store the parsed arguments. "Now where do these parsed arguments come
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from?" you ask. Well, that's where the second syntax change comes in. The
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second syntax change is the actual use of the wrap function itself to decorate
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our command names. The basic decoration syntax is::
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commandname = wrap(commandname, [converter1, converter2, ...])
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.. note::
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This should go on the line immediately following the body of the command's
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definition, so it can easily be located (and it obviously must go after the
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command's definition so that commandname is defined).
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Each of the converters in the above listing should be one of the converters in
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commands.py (I will describe each of them in detail later.) The converters are
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applied in order to the arguments given to the command, generally taking
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arguments off of the front of the argument list as they go. Note that each of
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the arguments is actually a string containing the NAME of the converter to use
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and not a reference to the actual converter itself. This way we can have
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converters with names like int and not have to worry about polluting the
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builtin namespace by overriding the builtin int.
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As you will find out when you look through the list of converters below, some
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of the converters actually take arguments. The syntax for supplying them (since
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we aren't actually calling the converters, but simply specifying them), is to
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wrap the converter name and args list into a tuple. For example::
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commandname = wrap(commandname, [(converterWithArgs, arg1, arg2),
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converterWithoutArgs1, converterWithoutArgs2])
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For the most part you won't need to use an argument with the converters you use
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either because the defaults are satisfactory or because it doesn't even take
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any.
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Customizing Wrap
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================
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Converters alone are a pretty powerful tool, but for even more advanced (yet
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simpler!) argument handling you may want to use contexts. Contexts describe how
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the converters are applied to the arguments, while the converters themselves
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do the actual parsing and validation.
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For example, one of the contexts is "optional". By using this context, you're
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saying that a given argument is not required, and if the supplied converter
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doesn't find anything it likes, we should use some default. Yet another
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example is the "reverse" context. This context tells the supplied converter to
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look at the last argument and work backwards instead of the normal
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first-to-last way of looking at arguments.
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So, that should give you a feel for the role that contexts play. They are not
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by any means necessary to use wrap. All of the stuff we've done to this point
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will work as-is. However, contexts let you do some very powerful things in very
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easy ways, and are a good thing to know how to use.
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Now, how do you use them? Well, they are in the global namespace of
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src/commands.py, so your previous import line will import them all; you can
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call them just as you call wrap. In fact, the way you use them is you simply
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call the context function you want to use, with the converter (and its
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arguments) as arguments. It's quite simple. Here's an example::
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commandname = wrap(commandname, [optional('int'), many('something')])
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In this example, our command is looking for an optional integer argument first.
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Then, after that, any number of arguments which can be anything (as long as
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they are something, of course).
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Do note, however, that the type of the arguments that are returned can be
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changed if you apply a context to it. So, optional("int") may very well return
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None as well as something that passes the "int" converter, because after all
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it's an optional argument and if it is None, that signifies that nothing was
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there. Also, for another example, many("something") doesn't return the same
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thing that just "something" would return, but rather a list of "something"s.
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Converter List
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==============
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Below is a list of all the available converters to use with wrap. If the
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converter accepts any arguments, they are listed after it and if they are
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optional, the default value is shown.
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id, kind="integer"
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Returns something that looks like an integer ID number. Takes an optional
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"kind" argument for you to state what kind of ID you are looking for,
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though this doesn't affect the integrity-checking. Basically requires that
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the argument be an integer, does no other integrity-checking, and provides
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a nice error message with the kind in it.
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ip
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Checks and makes sure the argument looks like a valid IP and then returns
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it.
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int, type="integer", p=None
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Gets an integer. The "type" text can be used to customize the error message
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received when the argument is not an integer. "p" is an optional predicate
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to test the integer with. If p(i) fails (where i is the integer arg parsed
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out of the argument string), the arg will not be accepted.
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index
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Basically ("int", "index"), but with a twist. This will take a 1-based
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index and turn it into a 0-based index (which is more useful in code). It
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doesn't transform 0, and it maintains negative indices as is (note that it
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does allow them!).
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color
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Accepts arguments that describe a text color code (e.g., "black", "light
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blue") and returns the mIRC color code for that color. (Note that many
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other IRC clients support the mIRC color code scheme, not just mIRC)
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now
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Simply returns the current timestamp as an arg, does not reference or
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modify the argument list.
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url
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Checks for a valid URL.
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httpUrl
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Checks for a valid HTTP URL.
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long, type="long"
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Basically the same as int minus the predicate, except that it converts the
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argument to a long integer regardless of the size of the int.
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float, type="floating point number"
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Basically the same as int minus the predicate, except that it converts the
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argument to a float.
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nonInt, type="non-integer value"
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Accepts everything but integers, and returns them unchanged. The "type"
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value, as always, can be used to customize the error message that is
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displayed upon failure.
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positiveInt
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Accepts only positive integers.
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nonNegativeInt
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Accepts only non-negative integers.
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letter
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Looks for a single letter. (Technically, it looks for any one-element
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sequence).
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haveOp, action="do that"
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Simply requires that the bot have ops in the channel that the command is
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called in. The action parameter completes the error message: "I need to be
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opped to ...".
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expiry
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Takes a number of seconds and adds it to the current time to create an
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expiration timestamp.
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literal, literals, errmsg=None
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Takes a required sequence or string (literals) and any argument that
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uniquely matches the starting substring of one of the literals is
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transformed into the full literal. For example, with ``("literal", ("bar",
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"baz", "qux"))``, you'd get "bar" for "bar", "baz" for "baz", and "qux"
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for any of "q", "qu", or "qux". "b" and "ba" would raise errors because
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they don't uniquely identify one of the literals in the list. You can
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override errmsg to provide a specific (full) error message, otherwise the
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default argument error message is displayed.
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to
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Returns the string "to" if the arg is any form of "to" (case-insensitive).
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nick
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Checks that the arg is a valid nick on the current IRC server.
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seenNick
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Checks that the arg is a nick that the bot has seen (NOTE: this is limited
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by the size of the history buffer that the bot has).
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channel
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Gets a channel to use the command in. If the channel isn't supplied, uses
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the channel the message was sent in. If using a different channel, does
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sanity-checking to make sure the channel exists on the current IRC network.
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inChannel
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Requires that the command be called from within any channel that the bot
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is currently in or with one of those channels used as an argument to the
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command.
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onlyInChannel
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Requires that the command be called from within any channel that the bot
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is currently in.
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nickInChannel
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Requires that the argument be a nick that is in the current channel, and
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returns that nick.
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networkIrc, errorIfNoMatch=False
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Returns the IRC object of the specified IRC network. If one isn't
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specified, the IRC object of the IRC network the command was called on is
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returned.
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callerInGivenChannel
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Takes the given argument as a channel and makes sure that the caller is in
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that channel.
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plugin, require=True
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Returns the plugin specified by the arg or None. If require is True, an
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error is raised if the plugin cannot be retrieved.
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boolean
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Converts the text string to a boolean value. Acceptable true values are:
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"1", "true", "on", "enable", or "enabled" (case-insensitive). Acceptable
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false values are: "0", false", "off", "disable", or "disabled"
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(case-insensitive).
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lowered
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Returns the argument lowered (NOTE: it is lowered according to IRC
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conventions, which does strange mapping with some punctuation characters).
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anything
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Returns anything as is.
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something, errorMsg=None, p=None
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Takes anything but the empty string. errorMsg can be used to customize the
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error message. p is any predicate function that can be used to test the
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validity of the input.
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filename
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Used to get a filename argument.
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commandName
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Returns the canonical command name version of the given string (ie, the
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string is lowercased and dashes and underscores are removed).
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text
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Takes the rest of the arguments as one big string. Note that this differs
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from the "anything" context in that it clobbers the arg string when it's
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done. Using any converters after this is most likely incorrect.
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glob
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Gets a glob string. Basically, if there are no wildcards (``*``, ``?``) in
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the argument, returns ``*string*``, making a glob string that matches
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anything containing the given argument.
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somethingWithoutSpaces
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Same as something, only with the exception of disallowing spaces of course.
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capability
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Used to retrieve an argument that describes a capability.
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channelDb
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Sets the channel appropriately in order to get to the databases for that
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channel (handles whether or not a given channel uses channel-specific
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databases and whatnot).
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hostmask
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Returns the hostmask of any provided nick or hostmask argument.
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banmask
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Returns a generic banmask of the provided nick or hostmask argument.
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user
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Requires that the caller be a registered user.
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matches, regexp, errmsg
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Searches the args with the given regexp and returns the matches. If no
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match is found, errmsg is given.
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public
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Requires that the command be sent in a channel instead of a private
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message.
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private
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Requires that the command be sent in a private message instead of a
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channel.
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otherUser
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Returns the user specified by the username or hostmask in the argument.
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regexpMatcher
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Gets a matching regexp argument (m// or //).
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validChannel
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Gets a channel argument once it makes sure it's a valid channel.
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regexpReplacer
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Gets a replacing regexp argument (s//).
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owner
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Requires that the command caller has the "owner" capability.
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admin
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Requires that the command caller has the "admin" capability.
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checkCapability, capability
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Checks to make sure that the caller has the specified capability.
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checkChannelCapability", capability
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Checks to make sure that the caller has the specified capability on the
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channel the command is called in.
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Contexts List
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=============
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What contexts are available for me to use?
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The list of available contexts is below. Unless specified otherwise, it can be
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assumed that the type returned by the context itself matches the type of the
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converter it is applied to.
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any
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Looks for any number of arguments matching the supplied converter. Will
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return a sequence of converted arguments or None.
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many
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Looks for multiple arguments matching the supplied converter. Expects at
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least one to work, otherwise it will fail. Will return the sequence of
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converted arguments.
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optional
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Look for an argument that satisfies the supplied converter, but if it's not
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the type I'm expecting or there are no arguments for us to check, then use
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the default value. Will return the converted argument as is or None.
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additional
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Look for an argument that satisfies the supplied converter, making sure
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that it's the right type. If there aren't any arguments to check, then use
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the default value. Will return the converted argument as is or None.
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rest
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Treat the rest of the arguments as one big string, and then convert. If the
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conversion is unsuccessful, restores the arguments.
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getopts
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Handles --option style arguments. Each option should be a key in a
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dictionary that maps to the name of the converter that is to be used on
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that argument. To make the option take no argument, use "" as the converter
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name in the dictionary. For no conversion, use None as the converter name
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in the dictionary.
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first
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Tries each of the supplied converters in order and returns the result of
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the first successfully applied converter.
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reverse
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Reverse the argument list, apply the converters, and then reverse the
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argument list back.
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commalist
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Looks for a comma separated list of arguments that match the supplied
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converter. Returns a list of the successfully converted arguments. If any
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of the arguments fail, this whole context fails.
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Final Word
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==========
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Now that you know how to use wrap, and you have a list of converters and
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contexts you can use, your task of writing clean, simple, and safe plugin code
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should become much easier. Enjoy!
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