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88 lines
3.5 KiB
Plaintext
88 lines
3.5 KiB
Plaintext
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These are the interfaces of some of the objects you'll deal with if
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you code for Supybot.
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ircmsgs.IrcMsg:
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This is the object that represents an IRC message. It has
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several methods and attributes. The most important thing
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about this class, however, is that it *is* hashable, and thus
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*cannot* be modified. Do not change any attributes; any code
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that modifies an IRC message is *broken* and should not
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exist.
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Interesting Methods:
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__init__: One of the more complex initializers in
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a class. It can be used in three different ways:
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1) It can be given a string, as one received from
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the server, which it will then parse into its
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separate components and instantiate the class
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with those components as attributes.
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2) It can be given a command, some (optional)
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arguments, and a (optional) prefix, and will
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instantiate the class with those components as
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attributes.
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3) It can be given, in addition to any of the
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above arguments, a 'msg' keyword argument that
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will use the attributes of msg as defaults.
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This exists to make it easier to copy
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messages, since the class is immutable.
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__str__: This returns the message in a string form
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suitable for sending to a server.
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__repr__: This returns the message in a form
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suitable for eval(), assuming the name "IrcMsg" is
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in your namespace and is bound to this class.
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Interesting Attributes:
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This is the meat of this class. These are
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generally what you'll be looking at with IrcMsgs.
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command: This is the command of the IrcMsg --
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PRIVMSG, NOTICE, WHOIS, etc.
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args: This is a tuple of the arguments to the
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IrcMsg. Some messages have arguments, some don't,
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depending on what command they are. You are, of
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course, always assured that args exists and is a
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tuple, though it might be empty.
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prefix: This is the hostmask of the person/server
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the message is from. In general, you won't be
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setting this on your outgoing messages, but
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incoming messages will always have one. This is
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the whole hostmask; if the message was received
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from a server, it'll be the server's hostmask; if
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the message was received from a user, it'll be the
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whole user hostmask. In that case, however, it's
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also parsed out into the nick/user/host
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attributes, which are probably more useful to
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check for many purposes.
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nick: If the message was sent by a user, this will
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be the nick of the user. If it was sent by a
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server, this will be the server's name (something
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like calvino.freenode.net or similar).
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user: If the message was sent by a user, this will
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be the user string of the user -- what they put
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into their IRC client for their "full name." If
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it was sent by a server, it'll be the server's
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name, again.
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host: If the message was sent by a user, this will
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be the host portion of their hostmask. If it was
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sent by a server, it'll be the server's name (yet
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again :))
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irclib.Irc:
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This is the object to handle everything about IRC except the
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actual connection to the server itself.
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Interesting attributes:
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nick: the current nick of the bot.
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prefix: the current prefix of the bot.
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