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			272 lines
		
	
	
		
			12 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| These are the interfaces for some of the objects you'll deal with if
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| you code for Supybot.
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| 
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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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| 
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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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| 
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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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| 
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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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| 
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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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| 
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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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| 
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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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| 
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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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| 
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|             command: This is the command of the IrcMsg --
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|             PRIVMSG, NOTICE, WHOIS, etc.
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| 
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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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| 
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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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| 
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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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| 
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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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| 
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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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|          
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|                        
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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.  (*NOTE* that the
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|     object actually received by commands in subclasses of
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|     callbacks.Privmsg is an IrcObjectProxy, which is described
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|     later.  It augments the following interface with several
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|     methods of its own to help plugin authors.)
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| 
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|     Interesting Methods:
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|             The two following messages (queueMsg and
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|             sendMsg) are the methods by far most commonly
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|             called by plugin authors.  They're generally
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|             the only methods you need to pay attention to
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|             if you're writing plugins.
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|             
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|             queueMsg: Queues a message for sending to the
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|             server.  The queue is generally FIFO, but it
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|             does prioritize messages based on their command.
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| 
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|             sendMsg: Queues a message for sending to the
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|             server prior to any messages in the normal
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|             queue.  This is exactly a FIFO queue, no
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|             reordering is done at all.
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| 
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|             The following two methods are the most important
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|             for people writing new IrcDrivers.  Otherwise,
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|             you really don't need to pay attention to them.
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| 
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|             feedMsg: Feeds the Irc object a message for it
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|             handle appropriately, as well as passing it on
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|             to callbacks.
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| 
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|             takeMsg: If the Irc object has a message it's
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|             ready to send to the server, this will return
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|             it.  Otherwise, it will return None.
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| 
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|             The next several methods are of far more marginal
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|             utility.  But someone may need them, so they're
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|             documented here.
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| 
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|             addCallback: Takes a callback to add to the list
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|             of callbacks in the Irc object.  See the
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|             interface for IrcCallback for more information.
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| 
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|             getCallback: Gets a callback by name, if it is
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|             in the Irc object's list of callbacks.  If it
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|             it isn't, returns None.
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| 
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|             removeCallback: Removes a callback by name.
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|             Returns a list of the callbacks removed (since
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|             it is technically possible to have multiple
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|             callbacks with the same name.  This list may
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|             be empty.
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| 
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|             __init__: Requires a nick.  Optional arguments
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|             include user and ident, which default to the
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|             nick given, password, which defaults to the empty
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|             password, and callbacks, a list of callbacks
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|             (which defaults to nothing, an empty list).
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| 
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|             reset: Resets the Irc object to its original
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|             state, as well as sends a reset() to every
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|             callbacks.
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| 
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|             die: Kills the IRC object and all its callbacks.
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| 
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|     Interesting attributes:
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|             nick: The current nick of the bot.
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| 
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|             prefix: The current prefix of the bot.
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| 
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|             server: The current server the bot is connected to.
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| 
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| 	    network: The current network name the bot is connected to.
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| 
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|             afterConnect: False until the bot has received a
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|                           command sent after the connection is finished --
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|                           376, 377, or 422.
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| 
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|             state: An IrcState object for this particular
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|                     connection.  See the interface for the IrcState
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|                     object for more information.
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| 
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| 
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| irclib.IrcCallback:
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|     Interesting Methods:
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|             name: Returns the name of the callback.  The
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|             default implementation simply returns the name
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|             of the class.
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| 
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|             __call__: Called by the Irc object with itself
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|             and the message whenever a message is fed to
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|             the Irc object.  Nothing is done with the return
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|             value.
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| 
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|             inFilter: Called by the Irc object with itself
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|             and the message whenever a message is fed to
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|             the Irc object.  The return value should be an
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|             IrcMsg object to be passed to the next callback
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|             in the Irc's list of callbacks.  If None is
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|             returned, all processing stops.  This gives
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|             callbacks an oppurtunity to "filter" incoming
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|             messages before general callbacks are given
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|             them.
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| 
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|             outFilter: Basically equivalent to inFilter,
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|             except instead of being called on messages
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|             as they enter the Irc object, it's called on
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|             messages as they leave the Irc object.
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| 
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|             die: Called when the parent Irc is told to
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|             die.  This gives callbacks an oppurtunity to
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|             close open files, network connections, or
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|             databases before they're deleted.
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| 
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|             reset: Called when the parent Irc is told to
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|             reset (which is generally when reconnecting
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|             to the server).  Most callbacks don't need
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|             to define this.
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| 
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|     Interesting attributes:
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|             priority: Determines the priority of the
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|             callback in the Irc object's list of
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|             callbacks.  Defaults to 99; the valid range
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|             includes 0 through sys.maxint-1 (don't use
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|             sys.maxint itself, that's reserved for the
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|             Misc plugin).  The lower the number, the
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|             higher the priority.  High priority
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|             callbacks are called earlier in the
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|             inFilter cycle, earlier in the __call__
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|             cycle, and later in the outFilter cycle --
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|             basically, they're given the first chances
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|             on the way in and the last chances on the
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|             way out.
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| 
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| 
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| callbacks.IrcObjectProxy:
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|     IrcObjectProxy is a proxy for an irclib.Irc instance that
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|     serves to provide a much fuller interface for handling
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|     replies and errors as well as to handle the nesting of
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|     commands.  This is what you'll be dealing with almost all the
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|     time when writing commands; when writing doCommand methods
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|     (the kind you read about in the interface description of
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|     irclib.IrcCallback) you'll be dealing with plain old
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|     irclib.Irc objects.
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| 
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|     Interesting methods:
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|             reply: Called to reply to the current message
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|             with a string that is to be the reply.
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| 
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|             replySuccess, replyError: These reply with the
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|             configured responses for success and generic
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|             error, respectively.  If an additional argument
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|             is given, it's (intelligently) appended to the
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|             generic message to be more specific.
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| 
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|             error: Called to send an error reply to the
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|             current message; not only does the response
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|             indicate an error, but commands that error out
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|             break the nested-command chain, which is
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|             generally useful for not confusing the user :)
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| 
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|             errorNoCapability: Like error, except it accepts
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|             the capability that's missing and integrates it
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|             into the configured error message for such
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|             things.  Also accepts an additional string for a
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|             more descriptive message, if that's what you
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|             want.
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| 
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|             errorPossibleBug, errorNotRegistered,
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|             errorNoUser, errorRequiresPrivacy: These methods
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|             reply with the appropriate configured error
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|             message for the conditions in their names; they
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|             all take an additional arguments to be more
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|             specific about the conditions they indicate, but
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|             this argument is very rarely necessary.
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| 
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|             getRealIrc: Returns the actual Irc object being
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|             proxied for.
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| 	    
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| 	    replies: Sends a collection of messages to a given
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| 	    target, much like reply; except in this case, the user
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| 	    can configure whether the messages will be sent
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| 	    one-by-one or combined into a single message.  Thus, the
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| 	    method accepts a "prefixer" argument, which prefixes the
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| 	    messages with a given string (or according to a given
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| 	    function), a "joiner" string (or function) used to join
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| 	    the messages into a single message if necessary, and an
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| 	    onlyPrefixFirst argument which determines whether only
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| 	    the first message will be prefixed when the messages are
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| 	    sent separately (it defaults to False).
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