Where is perform in mirc




















To understand how commands work, see the Aliases help section. This option allows you to set the number of times a connection attempt is retried when connecting to a server. See here for more information.

This can be useful if you need to open up a specific range of ports on your firewall or router for incoming and outgoing connections. The Randomize ports option makes mIRC use non-consecutive ports when creating listening sockets.

This greatly simplifies use of the identd server, file transfers and a number of other features. The Bind to Adapter or IP address option makes mIRC bind all sockets to a specific adapter or local IP address, in case you want to use a different outgoing network connection. You can also specify a channel name to open the channel central for a channel you have already joined but which is not the active window.

Clears the buffer of the current window. If you specify a window name, that window's buffer will be cleared. The -l switch clears the side-listbox in a custom window. The -c switch clears the click history in a picture window. The -h switch clears the editbox command history for a window. Copies the specified text to the clipboard. The -a switch makes it append the text to any existing text in the clipboard. The -x switch applies the command to the current server connection. You can specify the Nth window for -cfgs by appending a number, eg.

You can also use a wildcard as the window name and all matching windows will be closed. Allows you to change the color settings for items in the Colors dialog. The -l switch reloads the color settings from the mirc. To change the color of a text item in the color dialog, you can specify the name of the item, eg.

Normal text, along with a new palette index. Copies a file to another filename or directory. You can also use wildcards for the source filename, and a directory name for the destination. The -o switch overwrites a file if it exists. The -a switch appends the first file to the second one.

Outputs raw server messages, both incoming and outgoing, to a debug. The -i switch calls the specified identifier before a debug line is logged. The return value of the identifier is used as the debug line. Forces a disconnect from a server. Resolves an address. If mIRC sees a ". If you specify an IP address, it looks up the host name. The -c switch clears all currently queued DNS requests, except for the one currently in progress.

The -h switch forces lines to hard-wrap so resizing the window does not change the line. The -tN switch prefixes the line with a timestamp if global time stamping is on or timestamping is on for that window.

N is optional and is the UTC value to use for the timestamp. The -q switch makes it not display the text if called from an alias using the. The -l switch makes it apply the highlight settings to the line that is displayed.

The -n switch prevents the echo from highlighting the window switchbar icon. The -m switch indicates that the line should be treated as a user message, not an event.

The -g switch prevents the line from being logged to the log file. The -r switch applies the strip settings in the messages dialog. The -c switch uses the specified color name from the colors dialog. Note: This text is only displayed in your own window, it is not sent to the server, no one else can see it. The -p switch indicates that a space should be appended to text. The -n switch fills the editbox and presses the enter key in the editbox. The -o switch applies the command to the second editbox in a channel window.

The -bNeN switches set the start and end of the selection in the editbox. The -v switch prevents the editbox contents from being changed. This command scans lines of text in a window or file and if any of them contain matchtext, they are written out to another window or file which you can then use. The infile can be a filename or a window name custom or normal. The outfile can be a filename or a custom window name. You should specify the -fw switches if the names are ambiguous eg.

The -a switch sorts filtered lines by calling the optional [alias]. The -hN switch indents wrapped text N characters when the -p switch is used. The -r switch specifies the range of lines n to n2 for filtering. The -b switch strips BURK codes when matching text. The -g switch indicates that matchtext is a regular expression. The -z switch retains line colors when filtering between custom windows. The alias will be called with the result of each filtered line. The -i switch indicates that you have provided a [dialog id] custom dialog control as the input.

The -o switch indicates that you have provided a [dialog id] custom dialog control as the output. The -t switch sorts the output based on [c s], column C using character S as the columns separator. The -e specifies a descending sort, and -u a numeric sort. The -l switch filters from the side-listbox in the first window, and -L filters to the side-listbox in the second window. Flushes the specified INI file to the hard disk.

INI files are cached in memory, so you may want to do this to make sure that your INI is updated properly. This allows you to change the font for the current window. If no parameters are specified, the font dialog pops up, otherwise the specified parameters are used. The -a switch applies the setting to the active window, -s to the status window. The -b switch makes the font bold and the -i switch makes it italic. The -d switch makes the font the default for that type of window, eg. The -z switch clears all font settings and sets all windows to the specified font.

If no font is specified, all windows are set to default font settings. Note: If you use a negative number for the font size, it will match the size of fonts in the font dialog. Parts the current channel and joins a new one. If no new channel is specified, it parts and rejoins the current channel without closing the window.

The -c switch cycles the specified channel by parting and rejoining it. Hello fellow DC members. I've been working my butt off to make a complete overhaul of the perform function of mIRC. IRC is a way to chat on the internet with others. Here is a copy of the Readme, for a complete explanation. Auto Perform beta v0. Depending on the current state of the script aka if it is enabled or disabled , it will issue every command found inside the.

These files are plain text files which are named according to their execution time. The commands found in startup. The commands found in loggedin. The file freenode. Any network name can be used, and all it takes is to create your own text file containing the proper commands and named properly.



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