I’m a noob in mirc scripting, and I need some help.
- there’s 2 irc channels. let’s call then #channel1 and #channel2;
- There’s 2 bots. One is mine, let’s call him “mybot” (my bot is in both channels). The other bot is from a third person, let’s call him “otherBot”;
What I need is… let me make an example to better explain.
a) in #channel1 some user type:
[14:38:48] <@someuser> !user xpto
At this time, “mybot” is in both channels. he reads the command “!user*” and copy/paste it in #channel2, where the “otherBot” will recognize the command “!user*” and will paste some information about this command.
b) so, in #channel2 it will append something like:
[14:38:50] <@ mybot > !user xpto
[14:38:52] <@ otherBot > User name is xpto and he likes popatos.
Now I want that “mybot” reads the information provided by the “otherBot” and then paste it on #channel1
c) so, in #channel1:
[14:38:54] <@ mybot > User name is xpto and he likes popatos.
So far I have the fowling code in my remote:
on *:TEXT:!user*:#channel1 {
/msg # channel2 $1-
}
on *:TEXT:User name*:#channel2 {
if $address($nick,2) == *!*@otherBot.users.gameea {
/msg # channel1 $1-
}
}
This works fine, but have a problem: if someone else ( not “mybot” ) type “!user kakaka” in #channel2, “mybot” will also copy/paste the information provided by the “otherBot” and then paste it on #channel1. And I only want that “mybot” copy/paste only the information that “mybot” ask to “otherBot”.
A very simple (but not a particularly nice) way of doing this could be to set a global variable when someone types !user in #channel1, and check whether or not this is set in the other part which is listening on #channel2. For example:
This isn't a perfect solution, since if the bot says something else between the time it takes for the script to send '!user' to the other channel and for the bot to respond, then it will print out that reply instead of the one for your request, but this is only relevant if #channel2 is ridiculously busy, otherbot is very laggy, or it just so happens that both your bot and someone else type !user on #channel2 within a fraction of a second of eachother.