This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
— |
ishalfop [2006/11/19 04:30] (current) |
||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | # $EPIC: ishalfop.txt,v 1.5 2006/10/13 17:51:04 sthalik Exp $ | ||
+ | ======Synopsis:====== | ||
+ | $__ishalfop__(<nick> <channel>) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ======Technical:====== | ||
+ | * If the <nick> argument is omitted, the empty string is returned. | ||
+ | * If the <channel> argument is omitted, or if it is a literal star ('*'), then the current channel is assumed. | ||
+ | * BEWARE -- if you are connected to more than one server and the current window is connected to a different server than whatever context this function is called in, it may falsely return 0. To be sure, always specify the channel name! | ||
+ | * This function returns 1 if <nick> is a channel half-operator on <channel>. | ||
+ | * This function uses the internal channel cache: | ||
+ | * Both you and <nick> must be on <channel> or it will return 0. | ||
+ | * If /on channel_sync has not been thrown for <channel> it may return 0. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ======Practical:====== | ||
+ | You can use this function to see if someone is a channel half-operator | ||
+ | as a condition of some other action. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ======Returns:====== | ||
+ | | 1 | <nick> is a halfop on <channel> | | ||
+ | | 0 | <nick> is not a halfop on <channel> | | ||
+ | | -1 | the client doesn't know whether <nick> is a halfop on <channel> | | ||