Difference between revisions of "Manual:Basic Essentials"
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* ''text:'' text you'd like to see printed. You can use \n in an echo to insert a new line. If you're echoing this to a label, you can also use styling to colour, center, increase/decrease size of text and various other formatting options [http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/richtext-html-subset.html as listed here]. | * ''text:'' text you'd like to see printed. You can use \n in an echo to insert a new line. If you're echoing this to a label, you can also use styling to colour, center, increase/decrease size of text and various other formatting options [http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/richtext-html-subset.html as listed here]. | ||
− | See also: [[Manual:Lua_Functions#moveCursor|moveCursor()]], [[Manual:Lua_Functions#insertText|insertText()]], [[Manual:Lua_Functions#decho|decho()]], [[Manual:Lua_Functions#hecho|hecho()]] | + | See also: [[Manual:Lua_Functions#moveCursor|moveCursor()]], [[Manual:Lua_Functions#insertText|insertText()]], [[Manual:Lua_Functions#cecho|cecho()]], [[Manual:Lua_Functions#decho|decho()]], [[Manual:Lua_Functions#hecho|hecho()]] |
;Example | ;Example |
Revision as of 12:24, 20 May 2017
Basic Essentials
These functions are generic functions used in normal scripting. These deal with mainly everyday things, like sending stuff and echoing to the screen.
send
- send( command, show on screen )
- This sends "command" directly to the network layer, skipping the alias matching. The optional second argument of type boolean (print) determines if the outgoing command is to be echoed on the screen.
See also: sendAll()
Note: If you want your command to be checked as if it's an alias, use expandAlias() instead - send() will ignore them.
<lua> send( "Hello Jane" ) --echos the command on the screen send( "Hello Jane", true ) --echos the command on the screen send( "Hello Jane", false ) --does not echo the command on the screen
-- use a variable in the send: send("kick "..target) </lua>
echo
- echo([miniconsole or label], text)
- This function appends text at the end of the current line.
- Parameters
- miniconsole: (optional) the miniconsole to echo to, or:
- label: (optional) the label to echo to.
- text: text you'd like to see printed. You can use \n in an echo to insert a new line. If you're echoing this to a label, you can also use styling to colour, center, increase/decrease size of text and various other formatting options as listed here.
See also: moveCursor(), insertText(), cecho(), decho(), hecho()
- Example
<lua> -- a miniconsole example
-- first, determine the size of your screen local windowWidth, windowHeight = getMainWindowSize()
-- create the miniconsole createMiniConsole("sys", windowWidth-650,0,650,300) setBackgroundColor("sys",255,69,0,255) setMiniConsoleFontSize("sys", 8) -- wrap lines in window "sys" at 40 characters per line - somewhere halfway, as an example setWindowWrap("sys", 40)
echo("sys","Hello world!\n") cecho("sys", "<:OrangeRed>This is random spam with the same background\n") cecho("sys", "<blue:OrangeRed>and this is with a blue foreground. ") cecho("sys", "<bisque:BlueViolet>Lastly, this is with both a foreground and a background.\n") </lua>
<lua> -- a label example
-- This example creates a transparent overlay message box to show a big warning message "You are under attack!" in the middle -- of the screen. Because the background color has a transparency level of 150 (0-255, with 0 being completely transparent -- and 255 opaque) the background text can still be read through. local width, height = getMainWindowSize() createLabel("messageBox",(width/2)-300,(height/2)-100,250,150,1) resizeWindow("messageBox",500,70) moveWindow("messageBox", (width/2)-300,(height/2)-100 ) setBackgroundColor("messageBox", 255, 204, 0, 200)
echo("messageBox", [[
]])
</lua>
display
- display( content )
- This is much like echo, in that is will show text at your screen, not send anything to anywhere. However, it also works with other objects than just text. This way, you can easily take a look at the contents of a lua table, etc.
See also: display()
Note: Do not use this to display information to end-users. It may be hard to read. It is mainly useful for developing/debugging.
<lua> myTable = {} -- create an empty lua table myTable.foo = "Hello there" -- add a text myTable.bar = 23 -- add a number myTable.ubar = function () echo("OK") end -- add more stuff display( myTable ) -- take a look inside the table </lua>