Some networks don\'t have you identify the same way. Most use NickServ, while some (like UnderNet & QuakeNet) use X and Q. You should use an if check to see if the nick Q is online, and check if it\'s an IRCop (raw 311 I believe). Then send your AUTH command. Otherwise, with X, you check it the same way. X should be cservice@* probably, from what I\'d guess. You also should use a %username and %password variable: var %username = MYUSERNAME | var %password = MYPASSWORD. %username will be the Q/X AUTH username.
If you want to make it easier with a non-permanent ban, use this. Note that %mins is the minutes until the ban is removed (NOT seconds): on $@:text:/||/:#:{ var %mins = 15 | var %cnt = $calc(%mins 60) | if $nick isreg $chan { hinc -m col $nick | if $hget(col,$nick) == 1 { msg # 0,1This is the first and only warning $nick $+ , do not use colours, underline or bold in this channel. Next time you will be banned. } | elseif $hget(col,$nick) == 2 { ban -u $+ %cnt $chan $nick You were warned | hdel col $nick } } }
Yes. That is an extra else. Since you do not need it, it is totally useless. mIRC will just halt. You don\'t even need else { halt } if you were going to put else there. Taking out the else { } will work fine, and will not make any modification to the script. This looks like a good script, except with when you used the 30 words. $2- will contain the whole thing. And $2- is much easier than putting $2 $3 $4 $5 $6 $7 $8 $9 $10 $11 $12 $13 $14 $15 $16 $17 $18 $19 $20 $21 $22 $23 $24 $25 $26 $27 $28 $29 $30. It is a waste of time to put that many. I\'d rather put $2- when you can have unlimited words, as you updated it. That is probably what you did, $2 $3 $4 $5 $6 $7 $8 $9 $10 $11 $12 $13 $14 $15 $16 $17 $18 $19 $20 $21 $22 $23 $24 $25 $26 $27 $28 $29 $30, right?
This is a great script. I\'d recommend this rather than any old FTP client. You can use this when you don\'t want to open your FTP client. Like me, sometimes I don\'t want to open my FTP client, WS_FTP. This is a great client for when you\'re on a dial-up and can\'t get an FTP application. I highly recommend it as one of Hawkee.com\'s top scripts. There probably wouldn\'t be a better FTP client made out of mIRC. I may be wrong, but this is probably the first FTP client out of mIRC. Great knowledge of UNIX if you are able to make an FTP client. At least I run this every day, so I\'m able to remember the Linux/shell commands, since our server runs on Red Hat Linux 9, soon Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3.0 AS. I must say, though, that this is a must-have script for portable computers like laptops.