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mIRC is not considered a fast language and, more often than not, the easiest implementation is not the fastest. | mIRC is not considered a fast language and, more often than not, the easiest implementation is not the fastest. | ||
− | The following tips will help to increase the execution speed of a script. Most will have a very marginal speed advantage and | + | The following tips will help to increase the execution speed of a script. Most will have a very marginal speed advantage and may not be worth consideration outside of long-running script blocks such as loops. |
Revision as of 21:01, 15 December 2015
mIRC is not considered a fast language and, more often than not, the easiest implementation is not the fastest.
The following tips will help to increase the execution speed of a script. Most will have a very marginal speed advantage and may not be worth consideration outside of long-running script blocks such as loops.
Contents
Custom alias bypassing
When calling any form of command or identifer mIRC attempts to find a scripted version prior to looking for native functionality. This can be bypassed by prefixing commands with ! and by inserting a ~ after the $ of identifers
Conditional Syntax
Best to worst:
if (condition) command if condition { command } if (condition) { command }
if-else vs $iif()
$iif() is much slower than using an if-else statement. When $iif() is evaluated it is first rearranged into an if-else statement and the resulting if-else statement is parsed.
Best to worst:
var %result = condition_false_value if (condition) var %result = condition_true_value if (condition) var %result = condition_true_value else var %result = condition_false_value var %result = $iif(condition, condition_true_value, condition_false_value)
/tokenize & $n vs $gettok()
For successive calls against the same data, it is faster to use /tokenize and $n over $gettok().
[]'s vs $() vs $eval
Best to worst:
[ eval_statement ] $(eval_statement, 2) $eval(eval_statement, 2)