m (Bot: Automated text replacement (-<small>Note: Individual switches were not taken into consideration.</small> +)) |
Maroonbells (talk | contribs) (updated syntax+examples) |
||
(11 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | The '''/breplace | + | {{mirc title|/breplace Command}} |
+ | The '''/breplace''' command can be used to replace an ASCII value by another value in a binary variable. Multiple replacements are allowed. | ||
== Synopsis == | == Synopsis == | ||
/breplace &binvar <oldvalue> <newvalue> [oldvalue newvalue...] | /breplace &binvar <oldvalue> <newvalue> [oldvalue newvalue...] | ||
+ | /breplace &binvar <old-char/value> <old-char/value> [old-char/value new-char/value...] | ||
== Switches == | == Switches == | ||
Line 8: | Line 10: | ||
== Parameters == | == Parameters == | ||
− | * '''<oldvalue>''' - The old ASCII value to replaced | + | * '''<oldvalue>''' - The old ASCII value to replaced (decimal 0-255) |
− | * '''<newvalue>''' - The new ASCII value to replace the old one | + | * '''<newvalue>''' - The new ASCII value to replace the old one (decimal 0-255) |
− | + | *'''Note:''' - Also accepts case-sensitive text characters/strings as parameters, using $asc(1st character of the string) | |
+ | '''Note:''' This replaces individual bytes and does not allow replacing multi-byte patterns with new multi-byte patterns.<br /> | ||
+ | '''Note:''' Bytes are replaced only once, even if the new_value is the old_value for the next old/new pair. This means that it mimics the behavior of $replacex not $replace. However the replacements are made in reverse order, with the first pair being replaced last of all.<br /> | ||
+ | '''Note:''' You can have multiple old/new number pairs, and if the count of numbers is an odd number greater than 2, the last unpaired number is ignored.<br /> | ||
+ | '''Note:''' You cannot breplace within a portion of a binary &string unless you bcopy that section to a &temp where you perform the breplace then bcopy &temp back to the original &string/position. | ||
== Example == | == Example == | ||
− | < | + | <source lang="mIRC">Alias Example { |
;Create a binary variable set it to \"Hello World\" | ;Create a binary variable set it to \"Hello World\" | ||
bset -t &Example 1 Hello World | bset -t &Example 1 Hello World | ||
Line 21: | Line 27: | ||
;Echo our new string | ;Echo our new string | ||
echo -a $bvar(&Example,1,$bvar(&Example,0)).text | echo -a $bvar(&Example,1,$bvar(&Example,0)).text | ||
− | }</ | + | }</source> |
The above example will output: | The above example will output: | ||
+ | <pre>H3llo World</pre> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <source lang="mIRC"> | ||
+ | Note that long strings can be replaced. The replace is on the entire token - not finding the 0 within the 10: | ||
+ | //bset &a 7654321 10 | echo -a $bvar(&a,7654300-) | breplace &a 0 1 | echo -a $bvar(&a,7654300-) | ||
+ | shows the last 22 bytes changing: | ||
+ | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 | ||
+ | 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 10 | ||
+ | </source> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <source lang="mIRC"> | ||
+ | The replacements are made in the same style as $replacexcs not $replace, but the replacement pairs are made in reverse order. Because of the reverse order, /breplace swaps the 11 for the 77 in the last pair before it can replace the 11 with the 88. | ||
− | + | //var %a 11 22 33 44 | bset &v 1 %a | breplace &v 11 88 44 66 11 77 | echo -a %a (original) | echo -a $bvar(&v,1-) (breplace) | echo -a $replace(%a,11,88,44,66,11,77,66,99) (replace) | echo -a $replacex(%a,11,88,44,66,11,77,66,99) (replacex) | |
+ | result: | ||
+ | 11 22 33 44 (original) | ||
+ | 77 22 33 66 (breplace) | ||
+ | 88 22 33 99 (replace) | ||
+ | 88 22 33 66 (replacex) | ||
+ | </source> | ||
− | = | + | <source lang="mIRC"> |
− | + | The first character of a string can substitute in place of a byte value, if it is non-numeric and is not UTF-8 encoded to more than 1 byte. In this example, the chr(233) is not replaced because there is no 1-byte character match. The next match fails because capital F is not a case-sensitive match for lower-case 'f'. The 'b' takes the place of byte value 98, and is replaced by $chr(33). The first character of 'abc' is found in the string, and is replaced by the 1st character of 'xyz'. | |
− | + | //bset -t &v 1 abcdefé | breplace &v abc xyz b 33 F g $chr(233) $chr(234) | echo -a $bvar(&v,1-) / $bvar(&v,1-).text | |
+ | result: x!cdefé | ||
+ | </source> | ||
+ | <source lang="mIRC"> | ||
+ | The number of from/to byte pairs is an odd number greater than 2, so the last unpaired number is ignored without reporting an error, before the swaps are made in reverse-pair order: | ||
+ | //bset &a 1 13 10 13 10 99 | breplace &a 10 13 13 10 99 | echo -a $bvar(&a,1-) | ||
+ | returns: 10 13 10 13 99 | ||
+ | </source> | ||
+ | == Compatibility == | ||
+ | {{mIRC compatibility|5.6}} | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
− | |||
− | |||
* {{mIRC|$bvar}} | * {{mIRC|$bvar}} | ||
+ | * {{mIRC|$bfind}} | ||
* {{mIRC|/bread}} | * {{mIRC|/bread}} | ||
* {{mIRC|/bset}} | * {{mIRC|/bset}} | ||
+ | * {{mIRC|/bunset}} | ||
+ | * {{mIRC|/bwrite}} | ||
* {{mIRC|/btrunc}} | * {{mIRC|/btrunc}} | ||
− | {{mIRC | + | * {{mIRC|/bcopy}} |
− | + | * {{mIRC|$replacex}} | |
− | + | * {{mIRC|$replace}} |
Latest revision as of 20:50, 3 April 2019
The /breplace command can be used to replace an ASCII value by another value in a binary variable. Multiple replacements are allowed.
Synopsis[edit]
/breplace &binvar <oldvalue> <newvalue> [oldvalue newvalue...] /breplace &binvar <old-char/value> <old-char/value> [old-char/value new-char/value...]
Switches[edit]
None
Parameters[edit]
- <oldvalue> - The old ASCII value to replaced (decimal 0-255)
- <newvalue> - The new ASCII value to replace the old one (decimal 0-255)
- Note: - Also accepts case-sensitive text characters/strings as parameters, using $asc(1st character of the string)
Note: This replaces individual bytes and does not allow replacing multi-byte patterns with new multi-byte patterns.
Note: Bytes are replaced only once, even if the new_value is the old_value for the next old/new pair. This means that it mimics the behavior of $replacex not $replace. However the replacements are made in reverse order, with the first pair being replaced last of all.
Note: You can have multiple old/new number pairs, and if the count of numbers is an odd number greater than 2, the last unpaired number is ignored.
Note: You cannot breplace within a portion of a binary &string unless you bcopy that section to a &temp where you perform the breplace then bcopy &temp back to the original &string/position.
Example[edit]
Alias Example { ;Create a binary variable set it to "Hello World" bset -t &Example 1 Hello World ;Replace e (ASCII value 101) with 3 (ASCII value 51) breplace &Example 101 51 ;Echo our new string echo -a $bvar(&Example,1,$bvar(&Example,0)).text }
The above example will output:
H3llo World
Note that long strings can be replaced. The replace is on the entire token - not finding the 0 within the 10: //bset &a 7654321 10 | echo -a $bvar(&a,7654300-) | breplace &a 0 1 | echo -a $bvar(&a,7654300-) shows the last 22 bytes changing: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 10
The replacements are made in the same style as $replacexcs not $replace, but the replacement pairs are made in reverse order. Because of the reverse order, /breplace swaps the 11 for the 77 in the last pair before it can replace the 11 with the 88. //var %a 11 22 33 44 | bset &v 1 %a | breplace &v 11 88 44 66 11 77 | echo -a %a (original) | echo -a $bvar(&v,1-) (breplace) | echo -a $replace(%a,11,88,44,66,11,77,66,99) (replace) | echo -a $replacex(%a,11,88,44,66,11,77,66,99) (replacex) result: 11 22 33 44 (original) 77 22 33 66 (breplace) 88 22 33 99 (replace) 88 22 33 66 (replacex)
The first character of a string can substitute in place of a byte value, if it is non-numeric and is not UTF-8 encoded to more than 1 byte. In this example, the chr(233) is not replaced because there is no 1-byte character match. The next match fails because capital F is not a case-sensitive match for lower-case 'f'. The 'b' takes the place of byte value 98, and is replaced by $chr(33). The first character of 'abc' is found in the string, and is replaced by the 1st character of 'xyz'. //bset -t &v 1 abcdefé | breplace &v abc xyz b 33 F g $chr(233) $chr(234) | echo -a $bvar(&v,1-) / $bvar(&v,1-).text result: x!cdefé
The number of from/to byte pairs is an odd number greater than 2, so the last unpaired number is ignored without reporting an error, before the swaps are made in reverse-pair order: //bset &a 1 13 10 13 10 99 | breplace &a 10 13 13 10 99 | echo -a $bvar(&a,1-) returns: 10 13 10 13 99
Compatibility[edit]
Added: mIRC v5.6
Added on: 03 Jun 1999
Note: Unless otherwise stated, this was the date of original functionality.
Further enhancements may have been made in later versions.