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The '''/bcopy command''' can be used to copy any amount of bytes from one variable starting at a specific position into a second variable at a specific position. This command supports copying of overlapping buffers. | The '''/bcopy command''' can be used to copy any amount of bytes from one variable starting at a specific position into a second variable at a specific position. This command supports copying of overlapping buffers. | ||
− | If the number of bytes to copy is -1, all bytes available will be copied over to the destination variable. | + | If the number of bytes to copy is -1, all bytes available will be copied over to the destination variable. If the destination position is -1, the bytes will be appended. |
'''Note:''' The first byte starts at the position/index 1, 0 is invalid and will procudes an error. | '''Note:''' The first byte starts at the position/index 1, 0 is invalid and will procudes an error. | ||
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== Switches == | == Switches == | ||
* '''-z''' - Bytes copied from the source binary variable gets zero-filled after the copy | * '''-z''' - Bytes copied from the source binary variable gets zero-filled after the copy | ||
− | * '''-c''' - Truncates the destination variable to | + | * '''-c''' - Truncates the destination variable to remove bytes following the bytes copied. Where both N and M are positive, the new destination length is <des_pos> + <numBytes> -1 |
== Parameters == | == Parameters == | ||
* '''<&dest_binvar>''' - The destination binary variable. | * '''<&dest_binvar>''' - The destination binary variable. | ||
− | * '''<des_pos>''' - The position to which to copy the byte to. | + | * '''<des_pos>''' - The position to which to copy the byte to (or -1 to append to destination). |
* '''<&src_binvar>''' - The source binary variable. | * '''<&src_binvar>''' - The source binary variable. | ||
* '''<src_pos>''' - The position from which to start copying bytes. | * '''<src_pos>''' - The position from which to start copying bytes. | ||
− | * '''<numBytes>''' - Number of bytes to copy (or -1 for everything). | + | * '''<numBytes>''' - Number of bytes to copy beginning at <src pos> (or -1 for everything). |
== Example == | == Example == | ||
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<pre>This is a | <pre>This is a | ||
cool test!</pre> | cool test!</pre> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <source lang="mIRC"> | ||
+ | ;while these variables exist: | ||
+ | //bset &to 1 11 22 33 44 55 66 | bset &from 1 77 88 99 123 | ||
+ | and &to contains "11 22 33 44 55 66" and &to contains "77 88 99 123" | ||
+ | each of the following commands are based on the above values and are not executed after any of the other alternatives... | ||
+ | |||
+ | bcopy &to 2 &from 1 3 | ||
+ | ; copies 3 bytes at offset 1 of &from to overwrite the 3 bytes at offset 2 of &to. Length remains 6 | ||
+ | 11 77 88 99 55 66 | ||
+ | |||
+ | bcopy -z &to 2 &from 1 3 | ||
+ | ; same alteration of &to, but all byte positions in &from which were copied are changed to 0x00's. &from is now "0 0 0 123" | ||
+ | 11 77 88 99 55 66 | ||
+ | |||
+ | bcopy -c &to 2 &from 1 3 | ||
+ | ; adding the -c switch causes any destination bytes following the copied bytes to be removed, shortening &to to length 4 | ||
+ | 11 77 88 99 | ||
+ | bcopy -c &to 2 &from 1 0 | ||
+ | ; does not generate an error, but does not truncate the destination because 0 bytes were copied | ||
+ | 11 22 33 44 55 66 | ||
+ | |||
+ | bcopy &to 2 &from 1 99 | ||
+ | ; M is larger than bytes available beginning at offset 1, so the 4 bytes are copied to destination positions 2-5 without affecting the destination's 6th byte. | ||
+ | 11 77 88 99 0 66 | ||
+ | |||
+ | bcopy &to -1 &from 1 -1 | ||
+ | ; Destination position -1 causes bytes to be appended. Using -1 as number of bytes to copy copies the entire &from string beginning at position 1. | ||
+ | 11 22 33 44 55 66 77 88 99 123 | ||
+ | |||
+ | bcopy -c &to 1 &to 2 999 | ||
+ | ; copies positions 2-6 to 1-5. Without the -c switch, the length would still be 6 with the 66 repeated. | ||
+ | 22 33 44 55 66 | ||
+ | |||
+ | bcopy &to -1 &to 1 999 | ||
+ | ; appends the 6 bytes, doubling the length to 12 | ||
+ | 11 22 33 44 55 66 11 22 33 44 55 66 | ||
+ | |||
+ | bcopy -c &to 2 &to 1 999 | ||
+ | ; places the old contents of positions 1-6 into positions 2-7. The bytes are not update after each byte, so does not cause 11 to be replicated in each position. | ||
+ | 11 11 22 33 44 55 66 | ||
+ | |||
+ | bcopy -c &to 3 &to 3 1 | ||
+ | ; truncates a variable to length 3 | ||
+ | </source> | ||
== Compatibility == | == Compatibility == |
Revision as of 04:05, 3 December 2017
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The /bcopy command can be used to copy any amount of bytes from one variable starting at a specific position into a second variable at a specific position. This command supports copying of overlapping buffers.
If the number of bytes to copy is -1, all bytes available will be copied over to the destination variable. If the destination position is -1, the bytes will be appended.
Note: The first byte starts at the position/index 1, 0 is invalid and will procudes an error.
Synopsis
/bcopy [-zc] <&dest_binvar> <des_pos> <&src_binvar> <src_pos> <numBytes>
Switches
- -z - Bytes copied from the source binary variable gets zero-filled after the copy
- -c - Truncates the destination variable to remove bytes following the bytes copied. Where both N and M are positive, the new destination length is <des_pos> + <numBytes> -1
Parameters
- <&dest_binvar> - The destination binary variable.
- <des_pos> - The position to which to copy the byte to (or -1 to append to destination).
- <&src_binvar> - The source binary variable.
- <src_pos> - The position from which to start copying bytes.
- <numBytes> - Number of bytes to copy beginning at <src pos> (or -1 for everything).
Example
Alias Example { ; Create a binary variable 'example' and assign it some text bset -t &example 1 This is a cool test! ; Copy from 'example' from the 11th byte 10 bytes onward ; Zero-fill the part that was copied bcopy -z &example2 1 &example 11 10 ; Print out &example's content (up to the first null) echo -a $bvar(&example, 1-).text ; Print out &example2's content echo -a $bvar(&example2, 1-).text }
The above example will output:
This is a cool test!
;while these variables exist: //bset &to 1 11 22 33 44 55 66 | bset &from 1 77 88 99 123 and &to contains "11 22 33 44 55 66" and &to contains "77 88 99 123" each of the following commands are based on the above values and are not executed after any of the other alternatives... bcopy &to 2 &from 1 3 ; copies 3 bytes at offset 1 of &from to overwrite the 3 bytes at offset 2 of &to. Length remains 6 11 77 88 99 55 66 bcopy -z &to 2 &from 1 3 ; same alteration of &to, but all byte positions in &from which were copied are changed to 0x00's. &from is now "0 0 0 123" 11 77 88 99 55 66 bcopy -c &to 2 &from 1 3 ; adding the -c switch causes any destination bytes following the copied bytes to be removed, shortening &to to length 4 11 77 88 99 bcopy -c &to 2 &from 1 0 ; does not generate an error, but does not truncate the destination because 0 bytes were copied 11 22 33 44 55 66 bcopy &to 2 &from 1 99 ; M is larger than bytes available beginning at offset 1, so the 4 bytes are copied to destination positions 2-5 without affecting the destination's 6th byte. 11 77 88 99 0 66 bcopy &to -1 &from 1 -1 ; Destination position -1 causes bytes to be appended. Using -1 as number of bytes to copy copies the entire &from string beginning at position 1. 11 22 33 44 55 66 77 88 99 123 bcopy -c &to 1 &to 2 999 ; copies positions 2-6 to 1-5. Without the -c switch, the length would still be 6 with the 66 repeated. 22 33 44 55 66 bcopy &to -1 &to 1 999 ; appends the 6 bytes, doubling the length to 12 11 22 33 44 55 66 11 22 33 44 55 66 bcopy -c &to 2 &to 1 999 ; places the old contents of positions 1-6 into positions 2-7. The bytes are not update after each byte, so does not cause 11 to be replicated in each position. 11 11 22 33 44 55 66 bcopy -c &to 3 &to 3 1 ; truncates a variable to length 3
Compatibility
Added: mIRC v5.7
Added on: 02 Feb 2000
Note: Unless otherwise stated, this was the date of original functionality.
Further enhancements may have been made in later versions.
See also
mIRC commands list