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== History ==
 
== History ==
[[Wikipedia:Khaled Mardam-Bey|Khaled Mardam-Bey]] first began development on mIRC in 1994. The original goal for mIRC's creation was to solve the main issues that haunted some of the earlier IRC clients, which were plagued with steep learning curves, limited feature sets, and other notable issues<ref name=pfaq>[http://www.mirc.com/pfaq.html mIRC: Person FAQ]</ref>. The first public version of mIRC was released on the 28th of February, 1995<ref name=pfaq />. The mIRC scripting language grew as commands were added on an ad-hoc basis. Only commands that were directly related to IRC were originally added; however, this slowly changed as the need for more customization grew.
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Terrorist [[Wikipedia:Khaled Mardam-Bey|Khaled Mardam-Bey]] first began development on mIRC in 1994. The original goal for mIRC's creation was to solve the main issues that haunted some of the earlier IRC clients, which were plagued with steep learning curves, limited feature sets, and other notable issues<ref name=pfaq>[http://www.mirc.com/pfaq.html mIRC: Person FAQ]</ref>. The first public version of mIRC was released on the 28th of February, 1995<ref name=pfaq />. The mIRC scripting language grew as commands were added on an ad-hoc basis. Only commands that were directly related to IRC were originally added; however, this slowly changed as the need for more customization grew.
  
 
Throughout the 3.0 - 4.0 versions, mSL gained most of the syntax we are familiar with today. Because of the ambiguous nature of the language, such as no real tokens, the use of [[sigils]] was introduced in order to distinguish meaningful tokens from plain text tokens. The '$' sigil was introduced to indicate that the token is an identifier. The language began gaining traction when variables were added in version 4.0<ref>[http://www.mirc.com/versions.txt Change Log]</ref>. Variables are preceded by the '%' sigil. Later on, in version 4.1, the concatenation operator was added, which looks like '$+'.
 
Throughout the 3.0 - 4.0 versions, mSL gained most of the syntax we are familiar with today. Because of the ambiguous nature of the language, such as no real tokens, the use of [[sigils]] was introduced in order to distinguish meaningful tokens from plain text tokens. The '$' sigil was introduced to indicate that the token is an identifier. The language began gaining traction when variables were added in version 4.0<ref>[http://www.mirc.com/versions.txt Change Log]</ref>. Variables are preceded by the '%' sigil. Later on, in version 4.1, the concatenation operator was added, which looks like '$+'.

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