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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 '$' sigil was introduced to indicate that the token is an identifier. The language began gaining traction when variables were added in version 4.0<ref>[http://www.mirc.com/versions.txt Change Log]</ref>. Variables are preceded by the '%' sigil. Later on, in version 4.1, the concatenation operator was added, which looks like '$+'.
  
One of the largest updates to the mIRC scripting language took place in version 4.5, which brought {{mirc|evaluation brackets}}, {{mirc|aliases}} in remotes, {{mirc|goto statements}}, {{mirc|string manipulation}}, {{mirc|identifiers}}, {{mirc|conditional statements|if statements}} and {{mirc|operators}}, as well as {{mirc|variables|variable assignment}} arithmetic.
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One of the largest updates to the mIRC scripting language took place in version 4.5, which brought [[evaluation brackets - mIRC|evaluation brackets]], aliases in remotes, [[goto statements - mIRC|goto statements]], [[string manipulation - mIRC|string manipulation]], identifiers, [[if statements - mIRC|if statements]] and [[operators - mIRC|operators]], as well as [[variable - mIRC|variable assignment]] arithmetic.
  
mIRC 4.6 to 5.0 brought a stream of new {{mirc|identifiers}} and {{mirc|commands}} to perform more complex operations. Version 5.0 also introduced new {{mirc|custom windows}}, which gave scripters the ability to create customized mIRC windows.
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mIRC 4.6 to 5.0 brought a stream of new [[list of identifiers - mIRC|identifiers]] and [[list of commands - mIRC|commands]] to perform more complex operations. Version 5.0 also introduced new [[custom windows - mIRC|custom windows]], which gave scripters the ability to create customized mIRC windows.
  
mIRC 5.3 saw the introduction of sockets and {{mirc|picture windows}}, which were introduced in order to allow scripts the ability to have graphical user interfaces. In version 5.5, dialogs were added which allowed native-looking components to be added onto a window, such as buttons, check boxes and list boxes.
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mIRC 5.3 saw the introduction of sockets and [[Picture Windows - mIRC|picture windows]], which were introduced in order to allow scripts the ability to have graphical user interfaces. In version 5.5, dialogs were added which allowed native-looking components to be added onto a window, such as buttons, check boxes and list boxes.
  
 
mIRC 7.0 brought about [[Unicode]] support into the language.
 
mIRC 7.0 brought about [[Unicode]] support into the language.

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