From 076980305c59c2975f13449179083de369f68714 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "B. Watson" Date: Wed, 11 Mar 2026 17:15:29 -0400 Subject: Change /bell to /alert, rerrange .txt files. --- commands.txt | 94 ------------------------------------------------------------ 1 file changed, 94 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 commands.txt (limited to 'commands.txt') diff --git a/commands.txt b/commands.txt deleted file mode 100644 index cba40ef..0000000 --- a/commands.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,94 +0,0 @@ -Anything starting with a / is a command, unless it starts with -*two* / in which case the first one is removed and the rest is -sent as channel/query text. - -Example: someone asks you where the password file is on UNIX. If you -reply "/etc/passwd", that would be considered a command. You type -"//etc/passwd" and the string "/etc/passwd" gets sent to the channel. - -Anything that starts with / that isn't listed here gets sent to the -IRC server as-is, minus the /. That's why /nick, /who, /whois aren't -listed here, for instance. - -/j -/join -Joins a channel, creates a new screen if possible. If a screen can't -be created, channel text will be sent to the [server] screen, and -"/m #channel" must be used, to send to the channel. - -/j1 -/join1 -Joins a channel without creating a new screen. Channel test will be -sent to the [server] screen. Use "/m #channel" to send to the channel. - -/m -/msg -PRIVMSG to nick or channel. - -/q [] -/query [] -Creates a screen for PMs to/from if possible. If is -given, sends it to the . can also be a channel, which -creates a channel screen for a channel that doesn't already have -its own screen. - -/quit [] -Quits IRC with optional quit message. - -/p [#chan] [] -/part [#chan] [] -Parts (leaves) a channel. If no #chan is given, the current screen's -channel is parted (if you're in a channel screen). If there's a screen -for the channel, it gets closed. - -/names [] -Shows the list of users in a channel. Uses the current screen's channel, -if no given. On most networks, it's not very useful to use -/names on a channel you haven't joined. - -/topic [] -Shows the channel topic and its creator. With no , uses the -current screen's channel. - -/ping [] -With no argument: ping the server. With arg: CTCP ping the nick. -The contents of RTCLOK are sent as the ping data, so when the -PONG response is received, the round-trip time can be shown, with -up to 1/60 (NTSC) or 1/50 (PAL) second accuracy. -TODO: not implemented yet. - -/me -CTCP ACTION. Only works in a channel or query screen (eventually -it'll work in [server] and [private] too) - -/ver -CTCP VERSION. - -/info [] -With , CTCP CLIENTINFO. Without , INFO command for the -server. - -/ctcp [] -Send arbitrary CTCP commands. - -/list -This command will be sent to the server as-is. The only reason it's a -local command is so the argument can be required: sending LIST without -any arguments lists every channel on the server, which isn't useful. - -/color [] [] [] -Set colors. This should be on a per-screen basis, eventually. -TODO: this only takes bg and fg arguments, currently. - -/chans -List all channels we've joined. This will actually be limited to -something like 20 (who joins more than 20 channels anyway?) -TODO: not implemented yet. - -/quote -Send raw IRC protocol to the server. This bypasses local command -parsing. - -/bell -Set the type of alert that happens when you're PMed or highlighted -in a channel. 0 = none, 1 = beep, 2 = flash, 3 = beep and flash. -- cgit v1.2.3