.channel #yourchannel gives complete channel occupany with a plethora of useful information.Darkj wrote:Now I know that you can check if people are ops and voice etc, but is there an easy way to check if a user is in the channel?
You know what I hate about these boards, is when people ask for help, and then are ingrateful for the time others invest in trying to help, even if it is the wrong solution.Darkj wrote:You know, this is what I hate about these boards. The fact that when anyone comes here and asks a simple question like that, you get people that turn around and give stupid answers.
Is it really hard to just provide a quick example right off the bat? Don't you remember when you were learning and needed the same kind of help and didn't get it?
Grow up people.
PS Thanks Ofloo, worked perfectly.
So for him providing you with an incorrect answer you get all whiny like a baby without his bottle.. That explains it, sorry for thinking you were out of line.Darkj wrote:Oh and, after doing some research, the stuff that was first said to help was pretty much useless. No where can I find anything about "onchan" in those two areas.
So, I'm the one who needs to pay attention, yet you are unable to actually read documentation.... Again, my complete apologies for your own laziness and incompetence.Darkj wrote: Also, I did check the TCL guide, but I was being a moron and using a search, i had my mind stuck on mirc for some reason and was only able to thing of isin $chan or something.
So my original point still stands. Just get to the point when helping, don't always refer to the manual or whatever.
When a simplistic question is asked, and the topic has been covered thousands of times, giving a person a hint and steering them in the correct direction is the best way to help. If your child whines and sniffles about his math homework, do you help him to understand how to solve the problem himself, or would you just give them the answer, knowing full well that they won't learn a damn thing if given answers on a silver platter?Darkj wrote:Is it really hard to just provide a quick example right off the bat? Don't you remember when you were learning and needed the same kind of help and didn't get it?
Grow up people.
And this was the moronic answer I was given that didn't even HELP.Now I know that you can check if people are ops and voice etc, but is there an easy way to check if a user is in the channel?
I have a request system, and I want the bot to message the user (if in the channel), if the request is getting done.
Now, that answer is crap, I did that, yes I confessed about being a moron through the help file. I have read it, but there is alot there, and I have a hard time remembering everything there. My life does not revolve around learning TCL. Its a side thing..channel #yourchannel gives complete channel occupany with a plethora of useful information.
Try .help all, there is an amazing amount of information stored in every eggdrop's help directory.